Many Snellville residents live in older neighborhoods and established rental communities where maintenance schedules can be inconsistent. Stair hazards also show up in places that get heavy foot traffic—like:
- Apartment and townhome stairwells with shared entryways
- Retail or service buildings with customer access to stair landings
- Office or warehouse-adjacent workspaces where employees move between levels
- Split-level homes where thresholds, landings, and lighting change from room to room
In these environments, falls often trace back to problems that weren’t addressed promptly: loose handrails, uneven treads, worn or missing non-slip surfaces, cluttered landings, or lighting that makes steps hard to see. The key is proving those conditions existed—and that the responsible party knew or should have known.


