Truckee is a high-activity mountain community with visitors, seasonal staffing changes, and facilities that may serve residents who stay for long periods but also have complex health needs. Those realities can affect how falls happen and how quickly problems get noticed.
Common local-pattern issues we see in these cases include:
- Winter mobility and balance risks: Residents with neuropathy, dizziness, or medication side effects may be more vulnerable when transfers increase or routines change during colder months.
- More frequent transfers and supervision demands: During seasonal events, visitors, or schedule changes, staffing may be stretched, and transfer assistance may become inconsistent.
- Environmental hazards in accessible spaces: Slippery surfaces, poorly maintained flooring, inadequate lighting, or equipment that doesn’t fit the resident’s needs can turn a routine move into a serious fall.
- Delayed or incomplete post-fall monitoring: When a resident hits their head or reports pain, the response after the fall matters as much as the fall itself.
A strong claim ties these real-world conditions to what the facility knew, what it should have done, and how that failure contributed to harm.


