Avon is a growing suburban community, and job activity commonly increases where commercial projects, facility renovations, and road-adjacent construction overlap with active work schedules. That means scaffolding is often used for:
- exterior work on retail or service buildings
- renovations at local industrial or distribution sites
- repairs to multi-story structures and building facades
- maintenance work that happens while operations continue
When multiple contractors share a site, responsibility for safety can get blurred—especially if the scaffold was assembled by one entity, inspected by another, and used by workers under different supervision. The practical result: insurers may try to narrow blame to the injured person, or argue the scaffold issue was “temporary” or “known.”
Your case needs a strategy that addresses how Ohio law treats duty and negligence—and how to prove the specific link between unsafe conditions and your injuries.


