On many jobsites, scaffolding isn’t “owned” by one person. It’s commonly connected to:
- the general contractor coordinating the site
- subcontractors performing the work at height
- the property/landlord managing premises safety requirements
- equipment suppliers or rental providers who delivered components
That matters because insurers often try to narrow blame to the injured worker (“you should have been more careful”) or to a single subcontractor. In Rocky River, where projects frequently involve both commercial spaces and nearby residential access, it’s common for safety control to be shared—and for the paperwork to show who had the duty to prevent the fall.


