Construction Injury Help
Construction Site Injuries Lawyer in Wayne City
$4.55M
Auto Accident/Premises Liability
$3.2M
Work Injury
$2.15M
Auto Accident/Fatality
$1.14M
Wrongful Death/Society
$1M
Auto v. Pedestrian – Fatality
$688K
Wrongful Death/Loss of Society
$550K
Auto v. Pedestrian – Permanent Disfigurement
$455K
Premises Liability – Shoulder Injury
$400K
Premises Liability – Faulty Stairs
$400K
Premises Liability – Doorway Code Violation
$385K
Auto Accident – Ride Share Company
$305K
Dog Bite
$302K
Auto Accident
$301K
Dog Bite
$250K
Auto v. Pedestrian
$116K
Auto Accident – Ride Share Company
$100K
Auto v. Pedestrian
Auto Accident/Premises Liability
Auto Accident/Premises Liability
Work Injury
Work Injury
Auto Accident/Fatality
Auto Accident/Fatality
Wrongful Death/Society
Wrongful Death/Society
Auto Accident/Premises Liability
Work Injury
Auto Accident/Fatality
Auto Accident/Premises Liability
Work Injury
Construction Site Injury Claims
If you were injured on a construction site in Wayne City, you face medical bills, lost income, and the stress of recovery while complex liability questions remain. Get Bier Law represents injured people who need clear direction after accidents on jobsites, scaffolds, and other hazardous areas. Serving citizens of Wayne City and surrounding communities, our Chicago-based firm helps clients understand options against contractors, subcontractors, equipment manufacturers, and insurers. Call 877-417-BIER to discuss the circumstances of your injury, document evidence, and begin preserving rights. We focus on practical steps that protect your claim while you focus on healing and regaining stability.
Benefits of Pursuing a Construction Injury Claim
Pursuing a construction injury claim can help injured workers and bystanders recover compensation for medical costs, lost wages, ongoing care, and pain and suffering when negligence or unsafe conditions are to blame. A focused legal approach helps preserve critical evidence from the jobsite, secures timely medical documentation, and navigates complex insurance coverage issues that often arise in construction matters. By clarifying who may be liable and coordinating investigations, Get Bier Law helps clients avoid procedural mistakes that can weaken a claim. Our goal is to provide practical guidance so you can pursue fair compensation while minimizing additional stress during recovery.
About Get Bier Law and Our Approach
Understanding Construction Site Injury Claims
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Key Terms and Glossary for Construction Claims
Negligence
Negligence describes a failure to exercise reasonable care that results in harm to another person. In construction cases negligence can include unsafe scaffolding, lack of fall protection, improper maintenance of tools, or inadequate site supervision. To prove negligence you must show that a party owed a duty to act safely, that they breached that duty, and that the breach caused an injury that produced measurable damages. Establishing negligence typically requires documentation, eyewitness accounts, and analysis of construction practices. Claims based on negligence aim to compensate injured people for losses caused by preventable safety lapses on the jobsite.
Liability
Liability refers to legal responsibility for harm or loss caused to another person. On construction sites, multiple parties may share liability, including general contractors, subcontractors, property owners, equipment manufacturers, or material suppliers, depending on who acted negligently or failed to maintain safe conditions. Determining liability involves tracing the sequence of events, reviewing contracts and safety records, and identifying which party’s actions or omissions led to injury. Liability determines who can be held to pay damages and often requires careful investigation to connect unsafe conditions or defective equipment to the plaintiff’s medical and financial losses.
Workers' Compensation
Workers’ compensation is a no-fault insurance system that provides benefits to employees injured on the job, covering medical care and partial wage replacement without requiring proof of fault. In Illinois, workers’ compensation can provide essential immediate relief, but it may not cover all losses such as pain and suffering or certain long-term economic impacts. When a third party beyond the employer contributed to an injury, a separate liability claim may be available in addition to workers’ compensation. Get Bier Law can help explain how workers’ comp benefits interact with potential third-party claims and help protect overall recovery strategies.
