Two Rivers has a mix of industrial activity, seasonal work cycles, and frequent maintenance projects. On many job sites, scaffolding is used for short windows—repairs, inspections, exterior work, or interior access—so the timeline can feel tight.
That “tight timeline” matters legally. In the first hours and days, the facts are easiest to lock in:
- Photos and video of the scaffold setup (including guardrails, planks/decking, and access)
- Witness accounts from supervisors, crew members, and contractors
- Incident documentation generated on-site
- Medical records that link symptoms to the fall
When those pieces aren’t preserved early, it becomes harder to prove what failed, who had the duty to prevent the hazard, and how the unsafe condition caused the injury.


