Greenfield is a mix of residential neighborhoods, downtown activity, and frequent commuting routes. Pedestrian injuries often happen in predictable-but-complicated situations, such as:
- Daytime crosswalks and turning lanes near busier intersections, where visibility can be affected by parked vehicles, seasonal lighting, or turning speed.
- Shoulder and edge-of-road walking in lower-traffic stretches, where drivers may claim they “couldn’t see” you in time.
- Weather and road condition factors during Massachusetts winters and shoulder seasons—ice, slush, reduced stopping distance, and glare at dawn/dusk.
- Construction and utility work that changes lanes, shifts signage, or limits sightlines.
These factors matter because they shape fault arguments. In Massachusetts, insurance companies may try to frame the crash as unavoidable or suggest the pedestrian was outside a “reasonable” path—even when the driver still had a duty to keep a proper lookout.


