In a typical personal injury case, the focus is often on “who was careless.” In scaffolding cases, the focus is usually on site control and safety execution—and in our region, that can get complicated fast.
Common Le Mars scenarios we see in construction and maintenance settings include:
- Industrial and commercial maintenance where scaffolding is erected for short-term access and inspected on a tight schedule.
- Remodeling and tenant improvements where contractors coordinate trades and safety responsibilities shift between companies.
- Weather and schedule pressure—including rapid turnarounds before inspections or reopenings—where equipment handling and access routes may change mid-project.
When something goes wrong, insurers often try to narrow the blame to the injured worker (“unsafe use,” “failure to follow instructions,” or “you were careless”). Your claim typically needs the bigger picture: whether the scaffold was correctly assembled, whether fall protection and safe access were provided, and whether inspections were actually performed when conditions changed.


