In our region, construction and maintenance work can involve multiple contractors, rotating crews, and frequent site changes—materials delivered, access routes adjusted, temporary work platforms modified. Those realities matter legally because liability often turns on control and safety practices at the time of the incident.
After a scaffolding fall, the evidence that usually determines the outcome includes:
- Jobsite safety logs and inspection notes (often created and then overwritten or archived)
- Training records for fall protection and safe access
- Photos showing guardrails, toe boards, decking/planks, and how the scaffold was accessed
- Records of any scaffold adjustments made earlier the same day
- Medical records that clearly connect the fall to your diagnosis and restrictions
When these documents are incomplete or inconsistent, insurers may argue the injury wasn’t caused by the scaffold setup or that you assumed the risk. Acting early helps keep the story consistent.


