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When you or a loved one suffers a construction site accident, life changes in an instant. The pain is overwhelming, the financial pressure immediate, and the legal decisions ahead will determine whether your family is protected for years to come.
At Brian Hodgkiss Injury Lawyers, we’ve spent over two decades standing beside construction accident injury victims and their families throughout Green Bay and Northeast Wisconsin, fighting to secure every dollar they deserve.
Contact our workers’ compensation lawyers at Brian Hodgkiss Injury Lawyers to schedule a free consultation.
Construction is one of the most dangerous industries in America. According to the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA), one in five worker deaths occurs in construction. The “Fatal Four” account for more than half of all construction fatalities nationwide:
In Green Bay, workers face these hazards daily on downtown redevelopment projects, highway corridors, industrial facilities near the Port of Green Bay, and residential developments expanding across the west and east sides of the city.
When those hazards lead to tragedy, families are left navigating workers’ compensation systems, insurance company pressure, and wrongful death claims. That’s exactly the type of situation where our approach makes a difference.
We don’t just process cases. We investigate every angle, identify every liable party, and refuse to accept unfair offers.
Wisconsin workers’ compensation provides important protections after a construction accident. Benefits include:
Here’s the critical limitation: workers’ compensation does not compensate for pain and suffering, full lost wages, or the profound loss a family experiences when a worker is killed. It covers expenses, not the full human cost. That gap is exactly why understanding third-party liability claims matters so much, and why families who rely solely on workers’ comp often leave significant compensation unclaimed.
Construction sites involve multiple parties, such as general contractors, subcontractors, property owners, equipment manufacturers, and utility companies. When any of those parties’ negligence causes an injury or death, Wisconsin law allows victims to pursue third-party liability claims separate from workers’ compensation. These claims consider full lost wages, pain and suffering, loss of enjoyment of life, loss of consortium for a spouse, and punitive damages in cases of egregious negligence.
Our team has seen how often families don’t realize a third-party claim exists until it’s too late. A subcontractor’s failure to maintain scaffolding, a manufacturer’s defective equipment, a property owner’s ignored hazard—each of these creates liability beyond the employer.
Common third-party claims in Green Bay construction accidents include claims against:
Liability in a construction accident rarely falls on just one party.
The key is investigation, and that’s where experience matters. Our team conducts comprehensive site inspections, reviews OSHA reports and citations, interviews witnesses, and consults with safety experts and engineers to identify all parties whose negligence contributed. Because construction accidents frequently involve overlapping claims and multiple insurance policies, identifying all liable parties from the start is essential to maximizing total recovery.
The steps taken in the hours and days after a construction accident directly affect both your health and your legal rights. Seek emergency medical care first.
Green Bay has several facilities equipped to handle serious construction injuries:
Even if your injuries seem minor, get evaluated immediately. Some construction injuries—such as internal bleeding, concussions, or spinal damage—don’t show symptoms right away. Medical records created immediately after your accident become crucial evidence in your claim.
Report the accident to your employer in writing as soon as possible. Wisconsin law requires notice within 30 days, but immediate reporting protects your claim. Document the scene with photos before anything is moved or repaired.
Preserve any equipment or conditions involved. File your workers’ compensation claim promptly and keep copies of everything. Then consult with an attorney before accepting any settlement offer. Remember, once you settle, you typically can’t go back for more, even if your injuries worsen.
Yes. If you were injured on or near a Green Bay construction site as a pedestrian, driver, or bystander, you are not limited by workers’ compensation rules. You can pursue a full personal injury claim against the general contractor, subcontractors, property owner, or any other party whose negligence caused your injury. Non-worker bystanders are often entitled to the full range of damages: medical expenses, lost wages, pain and suffering, and more.
Construction zones in busy areas such as downtown Green Bay, Highway 41, and Highway 172 corridors pose real risks to the public. Falling debris, unsecured materials, inadequate barriers, and poor site management can injure people nearby. OSHA violations that contribute to those injuries become powerful evidence in a personal injury claim.
Wisconsin’s statute of limitations for personal injury and wrongful death claims is generally three years from the date of the injury or death. For workers’ compensation claims, the deadline to file is six years from the date of injury or the last payment of benefits. However, waiting diminishes your case. Evidence disappears, witnesses’ memories fade, and liable parties have more time to build defenses.
