Many Mauldin pedestrian injuries occur in predictable “everyday” settings:
- Commute corridors and turn lanes where drivers are watching for traffic flow and may not fully expect a pedestrian at the moment they step into the roadway.
- Crossings near shopping areas where sidewalks end, curb lines narrow, or visibility is blocked by parked vehicles, signage, or landscaping.
- Night and early-morning visibility issues—headlights glare, street lighting varies, and drivers may not see a pedestrian in time to brake safely.
- Construction and lane changes that shift where people walk and how drivers approach intersections.
In these situations, the question usually isn’t just “who was careless?” It’s whether the driver acted reasonably given what they could see, what the roadway demanded, and how quickly they could stop.


