In the Summerville area, many construction projects involve tight timelines and frequent site changes—materials delivered, access routes adjusted, and scaffolding reconfigured as work progresses. That matters because a fall claim is rarely about “someone fell.” It’s about what safety controls were in place at that moment and who had responsibility for maintaining them.
In practice, the issues that commonly surface include:
- Scaffolding access changes during the shift (new ladders, moved decks, altered walkways)
- Missing or damaged fall protection components on the day of the incident
- Unclear coordination between general contractors and subcontractors handling setup, inspections, or safety monitoring
- Documentation gaps—inspection logs, training records, or incident reports that don’t match what witnesses describe
When these factors are disputed early, the case can shift quickly from “straightforward accident” to a liability fight. Your next decisions can influence whether your claim stays strong.


