Many bicycle collisions aren’t dramatic “headline” events—they’re everyday moments: a left turn onto a side street, a last-second lane change, a vehicle that doesn’t leave enough room, or a driver who doesn’t realize a cyclist is already in the roadway.
In a town like Grenada, these crashes often involve:
- Commute timing (morning and evening traffic around work routes and schools)
- Road-sharing expectations (drivers who may not anticipate cyclists at certain intersections)
- Side-street and driveway movement (vehicles entering traffic without the same lookout a cyclist expects)
- Limited traffic signals/lighting in some areas (which can affect visibility and how fault is argued)
Because of that, the “story” of the crash—what happened first, what signals were used, where each vehicle was positioned—can become the entire dispute. Your lawyer’s job is to build that story using evidence, not just recollection.


