In suburban areas like Airmont, many pedestrian injuries occur during routine travel—not only at major intersections. Common patterns we see include:
- Crossings near busier traffic corridors where drivers are focused on turning, merging, or looking for gaps in traffic.
- Late-day and early-morning visibility issues (sun glare, wet pavement, and darker conditions) that affect whether a driver could reasonably stop.
- Sidewalk gaps and curb ramps that force pedestrians to step into roadway space more than they expect.
- School and shift-change timing when traffic density increases and driver attention becomes fragmented.
These cases often turn on a narrow set of facts: where the pedestrian was at the key moment, what the driver was doing (and when they should have seen you), and whether the driver had enough time and distance to avoid the collision.


