Salisbury’s pace and mix of job sites—commercial renovations, industrial maintenance, and seasonal building activity—means scaffolding is often erected, adjusted, and accessed repeatedly. That can create a pattern of risk:
- Access points and decking get changed mid-project (sometimes without updated safety checks)
- Weather and site traffic can contribute to instability or clutter around work zones
- Multiple crews may touch the same scaffold over days, complicating “who controlled safety”
When a fall occurs, insurers may try to narrow the story to “worker error.” In Maryland, your outcome depends on whether the evidence shows the unsafe condition that made the fall more likely—and whether the responsible party had a duty to prevent it.


