In smaller communities, many pedestrian incidents happen in familiar, repeat locations—places people walk every day and assume drivers will notice them. Common Gloversville patterns include:
- Commuter routes and shift changes around early mornings and evenings when visibility is poor
- Side streets connecting to busier roads, where drivers may speed up between intersections
- Busy seasonal foot traffic, including visitors who aren’t as familiar with local road patterns
- Construction zones and temporary lane changes that reduce sightlines for drivers and pedestrians
- Road lighting gaps in darker months, especially during rain or snow
Those details matter because they influence what a reasonable driver should have seen and done—and whether the other side tries to argue the crash was “unavoidable.”


