Selma is a community where commuting, school-area traffic patterns, and frequent cross-street crossings can create high-risk moments—especially when drivers are focused on timing traffic signals or turning through busier intersections.
Common Selma-style scenarios include:
- Turning-maneuver collisions where a driver cuts across a crosswalk or fails to yield at the last second.
- “I didn’t see them” claims—often tied to lighting, lane position, or whether the pedestrian was partially obscured by another vehicle.
- Construction and changing traffic flow, where detours, altered lanes, or temporary signage make it harder for drivers to anticipate pedestrians.
- Evening and low-visibility impacts, when glare, dusk lighting, or street brightness reduces reaction time.
These cases often turn on short timelines: whether the driver had time and distance to stop, and whether the pedestrian’s location was visible enough to trigger a duty to yield.


