In the Johnston area, many projects run through phases—framing, exterior work, maintenance, repairs, or tenant improvements—where scaffolding is set up, modified, inspected, and then taken down or rearranged. That can create a short window where key evidence is most available.
After a fall, the details that often matter most (and can be lost) include:
- The exact scaffold configuration at the time of the incident (decking placement, access method, guardrail status)
- Whether fall protection equipment was available and actually used
- Any changes made earlier that day (materials moved, sections altered, access rerouted)
- Site communications that show safety concerns were raised or ignored
A local attorney approach focuses on moving quickly to preserve what you’ll need later—before the jobsite is cleaned up or documentation is overwritten.


