In a smaller community like Livingston, it’s common for:
- Commute traffic to mix with cyclists along busy corridors and nearby roads.
- Daylight-and-visibility issues (dusk rides, sun glare, and last-minute lane changes) to become the center of fault arguments.
- Construction and roadway transitions to create confusing driving patterns—especially when lanes narrow or signage is unclear.
- Statements made soon after the crash to be used against you later, even when you’re still in pain or trying to make appointments.
Even when you believe you’re clearly right, insurers may argue that something else caused the crash—fatigue, speed, lane position, or “you should have avoided it.” Your job isn’t to win an argument; your job is to build a record that explains what happened and why the other side is legally responsible.


