Franklin’s mix of daily commuting routes, suburban neighborhoods, and areas with higher foot traffic creates predictable risk patterns.
Many pedestrian collisions happen when drivers are:
- Navigating through higher-traffic stretches where attention can drift during turns or lane changes.
- Approaching intersections where crosswalk visibility may be affected by weather, lighting, or traffic flow.
- Moving through construction or roadway changes where drivers expect different lane alignment or signage than usual.
In practice, these conditions influence the evidence you’ll need—like turning-signal timing, witness vantage points, and the condition of the roadway and markings at the time of the crash.


