Johnstown has a mix of busy downtown corridors, nearby residential streets, and areas where people walk to reach work, school, or transit. Pedestrian collisions often happen in predictable “real life” moments—like crossing near a stop, walking along a roadside where visibility changes with hills or landscaping, or navigating intersections where traffic patterns are affected by commuting schedules.
A key issue we see locally: insurers may argue that “it was dark,” “the pedestrian should have been more visible,” or that the driver simply couldn’t react in time. The strength of your case often depends on whether the evidence can show what the driver should have seen and what they had time to do.