If a loved one was fatally injured, the wrongful death claim must typically be filed within three years of the date of death. Acting quickly also allows us to conduct a thorough investigation while the evidence is still available and OSHA reports are fresh. The sooner you call, the stronger your case will be.
No. Our No Fee Guarantee® means you pay nothing unless we recover compensation for you. Construction accident cases are handled on a contingency fee basis. There are no upfront costs, no hourly fees, no financial risk to you or your family.
Yes. Wisconsin law allows surviving spouses, dependent children (through a guardian), parents, and estate administrators to pursue wrongful death claims against negligent third parties. These claims recover funeral and burial expenses, loss of financial support, loss of guidance and companionship, and the pain of losing a loved one, and are separate from workers’ compensation death benefits.
Employer and insurance company tactics often include blaming the injured worker, disputing the severity of the injury, or citing pre-existing conditions. These are strategies designed to reduce your payout; they aren’t accurate assessments of liability. We investigate independently, gather OSHA evidence, and counter these tactics with facts.
This is common on construction sites in Green Bay. We identify all parties (general contractor, subcontractor, property owner, or equipment manufacturer) whose negligence contributed to the accident, then coordinate workers’ compensation and third-party claims simultaneously to maximize total recovery.
Workers’ compensation death benefits provide important support, but they do not replace the full financial contribution your loved one would have made over a lifetime. They also don’t compensate for grief, loss of companionship, or pain and suffering. A wrongful death claim pursued alongside workers’ comp benefits is often the only way to achieve full financial security for surviving dependents.
Our track record speaks for itself: we’ve recovered millions for injured workers, including a $7.9 million settlement for a client whose initial offer was just $300,000. When insurance companies try to lowball your claim, we fight back.
You and your family deserve full accountability. Talk to Brian Hodgkiss Injury Lawyers today and find out what your workers’ compensation case is worth. Contact us or call today for a free case evaluation. Bank on Brian!
"*" indicates required fields
When you or a loved one suffers a construction site accident, life changes in an instant. The pain is overwhelming, the financial pressure immediate, and the legal decisions ahead will determine whether your family is protected for years to come.
At Brian Hodgkiss Injury Lawyers, we’ve spent over two decades standing beside construction accident injury victims and their families throughout Green Bay and Northeast Wisconsin, fighting to secure every dollar they deserve.
Contact our workers’ compensation lawyers at Brian Hodgkiss Injury Lawyers to schedule a free consultation.
Construction is one of the most dangerous industries in America. According to the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA), one in five worker deaths occurs in construction. The “Fatal Four” account for more than half of all construction fatalities nationwide:
In Green Bay, workers face these hazards daily on downtown redevelopment projects, highway corridors, industrial facilities near the Port of Green Bay, and residential developments expanding across the west and east sides of the city.
When those hazards lead to tragedy, families are left navigating workers’ compensation systems, insurance company pressure, and wrongful death claims. That’s exactly the type of situation where our approach makes a difference.
We don’t just process cases. We investigate every angle, identify every liable party, and refuse to accept unfair offers.
Wisconsin workers’ compensation provides important protections after a construction accident. Benefits include:
Here’s the critical limitation: workers’ compensation does not compensate for pain and suffering, full lost wages, or the profound loss a family experiences when a worker is killed. It covers expenses, not the full human cost. That gap is exactly why understanding third-party liability claims matters so much, and why families who rely solely on workers’ comp often leave significant compensation unclaimed.
Construction sites involve multiple parties, such as general contractors, subcontractors, property owners, equipment manufacturers, and utility companies. When any of those parties’ negligence causes an injury or death, Wisconsin law allows victims to pursue third-party liability claims separate from workers’ compensation. These claims consider full lost wages, pain and suffering, loss of enjoyment of life, loss of consortium for a spouse, and punitive damages in cases of egregious negligence.
Our team has seen how often families don’t realize a third-party claim exists until it’s too late. A subcontractor’s failure to maintain scaffolding, a manufacturer’s defective equipment, a property owner’s ignored hazard—each of these creates liability beyond the employer.
