In practice, many Norwich-area claims hinge on a few recurring issues:
- Intersection and turning conflicts on common roadway corridors, where timing and lane position become central.
- Dooring and lane intrusion situations involving vehicles that stop or park along the roadway.
- Construction and maintenance changes—temporary signage, detours, uneven surfaces, or debris that drivers may claim they couldn’t reasonably notice.
- Low-light visibility problems during commuting season when cyclists are more likely to be harder to see.
- Shared-road disputes where insurers argue the cyclist “should have anticipated” the hazard.
Even when the other side suggests you “contributed” to the crash, Connecticut law can still allow recovery depending on how fault is allocated. The key is building a record that shows what the other party did (or failed to do) and how that conduct led to your harm.


