Airmont projects frequently involve more than one business layer—property owners, general contractors, and subcontractors—plus equipment suppliers who manage rentals and component delivery. When a fall occurs near an access area (like the route workers use to move on and off the scaffold), liability can get complicated fast.
Instead of focusing only on the moment of the fall, a strong claim examines:
- who controlled the scaffold setup and fall-protection decisions,
- who was responsible for inspections and re-checks after changes,
- whether safe access was maintained as the work progressed.
In practice, Airmont-area claims often turn on documentation that contractors and subcontractors generate daily—inspection logs, safety checklists, and equipment rental records. If that paper trail isn’t secured early, insurers may later argue you can’t prove the condition was unsafe.


