Taylor’s mix of residential neighborhoods, retail corridors, and daily commuting routes can create recurring hazard patterns. Common scenarios include:
- Parking lot and curb hazards: oil spots, uneven pavement, missing curb paint, or wet surfaces near entrances.
- Trip-and-fall incidents around home and rental properties: loose steps, cracked sidewalks, inadequate handrails, or poorly lit entryways.
- Walkway safety during weather changes: slick conditions after rain, condensation near doors, and debris buildup near drainage areas.
- Injuries tied to construction and contractor activity: uneven temporary walkways, unsecured materials, and “make-do” repairs that weren’t properly controlled.
- Retail and event foot traffic: spills not cleaned quickly enough, obstructed aisles, and sudden bottlenecks that increase the risk of falls.
After an injury, insurers often focus on whether the hazard was “obvious” or whether you were paying attention. In many Taylor cases, the real issue is notice—what the owner knew (or should have known) and what they did about it.


