Salisbury has a mix of downtown activity, suburban commuting routes, and frequent pedestrian movement near retail, schools, and transit stops. That combination creates patterns we often see in local cases:
- Turns across crosswalks and side streets when traffic is moving faster than pedestrians expect.
- Low-visibility conditions during Maryland’s winter mornings and evening glare—especially around intersections with limited sightlines.
- Construction and roadway changes that affect where people walk, how drivers approach intersections, and what is clearly visible.
- Visitor and seasonal foot traffic, particularly near areas where people may be unfamiliar with local streets and signals.
Those factors matter because they shape what evidence is critical—photos of sightlines, traffic-control details, and documentation of how your injuries affected daily life back home.


