Howard is part of the larger Green Bay area, and that comes with specific day-to-day risk patterns—high-traffic commuting areas, residential driveways and entry steps, and businesses that serve workers with tight schedules.
In practice, premises liability cases frequently involve:
- Slip-and-fall incidents during Wisconsin weather: melt/refreeze on sidewalks, tracked-in snow/ice, or wet entryways where salt or sand wasn’t applied quickly enough.
- Trip-and-fall hazards around entrances: uneven steps, loose handrails, cracked pavement, or landscaping edging that wasn’t maintained.
- Parking lot and driveway injuries: potholes, poor drainage, uneven surfaces, or blocked visibility near high-use entrances.
- Inadequate security or supervision: injuries tied to unsafe conditions that allow foreseeable harm (especially where foot traffic is common).
- Falling objects: debris from unsecured storage or maintenance areas—often noticed only after the incident.
Even when the injury feels “ordinary,” the legal questions are not. Wisconsin insurers may argue the hazard was minor, obvious, temporary, or that you should have avoided it.


