Scranton is a city of short blocks and active sidewalks, where people frequently walk between neighborhoods, busier corridors, and workplaces. That means pedestrian injuries often involve common local patterns:
- Turning and yielding disputes at intersections where drivers accelerate through gaps in traffic.
- Low-visibility conditions during fall/winter storms, early sunsets, and darker evenings.
- Construction zones and lane shifts that change sightlines and force pedestrians closer to travel lanes.
- Crosswalk confusion when drivers treat a marked area as optional instead of predictable.
In Pennsylvania, the outcome usually turns on what can be proven about fault and causation—and that depends heavily on timing, witness statements, and the physical scene.


