In a smaller metro area like Slidell, many pedestrian injuries happen in everyday, “routine” situations:
- Crossing near retail and office areas where foot traffic mixes with turn lanes and delivery vehicles.
- Commuter traffic patterns—drivers moving between neighborhoods and work routes may not expect pedestrians where they appear.
- Night and low-visibility incidents during cooler months when lighting and driver sightlines become issues.
- Construction and roadway changes that can affect markings, signage, and how clearly drivers can see people near the curb.
Those details matter because they influence whether a driver was able to avoid the crash and whether the scene created foreseeable danger.


