In East Grand Rapids, many collisions happen in predictable “real life” moments:
- Commutes and school-day traffic: Drivers may be distracted, late, or turning quickly—especially near intersections with heavy morning and afternoon volume.
- Neighborhood-to-boulevard travel: Cyclists often take smoother residential routes, but they still have to cross or merge onto faster roads where timing and lane expectations matter.
- Weekend recreation and group rides: More cyclists on the road can increase the chance of “I didn’t see them” disputes, especially around turning movements.
- Roadwork and changing traffic patterns: Construction detours, temporary signage, and uneven pavement can contribute to crashes—then insurers argue the cyclist should have anticipated the condition.
Because the setting is specific, your evidence strategy needs to be too. The goal isn’t just to show you fell or got hit—it’s to explain how the crash happened and why the other party’s actions (or failure to act) created an unreasonable risk.