Third-Party Claim
A third-party claim arises when someone other than your employer is responsible for the harm you suffered at a construction site. This can include subcontractors, equipment manufacturers, property owners, or companies that supplied defective materials. Third-party claims seek compensation for losses that workers’ compensation does not fully address, such as pain and suffering, loss of enjoyment of life, and future lost earning capacity. Bringing a third-party claim requires proving the other party’s negligence or product defect and quantifying damages, which often involves coordinated medical, vocational, and economic evidence.
PRO TIPS
Document the Scene Immediately
If you are able to do so safely, document the scene of your injury with photos and notes that capture conditions, equipment, and any visible hazards. Record contact information for witnesses and request copies of any incident or safety reports generated by onsite supervisors. These early observations often become vital evidence in establishing how the injury happened and which parties may be responsible, so preserving them promptly helps protect the integrity of your claim while you focus on recovery.
Preserve Medical Records and Documentation
Keep careful records of all medical treatment, diagnostic tests, prescriptions, and referrals related to your construction injury, and follow prescribed care recommendations. Request copies of hospital and clinic records and maintain a folder of receipts, bills, and notes about symptoms and recovery progress. Consistent medical documentation establishes the link between the accident and your injuries and supports accurate calculation of damages in discussions with insurers or other parties.
Avoid Recorded Statements with Insurers
Insurance adjusters may request recorded statements shortly after an accident, but those recordings can be used later to narrow or dispute your claim. It is wise to consult with counsel before providing formal recorded statements so that your statements are accurate and do not unintentionally harm your position. Get Bier Law can handle insurer communications and help ensure your rights are protected while avoiding unnecessary or risky statements during the claims process.
Comparing Legal Options After a Construction Injury
When a Full Claim Is Advisable:
Serious or Long-Term Injuries
When injuries are severe, involve long-term care, or affect future earning capacity, pursuing a full claim beyond basic benefits may be necessary to cover ongoing medical needs and economic losses. Complex medical needs often require expert medical opinions, vocational analysis, and careful calculation of future costs, which are not fully addressed by short-term or limited claims. In those circumstances, legal representation helps secure documentation, negotiate with insurers, and present a complete damages picture to achieve recovery that reflects both current and future losses.
Multiple Liable Parties or Complex Fault
When several parties may share responsibility, such as a subcontractor and a manufacturer, a comprehensive claim can untangle fault and pursue all potentially liable sources of recovery. Identifying and proving liability across multiple defendants often requires focused investigation, document subpoenas, and coordination with specialists in construction practices. Addressing complex fault issues through a thorough claim increases the likelihood of recovering full compensation for medical expenses, lost wages, and non-economic damages.
When a Limited Claim Might Be Enough:
Minor Injuries with Quick Recovery
For relatively minor injuries that resolve quickly with minimal medical intervention, a limited claim or workers’ compensation filing may adequately address immediate medical costs and short-term wage loss. In those cases, pursuing a protracted third-party suit could be unnecessary and may not produce additional net recovery after legal costs. A practical assessment of injury severity, medical prognosis, and likely costs will guide whether a streamlined approach is appropriate for your situation.
Clear Workers' Compensation Coverage
If the employer’s workers’ compensation insurance fully covers medical treatment and wage replacement for an on-the-job injury and no third party contributed, a limited workers’ comp claim may be the most direct route to compensation. That pathway provides no-fault benefits without the need to prove negligence, simplifying recovery for many injured workers. Still, it is important to review the full circumstances to ensure no third-party claims are overlooked that could supplement workers’ compensation benefits.
Common Construction Site Accident Scenarios
Falls from Heights
Falls from scaffolds, ladders, roofs, and other elevated surfaces are a leading cause of serious construction injuries and often require rapid medical care and long-term rehabilitation. Investigations into fall incidents examine fall protection measures, training, equipment condition, and site supervision to determine whether negligence contributed to the event and whether additional recovery beyond initial benefits may be available.
Electrocutions and Shock
Electrocution and severe electrical shocks can produce life-altering injuries and often involve questions about proper lockout-tagout procedures, wiring inspections, and contractor compliance with safety standards. Determining responsibility requires review of maintenance records, contractor practices, and safety protocols to identify lapses that may have led to the injury and potential avenues for compensation.
