Georgetown jobsites often operate in environments where people and vehicles are constantly moving—near retail, restaurants, schools, and commuter routes. That day-to-day activity can affect a case in real ways:
- More witnesses, but harder to track: Workers, subcontractors, and passersby may change shifts or leave the project before anyone thinks to collect statements.
- More documentation pressure: Site managers may generate reports quickly for internal and insurer purposes—sometimes before the full injury picture is known.
- Construction schedules that don’t pause for injuries: If the project keeps moving, the scaffolding setup can be altered, removed, or “corrected,” which can reduce your ability to reconstruct exactly what failed.
In short: the same fall can produce different evidence depending on how quickly the site changes after the incident.


