In the Stow corridor—near retail development, medical facilities, warehouse improvements, and residential remodels—construction schedules can be tight. That often means:
- Frequent site changes: materials delivered, staging reconfigured, and sections adjusted as trades rotate.
- Multi-employer crews: general contractors, specialty subcontractors, and labor providers working in overlapping areas.
- Access-by-design shortcuts: workers using temporary routes because permanent access isn’t convenient yet.
Those realities can affect what caused the fall and who had the duty to keep the scaffold area safe. In many Stow cases, the dispute isn’t whether the fall occurred—it’s whether the setup, inspections, and fall-protection practices matched what the job required at that moment.


