In a smaller city, it’s common for multiple contractors and subcontractors to rotate through the same sites, and for work to be coordinated through site supervisors and safety leads. When a fall happens, insurers frequently try to narrow the story to one simple question: “Did the injured person do something wrong?”
The problem is that scaffolding accidents often involve a chain of decisions—how the platform was assembled, whether access routes were safe, whether fall protection was actually available and used, and whether the setup was re-checked as work changed.
To protect your claim in Gillette, you typically need more than “someone fell.” You need evidence that ties the unsafe condition to the injury and shows that the responsible parties had a duty to prevent falls on that site.


