Fort Mill is growing fast, and that growth shows up in active commercial builds, tenant improvements, and industrial maintenance work around the area. In these settings, scaffolding is frequently moved, reconfigured, or used alongside other trades working on the same footprint.
That matters legally because responsibility typically tracks who controlled the worksite safety—not just who employed the person who fell. A property owner, general contractor, subcontractor, or equipment provider may each have had different duties tied to:
- whether the scaffold was assembled and inspected correctly
- whether safe access (stairs/ladder arrangements) was maintained
- whether guardrails/toe boards/fall restraint were in place
- whether changes to the structure triggered re-checks
When multiple parties touch the project, the earliest investigation becomes crucial. The case can’t be won by “someone should have prevented this” alone—it’s won by pinning down the specific safety failures and linking them to the fall.


