In suburban business corridors and industrial parks around Dublin, OH, forklifts and pedestrians frequently share space—loading zones, cross-aisles, dock entrances, and temporary staging areas. Many injuries come down to how traffic moved at that moment:
- Someone entered a lane without clearance or barriers
- A pedestrian route wasn’t clearly marked or enforced
- A forklift was operating while visibility was restricted (pallet stacks, dock walls, lighting)
- Operations shifted during a busy delivery window, increasing “rush” behavior
Unlike car accidents, workplace incidents can involve multiple movement patterns—forklifts, pallet jacks, carts, dock doors, and sometimes contractors. In practice, that means the most important evidence is often tied to the site layout and the sequence of shifts, not just the impact itself.


