Harrisburg’s growth means more road-adjacent projects, commercial buildouts, and renovations happening near regular traffic patterns and delivery routes. That matters because in many scaffolding fall cases, the “who is responsible” question depends on who had the right—and the obligation—to manage the work safely.
Instead of focusing only on the fall itself, your claim typically needs to answer:
- Who directed the work at the time of the incident?
- Who controlled access to the elevated area and the way workers got on/off the scaffold?
- Who ensured the scaffold was inspected, altered safely, and kept in safe condition throughout the shift?
- Whether safety measures were in place for the specific setup used that day
When multiple contractors and subcontractors share the same jobsite, responsibility can be fragmented. Your legal team’s job is to connect safety failures to the fall and to the medical harm that followed.


