Lansing is a growing community where cyclists share the road with commuters, delivery traffic, and drivers heading to work and school. That mix can create recurring risk patterns, including:
- Late turns and yielding errors at intersections where drivers expect faster-moving traffic.
- Close passing on multi-lane roads, especially when drivers misjudge distance.
- Construction and changing traffic patterns, where lane markings, signage, and detours can be hard to interpret.
- Night and low-visibility rides, when headlight glare and darker bike visibility lead to delayed recognition.
Those details matter because Kansas insurance evaluations typically turn on whether the evidence supports a clear timeline of what each driver did—and whether that conduct created an unreasonable risk.


