If you’re hurt and overwhelmed, a clear plan can protect your health—and your claim.
After a serious accident—whether it’s a crash on the Glenn Highway, a workplace incident, a slip on ice, or a dog bite—most people in the Mat-Su area are suddenly juggling medical appointments, missed paychecks, and pressure from insurance adjusters. The steps you take in the first hours, days, and weeks can make a major difference in both your recovery and your ability to pursue compensation.
Below is a straightforward, Alaska-focused checklist from Law Office of Jason Skala, LLC to help Knik-Fairview families and workers avoid common mistakes and preserve the facts that matter.
Why “the paperwork” matters as much as the injury
Personal injury claims are built on documentation: medical records, photos, witness names, incident reports, and proof of missed work. Insurance companies often decide what they will pay based on what can be proven—not just what happened.
Alaska deadlines: don’t assume you “have plenty of time”
Many Alaska personal injury cases have a two-year filing deadline under AS 09.10.070, and Alaska also uses pure comparative fault (your recovery can be reduced by your share of fault). (nolo.com)
The Knik-Fairview Personal Injury Checklist (Save This)
Step 1: Get medical care first (even if you “feel okay”)
Some injuries—concussions, traumatic brain injuries, soft-tissue damage, internal injuries—can show up later. Prompt treatment protects your health and creates a clear medical record connecting symptoms to the accident.
Step 2: Document the scene (photos + context)
If you can safely do so: photograph vehicles, license plates, skid marks, lighting, weather, ice/snow conditions, property hazards, visible injuries, and any warning signs (or lack of them). Then write down what happened while it’s fresh.
Step 3: Get names of witnesses (and one key detail)
Ask witnesses for their name, phone number, and one sentence about what they saw. Independent witnesses can be crucial when stories change later.
Step 4: Don’t “explain” the accident to an insurance adjuster on day one
You can report basic facts, but avoid recorded statements or guessing about speed, distance, or fault—especially before you have your medical evaluation and the full incident report. If you don’t know, it’s okay to say you don’t know yet.
Step 5: Track your “damages” in real time
Start a simple folder (paper or digital) for: medical bills, pharmacy receipts, mileage to appointments, wage-loss notes, work restrictions, and how the injury affects your daily life (sleep, childcare, lifting, driving, pain flares).
Step 6: Talk to a personal injury attorney early—before evidence disappears
Surveillance video can be overwritten, vehicles can be repaired, snow/ice conditions change quickly, and witness memories fade. An early legal review helps protect critical evidence and prevents unforced errors.
Did you know? Quick Alaska facts that surprise injury victims
Common accident types we see across Alaska (and what evidence helps most)
Car and truck accidents
Slip and fall / icy walkway injuries
Dog bites
Oil field / industrial injuries
Wrongful death
Quick comparison table: what to collect after different accidents
Local angle: Knik-Fairview and Mat-Su realities that affect injury claims
People in Knik-Fairview often commute toward Wasilla, Palmer, and Anchorage for work, medical care, and family obligations—meaning accidents can involve multiple jurisdictions, overlapping insurance policies, and fast-changing road conditions.
Seasonal risk factors matter here: limited daylight, snow/ice buildup, freeze-thaw cycles that create black ice, and heavier truck traffic on key routes. When a collision or fall happens, that “snapshot in time” can disappear within hours—so documenting conditions early is especially important.
If your injury requires specialized care in Anchorage, keep a mileage log and appointment schedule from the start. Those practical details can help show the real-world burden of an injury—not just the diagnosis code.