Elizabeth roads often mean mixed traffic—passenger vehicles, delivery vans, and larger trucks sharing the same lanes and turning spaces. Many bicycle crashes locally involve:
- Turning vehicles cutting across a cyclist’s path
- Failure to yield at controlled intersections
- Lane changes where a driver didn’t see a bicycle
- Construction-related lane shifts that change where cyclists are expected to ride
- Poor visibility conditions (darkness, glare, weather) that reduce reaction time
Because these patterns repeat, insurers commonly push arguments like “you were going too fast,” “you were in the wrong position,” or “the driver couldn’t avoid it.” The difference between a weak and a strong claim is whether your evidence counters those assumptions.