Struck-by and Caught-between Accidents
Injuries caused by falling objects, moving equipment, or structural collapses often raise issues about proper barricades, signaling, equipment maintenance, and material storage. A thorough fact-gathering effort looks for evidence of inadequate procedures or defective equipment that may establish liability and support recovery for medical bills and related losses.
Why Choose Get Bier Law for Construction Claims
Get Bier Law serves citizens of Wayne City from our Chicago office and provides focused representation for people injured on construction sites. We emphasize clear client communication, careful evidence preservation, and strategic case development tailored to each client’s medical and financial needs. When you call 877-417-BIER we will explain possible avenues of recovery, what documents to gather, and steps to protect your rights. Our approach is to manage insurer contact, coordinate investigations, and seek fair compensation so clients can focus on treatment and recovery.
Choosing the right path after a construction injury means balancing immediate benefits with longer-term recovery needs and potential third-party claims. Get Bier Law provides guidance on how workers’ compensation intersects with liability claims and when pursuing additional defendants may be appropriate. We work to document damages thoroughly, negotiate with insurers, and pursue litigation when necessary, while keeping clients informed of realistic timelines and likely outcomes. Contact us at 877-417-BIER for an initial discussion about your situation and available options.
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FAQS
What should I do immediately after a construction site injury?
Seek medical attention immediately, even if your injuries seem minor at first, because some symptoms can appear later and medical documentation is critical to any claim. If it is safe to do so, collect basic evidence at the scene such as photos of the hazard, names and contact information for witnesses, and any incident reports completed by site supervisors. Report the injury to your employer as required and request copies of any written incident reports. Preserving the scene and records helps establish what happened and supports insurance or liability claims. Contact Get Bier Law to discuss your next steps, including how to coordinate communications with employers and insurers and whether a third-party claim may be appropriate. Our office can explain how workers’ compensation benefits interact with other claims and advise on preserving evidence and medical documentation. Call 877-417-BIER to arrange a confidential review of your situation and learn which actions will best protect your recovery rights while you focus on treatment.
Can I receive workers' compensation and still sue a third party?
Yes. Receiving workers’ compensation benefits does not necessarily prevent you from pursuing a separate claim against a third party who contributed to your injury, such as an equipment manufacturer, a subcontractor, or a property owner. Workers’ compensation covers many on-the-job medical costs and wage replacement without proving fault, but it typically does not compensate for pain and suffering or full economic losses related to long-term disability. Identifying third-party defendants requires careful investigation to determine who else may share responsibility for the incident. When a third-party claim exists, coordination is important because compensation from that claim may affect workers’ compensation liens or subrogation interests. Get Bier Law can review the facts of your case, help determine whether third-party recovery is possible, and guide you through steps to pursue additional recovery while protecting workers’ compensation benefits. We will also explain how settlements can be structured to address competing interests and maximize net recovery for your needs.
How long do I have to file a construction injury claim in Illinois?
In Illinois, statutes of limitations set deadlines for filing lawsuits, and those time limits vary depending on the type of claim. For most personal injury claims, the general deadline is two years from the date of injury, but different rules can apply in certain situations, such as claims involving government entities or minors. Failing to file within the applicable time period can bar your ability to pursue compensation, so addressing the timeline early is essential in preserving your rights. Because construction claims may involve multiple potential defendants and different legal avenues, it is important to consult with counsel promptly to identify the correct statute of limitations that applies to your case. Get Bier Law can evaluate the specifics of your situation, determine any special filing deadlines, and take timely steps to preserve evidence and prepare necessary filings so that your right to recovery is protected.
What types of damages can be recovered after a construction injury?
Damages in a construction injury claim can include medical expenses, both current and future, lost wages and reduced earning capacity, and non-economic losses such as pain and suffering and loss of enjoyment of life. In severe cases, claims may also seek compensation for long-term care, vocational rehabilitation, and costs of home modifications or assistive devices. The precise elements of damages depend on the nature and severity of injuries and applicable law in Illinois. Accurate quantification of damages typically requires medical records, opinions about prognosis and future care needs, wage documentation, and often input from vocational or economic professionals. Get Bier Law can help assemble the necessary documentation to present a full account of losses and negotiate with insurers or litigate when appropriate to pursue a fair recovery that addresses both immediate and ongoing needs.
Will my case go to trial or can it be settled outside court?
