Staircase injuries in Annapolis often involve environments where hazards are easy to overlook—but still legally important:
- Historic and older buildings: uneven tread height, worn steps, handrails that don’t match the walkway, and stair edges that have degraded over time.
- Tourism-heavy properties: higher visitor volume increases the chance someone encounters a hazard before staff or management notice it.
- Multi-unit housing: cracked steps, loose carpeting, or damaged rails in common areas where tenants may report issues repeatedly.
- Workplaces with deliveries and foot traffic: stair access used for deliveries, trash removal, or shift changes—conditions that can lead to debris on steps or blocked routes.
If your fall happened in any of these settings, the “who should have fixed it” question matters as much as the injury itself.


