In and around Inkster, construction and maintenance work frequently involves layered contracting: a property owner hires a general contractor; the general contractor brings in specialty subcontractors; equipment may be rented or supplied through third parties.
That structure matters because fault is usually tied to who controlled safety at the specific moment of the fall, not just who employed the injured worker. In many Inkster cases, the fight becomes:
- Who had authority over the work platform setup and inspection cadence
- Whether fall protection and safe access were required by contract and site practices
- Whether the scaffold was altered, moved, or reconfigured without proper safeguards


