Construction sites change quickly. In Albany, that may mean crews moving equipment from one phase of a project to another, weather affecting how scaffolds are accessed, or safety equipment being adjusted after an incident. The problem is that the strongest proof is usually the proof closest to the fall.
After a scaffolding fall, evidence can include:
- Photos showing the scaffold setup, access points, and fall-protection conditions
- Site logs and inspection records (including any post-incident changes)
- Incident reports and supervisor notes
- Witness contact information from the same shift
- Medical documentation showing diagnosis and symptom progression
Waiting too long can make it harder to reconstruct what was in place at the time of the fall—especially when multiple contractors and trades touch the same work area.


