Moses Lake is a commuter and work hub, and pedestrian incidents often involve predictable local patterns:
- Crossings near high-traffic corridors where drivers are watching for traffic flow, not people on foot.
- School schedules and shift changes that concentrate foot traffic during early mornings and afternoons.
- Daytime visibility issues—glare, dusty conditions, and glare from wet pavement—that can affect what drivers say they saw.
- Construction and road work that changes normal routes, signage, and sight lines.
- Visitors and event crowds during peak seasons, when unfamiliar drivers may not be as alert to local crossing habits.
Those details matter because Washington claims typically turn on whether the driver acted reasonably under the circumstances—and whether the evidence supports that timeline.


