Addison is a high-traffic North Dallas suburb with a mix of corporate offices, retail corridors, and logistics activity. That environment shows up in forklift injury patterns, including:
- Delivery and loading conflicts: Forklifts move goods while trucks back in/out nearby. Miscommunication about lanes, timing, or “who has the right of way” can lead to pedestrian or worker strikes.
- Busy walkways near industrial entrances: Even when a worksite isn’t a “warehouse,” forklifts often operate near employee entrances, break areas, or designated crossing paths.
- Late-shift and peak-volume operations: When staffing is tight, supervision and spot-checks can drop—making training gaps or unsafe practices more likely to surface during busy hours.
- Weather and pavement conditions: Texas sun, rain, and debris can affect traction and visibility. Wet patches and clutter in loading areas can contribute to sudden stops or unintended contact.
If your injury happened in or around a loading dock, distribution route, or equipment-heavy work zone, your case will likely turn on how the site controlled movement and safety, not just what the forklift operator did in the moment.


