Fairview is close to major commuting corridors, so pedestrian activity often mixes with higher-volume traffic patterns. In many cases, the driver is not “just passing through”—they’re navigating intersections, making turns, watching for gaps, and responding to traffic flow.
That mix can create predictable dispute points, such as:
- Late visibility when a pedestrian is partially obscured by vehicles at the curb line or on turning approaches.
- Turning conflicts at intersections where drivers argue they saw you in time, or that you entered the roadway too suddenly.
- Crosswalk confusion when signals, markings, or lighting conditions don’t match what the driver later claims.
- Construction and road changes common to commuter routes, where altered lanes or temporary signage affect sightlines.
Because the story is often contested from day one, early documentation and a clear liability theory matter.


