Rio Grande City has a mix of commercial remodeling, industrial maintenance, and ongoing construction activity—meaning scaffolding may be used for short-term repairs as well as longer projects. That can affect your case in a few practical ways:
- Worksite access changes fast. Routes for getting materials and tools in/out often get adjusted mid-job, which can impact stability, guardrail placement, and safe access.
- Multiple crews may share the same elevation risks. When different contractors handle different tasks, it’s common for responsibility to be disputed between the jobsite’s general contractor, subcontractors, and equipment suppliers.
- Documentation is time-sensitive. In active Texas construction schedules, inspection logs, training records, and setup photos are frequently updated—and sometimes overwritten, misplaced, or “cleaned up” after an incident.
Because of that, the most important goal early on is building a clear timeline of what happened and what safety measures were—or weren’t—followed.


