Glendora residents often travel through a mix of neighborhood streets and busier corridors where drivers may be balancing commuting schedules, turning movements, and changing traffic patterns. Pedestrian crashes commonly happen:
- During daylight commutes when visibility is good but drivers are focused on timing (turning lanes, late turns across crosswalks)
- Near shopping and service areas where foot traffic increases and drivers may not anticipate pedestrians at the curb
- At crossings near intersections where stopping distances and sightlines decide whether a driver could have avoided impact
- Around construction or lane changes where drivers may be distracted by signage, shifted lanes, or reduced sightlines
Even if you feel the driver “clearly” caused the collision, insurers often challenge details—where you entered the roadway, how fast the vehicle was moving, or whether the driver had a reasonable opportunity to stop. Your job early is to preserve the facts.


