In Farmington, many pedestrian injuries occur around predictable “high foot-traffic” moments:
- Busy commuting corridors where drivers juggle traffic flow and turning movements
- Downtown-style sidewalks and crossings near retail and services where drivers may not expect a pedestrian to step into a path
- School and shift-change periods when visibility and attention are stretched
- Evening and weekend activity when lighting drops and distractions rise
Even when the driver “seems” at fault, insurers frequently try to narrow the story: they may claim the pedestrian entered unsafely, argue speed was reasonable, or suggest injuries are unrelated. In practice, these cases turn on what can be proven—timing, distance, what the driver could see, and what happened immediately before impact.


