In a smaller community like Post Falls, many drivers assume incidents are “obvious” until evidence is reviewed. But pedestrian cases frequently hinge on details like:
- Sight lines (vehicles rounding turns, glare, late-day lighting)
- Crosswalk compliance (what the signal showed and whether a driver had a duty to yield)
- Lane positioning (where the vehicle was positioned before impact)
- Timing (whether the driver had enough time to react)
Tourism season, school schedules, and weekend activity can also increase pedestrian traffic—so more crashes occur around busy corridors where drivers are concentrating on traffic flow, not pedestrians.


