Workers’ Compensation Lawyer in Brookfield, WI
Workers’ Compensation Lawyer in Brookfield, WI
If a job injury has put you out of work in Brookfield, Wisconsin law is supposed to cover your treatment and replace part of the wages you lose while you recover. Getting the system to actually do that is another matter. The clock starts running the day you are hurt, the insurance company builds its file before it decides anything, and when a denial comes, it arrives with a reason written to favor the insurer — not a full explanation of what you are owed. Understanding how the process works, and what the law puts on your side, is often what separates a claim that pays from one that goes nowhere.
Mays Law Office represents injured workers throughout Wisconsin from our office in Middleton. We handle the filings, the disputes, and the hearings so you can concentrate on getting better. Call 608-305-4518 for a free consultation before you accept a denial or sign anything the insurance company sends you.
Workers’ Compensation Attorneys in Brookfield, WI
Attorney Lisa Pierobon Mays concentrates her practice on Wisconsin workers’ compensation. She was admitted to the Wisconsin bar in 1995 and earned her J.D. from Thomas M. Cooley Law School cum laude. From 2001 to 2025 she served on the Wisconsin Association of Workers’ Compensation Attorneys Board of Directors for District 7 — a long-standing role in the state’s workers’ compensation bar.
That background matters because a workers’ compensation claim is a legal proceeding, not just a form you fill out. Whether your wage benefits are figured correctly, whether a lasting impairment is rated fairly, and whether a denial survives all come down to details the insurer has no duty to explain to you. We start asking those questions at the first call.
When to Call a Workers’ Comp Lawyer
Call us right away if any of these describe your situation:
- Your claim was denied, or the insurer says your injury didn’t happen at work.
- Wage-replacement checks stopped, are late, or are smaller than they should be.
- The insurer wants you seen by its own doctor for an “independent” medical examination.
- You have a permanent restriction and can’t go back to your old job.
- You were pushed to settle before anyone knows the full extent of your injury.
- Your condition built up over time — a repetitive-strain or exposure problem — and the insurer disputes that work caused it.
- You’re being pressured to treat with a doctor you didn’t choose.
What Workers’ Compensation Pays in Wisconsin
Wisconsin workers’ compensation replaces lost wages and pays for treatment. The benefit types break down like this:
- Temporary Total Disability (TTD). Paid while you heal and cannot work. Rate is two-thirds of your average weekly wage. The 2025 maximum is $1,254 per week. For injuries on or after January 1, 2026, it is $1,299 per week.
- Temporary Partial Disability (TPD). For lighter or reduced-hour work that pays less. It covers a portion of the wage difference.
- Permanent Partial Disability (PPD). For lasting impairment. Scheduled injuries — arms, hands, legs, feet, vision, hearing — pay a percentage of set statutory weeks. Unscheduled injuries — back, spine, head — use a whole-person or earning-capacity measure against a 1,000-week base. The maximum PPD rate is $446 per week in 2025. It rises to $454 per week effective April 1, 2026.
- Permanent Total Disability (PTD). For an injury that ends all gainful work. It pays at the TTD rate for life.
- Death benefits. Available to eligible dependents, generally capped at four times the worker’s average annual wage. Burial costs are covered up to $10,000.
- Medical expenses. Reasonable, necessary treatment is fully covered. Mileage to appointments is reimbursed at 51 cents per mile.
Every figure above is set by statute. Some rates change by injury year.
Deadlines That Can Make or Break Your Claim
Deadlines drive workers’ compensation claims. Miss one and you can lose rights. Here is the timeline:
- Report the injury: 30 days. Tell your employer within 30 days. A late report is not automatically fatal. A late report can be excused only if the employer knew — or reasonably should have known — of the injury, and cannot show it was significantly misled or disadvantaged by the delay.
- Statute of limitations — traumatic injury: 6 years. This covers a single-event injury occurring on or after March 2, 2016. It runs from the injury or the last indemnity payment.
- Statute of limitations — occupational disease: 12 years. This covers conditions that build over time. Each indemnity payment resets the clock.
- Waiting period: 3 days (Sundays excluded unless you normally work them). Wage benefits start after it runs. The first three days are unpaid at first.
- Retroactive rule: 7 days. If disability lasts beyond seven calendar days, those first three days get paid back.
- First payment. DWD’s performance standard expects insurers to pay 80 percent of first indemnity payments within 14 days of injury or last day worked; statutory late-payment penalties apply separately.
The basic flow is short. You report the injury. The insurer investigates. It pays or it denies. A dispute goes to a hearing.
Workers’ Comp in Brookfield: Local Reality
Brookfield is a commercial edge city in Waukesha County, and its economy shapes the injuries that turn up in the workers’ compensation system. The city is built around a heavy concentration of corporate offices, high-end retail, and healthcare services, with a large share of residents also working in manufacturing. That service-sector mix produces its own distinct injury profile — one that looks different from a factory town but is no less real.
