When a scaffolding-related injury occurs, the jobsite reality changes fast. Materials get moved, access routes shift, and safety systems may be adjusted—even if nothing is officially “fixed” in writing.
In New Milford projects, that can be especially true when crews are working on tight schedules or coordinating with subcontractors. The result: the evidence that matters most (how the scaffold was set up, what safety measures were in place, who controlled the work area) can disappear before you know what to ask for.
A strong claim typically starts with preserving:
- photos/video of the scaffold layout and fall-protection setup
- incident reports and any “near miss” or safety logs
- witness names tied to the exact time of the fall
- the jobsite conditions that contributed to the fall (access, decking, guardrails, stability)


