I may be off-based with what I'm imagining is going at your site. I'll just throw in a story and you can see if it applies.
A geotech company i worked for did a site where they would take a hill off the site to make way for a industrial bldg addition in western NC. We had done the drilling and geotech engineering. We had extended soil borings deeper than proposed grade (15' maybe) and one deep one for our seismic classification. The site was drilled before I had worked there.
When construction started, we got the soil & concrete testing. We tested each pier footing and all along the strip ftgs to about 8' after excavation (this is generally overkill but it was for a reason here)
The blow counts were less than we would have accepted for the bearing pressure if it had been a normal balanced site job. We ran the loads for settlement and it was still w/n tolerance if any immediate settlement occurred.
But, we expected that the looseness of the soils is from the rebound of the soil from the removal of the overburden since we were absolutely confident in our drilling results and the during field construction testing demonstrated consistency all over the site and matching materials w/ the boring logs.
My question is: If the geotech exploration had extended 10' to 15' more and found no red flags would the site change? Further drilling around the site and away from the excavation can "indicate" this if the problem is big enough that you think the flags are there.
I can imagine some other possibilities which would mess it up but it's just imagination since i don't know where you are, how big your excavation is, how long it is open, does the excavation get disturbed, what the soils are like there, where the soils came from, and groundwater elevation.
long post,
back to work
Ham