Payson is a community where people regularly travel on foot for errands, school drop-offs, commuting, and everyday errands—often on roads with changing traffic patterns throughout the day.
In pedestrian crashes here, disputes often come down to details like:
- Visibility at dawn/dusk on Utah roads (glare and long shadows)
- Turner-and-yielder arguments at intersections where drivers claim they “didn’t see” until it was too late
- Crosswalk and signal confusion—especially when pedestrians step off at the edge of a marked area
- Weather-related stopping distance (rain, snow, slush, or slick driveways near curb lines)
- Construction and lane changes that can block sightlines or alter how drivers approach a crossing
These facts matter because insurers frequently try to shift blame onto the pedestrian or minimize the seriousness of injuries—especially when the crash happened “quickly” or without a clear witness.


