Kenmore’s mix of residential streets, commercial corridors, and commuter traffic creates predictable risk patterns. Many pedestrian injuries occur when:
- Drivers are turning across a crosswalk after waiting for a gap in traffic.
- Pedestrians are sharing the roadway near busier lanes, especially when sidewalks narrow, end, or are interrupted.
- Bad visibility plays a role—early sunsets, winter glare, heavy rain, and snow-packed edges that affect where a driver can see.
- Construction and traffic control changes how people walk and how drivers react to shifting lanes.
In real cases, disputes often come down to timing: whether the driver had sufficient time and distance to stop, and whether the pedestrian was where they were legally expected to be.


