Construction work in and around Dunmore commonly includes layered contracts: a property owner hires a general contractor; the general contractor brings in subcontractors; equipment may be rented or supplied through separate vendors; and safety oversight is sometimes split across roles.
That matters because after a fall, fault is rarely limited to “the person who fell.” The case often turns on questions like:
- Who controlled the work area where the scaffold was used?
- Who was responsible for inspecting the scaffold and confirming it was safe to work on?
- Whether the site had safe access and fall-protection systems in place at the time of the incident.
A Dunmore scaffolding injury claim typically requires quickly identifying the chain of responsibility—before key records are lost or overwritten.


