In South Jersey, construction projects can involve multiple subcontractors, rotating crews, and tight timelines. When a fall happens, liability questions usually hinge on site-specific details—things like how access was set up, whether fall protection was actually used, and whether scaffolding was inspected after changes.
That’s why the first goal after a scaffolding fall is preserving the details that tend to disappear quickly:
- Photos of the scaffold configuration (platforming, guardrails, access points)
- Copies of incident reports or safety logs
- Names of supervisors, safety personnel, and witnesses on-site
- Any documentation about scaffold delivery, assembly, or inspection
In New Jersey, these early records can be critical for establishing negligence and linking the worksite conditions to your injuries—especially when an insurer later suggests the fall was caused by something unrelated or by “worker error.”


