Pedestrian injuries in small-city Georgia often involve predictable—but still disputable—patterns:
- Commuter traffic and shift changes. When people are walking to work, to a school, or to a busier corridor during morning/evening hours, drivers may be moving quickly and not expecting pedestrians at that exact moment.
- Roadside hazards near commercial areas. Sidewalk gaps, curb cuts, and areas with limited lighting can affect what a driver “should have seen” and when.
- Turning crashes at intersections. Many disputes come down to timing—whether a driver saw you in time to stop, and whether a turning movement was made safely.
- Weather and visibility. Fog, rain, and glare can reduce reaction time. If it was dark or visibility was limited, that fact matters for evaluating reasonableness.
Even when you believe the other driver was clearly wrong, insurance teams still look for reasons to reduce payment. Your first goal is to protect the facts.


