Kenosha projects frequently involve multiple contractors, trades, and off-site material movement—so the question usually isn’t only who was standing on the scaffold, but who controlled the conditions that day.
Depending on the site, responsibility may turn on:
- who coordinated the work schedule and access points,
- who had authority to stop unsafe work,
- whether safety measures were implemented consistently across the project,
- how scaffolds were inspected after changes were made.
That matters because Wisconsin injury claims can become complicated when insurers argue the injured worker “should have known better” or when they claim the missing protection was the responsibility of another party. A local attorney focuses on aligning the facts with the duty each party owed under the circumstances.


