Clearwater is a city where people walk for errands, transit, and beach access—so pedestrians share the road with heavy turning traffic, rideshare pick-ups, and seasonal visitors. That mix can create predictable but complicated crash patterns, such as:
- Late-day glare and bright skies that reduce a driver’s ability to see a pedestrian in time to stop
- Turning-lane collisions where a driver claims they “looked” but didn’t yield soon enough
- Crosswalk disputes tied to what the pedestrian signal showed, how long it stayed lit, and whether the driver made a prohibited turn
- Construction and roadway re-striping that alters sightlines and confuses drivers about lane position and pedestrian crossings
Because these factors are often visible in the scene, early investigation matters. The sooner evidence is preserved, the easier it is to reconstruct what Clearwater drivers and pedestrians could realistically see and do.


