Many people assume the “scaffolding provider” must be at fault. In practice, Newark scaffolding fall cases commonly come down to who controlled the work at the time—who directed the task, who inspected or signed off on the setup, and who had authority over fall protection requirements.
On Ohio job sites, multiple parties may be involved, such as:
- the general contractor coordinating the project
- the subcontractor responsible for scaffolding work
- the property owner or facility manager overseeing the site
- the employer directing how workers access and perform tasks
Your claim tends to move faster when your attorney can quickly identify who had control, what their safety obligations were, and what the job conditions looked like in Newark at the time of the fall.