Many construction injury matters resolve through negotiation and settlement without going to trial, but some cases proceed to litigation when parties cannot agree on fair compensation. Factors that influence this include the clarity of liability, the extent of documented damages, and the willingness of insurers or defendants to offer reasonable settlements. Settlement can provide a quicker, more certain resolution, while trial can be necessary when significant disputed issues remain. Get Bier Law evaluates the merits of settlement offers against the strengths of a potential court case and your long-term needs. We aim to reach reasonable agreements when possible but prepare cases for litigation if that is the most effective way to secure appropriate compensation. We will keep you informed about realistic prospects and help choose the path that aligns with your recovery goals.
How does fault work when multiple contractors are involved?
When multiple contractors or entities are involved, liability can be apportioned among those whose actions or omissions contributed to the injury. Illinois law allows claims against any party whose negligence played a role, and comparative fault rules can affect the allocation of responsibility. Determining fault requires careful investigation of contracts, safety records, equipment maintenance, and jobsite supervision to identify which parties had responsibility for safe operations and whether those duties were breached. Get Bier Law can coordinate document requests, inspect records, and work with professionals who understand construction practices to trace responsibility across multiple defendants. Establishing shared liability can expand recovery options, but it also requires clear evidence connecting each party to the harmful condition or act. Our role is to assemble that evidence and present a coherent case for the appropriate allocation of responsibility and damages.
What evidence is most important for a construction injury claim?
Important evidence in a construction injury claim includes medical records that document injuries and treatment, incident reports filed by the employer or site, photographs of the scene and equipment, witness statements, and maintenance or inspection records for tools and machinery. Payroll records and contract documents may also be important to identify responsible parties and insurance coverage. Early collection and preservation of this evidence strengthens the claim and reduces the risk that important information will be lost or altered. Because evidence can be time-sensitive, prompt action to photograph the scene, gather witness contact information, and request relevant records is essential. Get Bier Law can advise you on which documents to request, help gather medical records, and coordinate investigative steps such as site inspections and subpoenas when necessary to secure essential evidence for negotiations or litigation.
Do I need to pay upfront fees to discuss my case with Get Bier Law?
Get Bier Law offers an initial review of construction injury matters without upfront attorney fees in many cases, and we can explain fee arrangements during an early consultation. Commonly, personal injury cases are handled on a contingency basis so that legal fees are paid from any recovery rather than requiring out-of-pocket payments while the claim is pending. This arrangement helps injured people pursue claims without the burden of immediate legal costs. During an initial consultation we will discuss fee structures, potential expenses, and how any recovery would be allocated to medical costs, liens, and attorney fees. We strive for transparency about costs so you can make informed decisions about whether to proceed. Call 877-417-BIER to learn more about how we handle fee agreements and to review your case details.
How are future medical expenses and lost wages calculated?
Calculating future medical expenses and lost wages involves projecting the course of recovery, expected treatments, potential need for ongoing care, and the likely impact on future earning capacity. Medical professionals and vocational or economic analysts can provide estimates based on your diagnosis, prognosis, and job history, which are then translated into dollar amounts to represent anticipated costs and income losses. Accurate projections help ensure that settlements or court awards adequately address long-term needs. Get Bier Law works with medical and economic professionals to assemble credible estimates of future care and earnings loss. We review medical treatment plans, consult with appropriate specialists, and use employment and wage records to model future financial impacts so that settlement negotiations or litigation can seek compensation that reflects both current and anticipated needs.
What if my employer says the injury was my fault?
An employer may assert that an injury was the employee’s fault, but Illinois law recognizes that multiple factors often contribute to construction accidents, and fault must be evaluated based on evidence. Even when employers point to worker conduct, issues such as inadequate training, lack of safety equipment, or defective tools may have played a role. Employers also have reporting obligations, and their representations about fault should be carefully evaluated against objective evidence and witness accounts. If your employer disputes responsibility, it is important to preserve medical records, incident reports, and witness information and to consult with counsel about how to respond. Get Bier Law can review employer statements, compare them to physical and documentary evidence, and pursue appropriate claims against other responsible parties if employer defenses are inconsistent with the facts. We will also advise on how employer statements may affect workers’ compensation or third-party claims.