Many pedestrian injuries here involve scenarios residents recognize:
- Commute-time crossings near high-traffic intersections where drivers are accelerating, turning, or merging.
- Construction and maintenance zones where lane lines, signage, or lighting are temporarily changed.
- Night and early-morning visibility issues—dark sidewalks, glare from headlights, and wet pavement after Lake Michigan-area weather.
- Bus-stop and retail-area foot traffic, where people step into the roadway to reach sidewalks or storefront entrances.
- Industrial workforce routes: employees walking between shifts may be crossing near areas where vehicles move differently than typical neighborhood traffic.
Those details matter because they shape what Indiana law and insurance adjusters look for: whether a driver had a clear opportunity to see and yield, and whether road conditions or traffic control contributed to the danger.


