Dyersburg traffic patterns and road design can create recurring risk situations for pedestrians, such as:
- Turning and merging near intersections where drivers are watching cross traffic more than pedestrians.
- Low-light visibility during early mornings and darker evenings, especially in areas with inconsistent lighting.
- Construction and detours that change lanes, shift crosswalk lines, and affect sight lines.
- Workday commuting congestion around routes people use to get to job sites, schools, and services.
- Local event and weekend movement where drivers may be unfamiliar with pedestrian activity and slower to react.
In these scenarios, the driver’s attention—what they could see, when they could stop, and whether they followed Tennessee traffic rules—becomes central. Even when you feel certain about what happened, insurance companies may still dispute timing, visibility, or whether the driver acted reasonably.