The office and administrative workforce that fills Brookfield’s business parks faces the slow-building injuries of desk-bound work: carpal tunnel syndrome and other repetitive-stress conditions that develop over years of keyboard, mouse, and paperwork. These are fully compensable occupational diseases under Wisconsin law, even though nothing “happened” on a single day. The city’s acute-care and specialty-clinic workforce carries the physical hazards of patient care — lifting, repositioning, and transferring patients, which drive the back, neck, and joint strains that lead Wisconsin’s workers’ compensation claims — along with exposure risks that come with clinical settings. Retail workers at the city’s large shopping centers are exposed to repetitive-motion injuries, overexertion from stocking and inventory, and slips, trips, and falls in high-traffic space. And the residents who work in manufacturing face the standard industrial risks of machinery, repetitive motion, and heavy lifting. A single-event trauma such as a fall and a gradual condition such as carpal tunnel are handled differently under the statute, and knowing which one you have shapes how the claim is built.
If a Brookfield worker’s claim is denied or disputed, it moves into Wisconsin’s formal hearing system — and that system changed at the start of 2026. Since January 1, 2026, workers’ compensation hearings are handled by the Worker’s Compensation Division within the Department of Workforce Development, which brought claim administration and adjudication back under one agency. The DWD holds hearings at seven locations across the state, and venue is assigned for the injured worker’s convenience — generally the office nearest the worker’s home. For Brookfield workers, whose city sits in Waukesha County, that is the Milwaukee hearing office. Before any formal hearing, an administrative law judge will typically try to resolve the dispute through mediation.
How We Fight Denied Claims
Insurers deny claims for many reasons. The most common grounds:
- The injury did not arise out of employment.
- The injury was directly caused by violating the employer’s drug or alcohol policy.
- A willful failure to use a required safety device or follow a reasonable safety rule — if the employer proves it, wage-replacement benefits (not medical coverage) drop 15 percent, capped at $15,000.
Denied? A written denial must state the reason. It must also explain your hearing right. The path forward:
- File Form WKC-7. This Hearing Application starts your challenge. It also pauses the statute of limitations while your case is pending.
- Mediation. The Worker’s Compensation Division at DWD runs it (hearings moved there January 1, 2026). Administrative law judges try to settle early.
- Hearing. If mediation fails, a formal hearing follows. Witnesses testify under oath and face cross-examination.
- LIRC appeal: 21 days. Petition the Labor and Industry Review Commission within 21 days. A LIRC ruling can then reach circuit court.
Two rights hold throughout. You may pick your own treating doctor (subject to the statute’s limits on the number of free choices). The insurer may order an Independent Medical Examination — but it pays your wages and mileage and gives you the report. These are rights the law grants. They are not a promise of any outcome.
That last point is where cases are frequently won or lost. An insurer’s “independent” examiner may rate your impairment lower than your own doctor, or tie your condition to something other than work. When your treating doctor and the insurer’s doctor disagree, the dispute is resolved through the hearing process — and building that record correctly is exactly what our Wisconsin workers’ compensation practice is built to do.
Brookfield Workers’ Comp Questions We Hear Most
What happens if my claim is denied?
If the insurer denies liability, it must give you written notice of the specific reason and tell you that you may request a hearing. You challenge the denial by filing a Hearing Application (Form WKC-7). The case then moves through the Worker’s Compensation Division at DWD (which has handled hearings since January 1, 2026), where an administrative law judge may mediate it and, if no settlement is reached, hold a formal hearing. An unfavorable decision can be appealed to the Labor and Industry Review Commission within 21 days.
Can I choose my own doctor?
Yes. Wisconsin law gives an injured worker the right to choose a treating physician licensed in the state, and that doctor’s findings and restrictions form the basis for what you are paid. The insurer may separately require you to attend an Independent Medical Examination with a doctor of its choosing — but it must reimburse your wages and mileage for that exam and give you a copy of the report.
Can my employer refuse to take me back after a claim?
Wisconsin gives injured workers a specific protection here. Under Wis. Stat. § 102.35(3), if an employer unreasonably refuses to rehire an injured worker when suitable work is available within their physical and mental limitations, the employer — not the insurer — can be ordered to pay the worker’s lost wages during the refusal, up to a maximum of one year’s wages.
How much does workers’ compensation pay?
For time missed while you heal, Temporary Total Disability pays two-thirds of your average weekly wage, up to a maximum that varies by injury year — $1,254 per week for 2025 injuries and $1,299 per week for injuries on or after January 1, 2026. Permanent Partial Disability has its own maximum: $446 per week in 2025, rising to $454 per week effective April 1, 2026. Reasonable and necessary medical care is covered in full, with mileage reimbursed at 51 cents per mile.
Where would my Brookfield hearing be held?
Brookfield sits in Waukesha County, so a disputed claim for a Brookfield worker is generally heard at the state’s Milwaukee hearing office. The DWD holds hearings at seven locations across Wisconsin, and venue is assigned for the injured worker’s convenience — usually the office nearest your home. Since January 1, 2026, these hearings are run by the Worker’s Compensation Division at the Department of Workforce Development, and an administrative law judge will typically attempt mediation before any formal hearing.
Get a Free Consultation
Se Habla Español — Call 608-305-4518
Whether your claim was just denied or you’re still waiting on the first check, the sooner you understand your rights, the stronger your position. Call 608-305-4518 or contact Mays Law Office online for a free consultation. We represent injured workers across Wisconsin, including Brookfield and Waukesha County, from our office at Mays Law Office, LLC — 6405 Century Ave STE 103, Middleton, WI 53562.
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