In and around Chippewa Falls, premises liability injuries frequently involve conditions that are predictable in our weather and traffic patterns. Examples include:
- Slip-and-fall in winter: ice buildup on entrances, stair treads, and poorly treated walkways after freezing rain or snow.
- Slip-and-fall during melt cycles: wet floors near doors, tracked-in slush, and “refreezing” hazards when temperatures swing.
- Trip-and-fall in parking areas: uneven pavement, potholes, damaged curbs, or blocked drains near entrances where people hurry between cars and stores.
- Construction-adjacent injuries: hazards created or worsened by contractors—tools left out, inadequate barricades, or unclear pedestrian routes.
- Public-facing businesses and visitor traffic: injuries in retail, restaurants, and service locations where foot traffic and deliveries increase the risk of unsafe conditions.
Even when an injury seems straightforward, the legal questions are not. Insurance may argue the hazard was obvious, temporary, or that you should have avoided it. Your job is to recover; your attorney’s job is to build the evidence-based story that counters those defenses.