Common third-party claims in Green Bay construction accidents include claims against:
Liability in a construction accident rarely falls on just one party.
The key is investigation, and that’s where experience matters. Our team conducts comprehensive site inspections, reviews OSHA reports and citations, interviews witnesses, and consults with safety experts and engineers to identify all parties whose negligence contributed. Because construction accidents frequently involve overlapping claims and multiple insurance policies, identifying all liable parties from the start is essential to maximizing total recovery.
The steps taken in the hours and days after a construction accident directly affect both your health and your legal rights. Seek emergency medical care first.
Green Bay has several facilities equipped to handle serious construction injuries:
Even if your injuries seem minor, get evaluated immediately. Some construction injuries—such as internal bleeding, concussions, or spinal damage—don’t show symptoms right away. Medical records created immediately after your accident become crucial evidence in your claim.
Report the accident to your employer in writing as soon as possible. Wisconsin law requires notice within 30 days, but immediate reporting protects your claim. Document the scene with photos before anything is moved or repaired.
Preserve any equipment or conditions involved. File your workers’ compensation claim promptly and keep copies of everything. Then consult with an attorney before accepting any settlement offer. Remember, once you settle, you typically can’t go back for more, even if your injuries worsen.
Yes. If you were injured on or near a Green Bay construction site as a pedestrian, driver, or bystander, you are not limited by workers’ compensation rules. You can pursue a full personal injury claim against the general contractor, subcontractors, property owner, or any other party whose negligence caused your injury. Non-worker bystanders are often entitled to the full range of damages: medical expenses, lost wages, pain and suffering, and more.
Construction zones in busy areas such as downtown Green Bay, Highway 41, and Highway 172 corridors pose real risks to the public. Falling debris, unsecured materials, inadequate barriers, and poor site management can injure people nearby. OSHA violations that contribute to those injuries become powerful evidence in a personal injury claim.
Wisconsin’s statute of limitations for personal injury and wrongful death claims is generally three years from the date of the injury or death. For workers’ compensation claims, the deadline to file is six years from the date of injury or the last payment of benefits. However, waiting diminishes your case. Evidence disappears, witnesses’ memories fade, and liable parties have more time to build defenses.
If a loved one was fatally injured, the wrongful death claim must typically be filed within three years of the date of death. Acting quickly also allows us to conduct a thorough investigation while the evidence is still available and OSHA reports are fresh. The sooner you call, the stronger your case will be.
No. Our No Fee Guarantee® means you pay nothing unless we recover compensation for you. Construction accident cases are handled on a contingency fee basis. There are no upfront costs, no hourly fees, no financial risk to you or your family.
Yes. Wisconsin law allows surviving spouses, dependent children (through a guardian), parents, and estate administrators to pursue wrongful death claims against negligent third parties. These claims recover funeral and burial expenses, loss of financial support, loss of guidance and companionship, and the pain of losing a loved one, and are separate from workers’ compensation death benefits.
Employer and insurance company tactics often include blaming the injured worker, disputing the severity of the injury, or citing pre-existing conditions. These are strategies designed to reduce your payout; they aren’t accurate assessments of liability. We investigate independently, gather OSHA evidence, and counter these tactics with facts.
This is common on construction sites in Green Bay. We identify all parties (general contractor, subcontractor, property owner, or equipment manufacturer) whose negligence contributed to the accident, then coordinate workers’ compensation and third-party claims simultaneously to maximize total recovery.
Workers’ compensation death benefits provide important support, but they do not replace the full financial contribution your loved one would have made over a lifetime. They also don’t compensate for grief, loss of companionship, or pain and suffering. A wrongful death claim pursued alongside workers’ comp benefits is often the only way to achieve full financial security for surviving dependents.
Our track record speaks for itself: we’ve recovered millions for injured workers, including a $7.9 million settlement for a client whose initial offer was just $300,000. When insurance companies try to lowball your claim, we fight back.
You and your family deserve full accountability. Talk to Brian Hodgkiss Injury Lawyers today and find out what your workers’ compensation case is worth. Contact us or call today for a free case evaluation. Bank on Brian!