In Lancaster, bicycle injuries often involve predictable real-world situations:
- Commutes with mixed traffic on routes where drivers may be distracted by turns, lanes changes, or nearby traffic flow.
- Left-turn conflicts at intersections where a cyclist’s speed or position is misjudged.
- Dooring and lane intrusion in areas where parked vehicles and curb access are common.
- Construction and resurfacing zones that create temporary hazards—rough pavement, debris, or shifted lane lines.
- Night riding where lighting, reflective gear, or visibility becomes a central issue.
In these cases, insurers frequently try to narrow fault and reduce payouts by arguing the cyclist was speeding, riding unpredictably, or that the injury is unrelated to the crash.
Your job isn’t to “win” the argument right away. Your job is to preserve the information that later proves what happened—and how it connects to your medical condition.


