Port Townsend isn’t a large city, but pedestrian activity is constant—commuters walking between neighborhoods, visitors exploring historic streets, and people using sidewalks and crosswalks near shopping and waterfront areas. That mix can affect how fault arguments develop.
Common local issues we investigate include:
- Seasonal tourism and unfamiliar drivers who may not notice pedestrian patterns or signage.
- Low-light conditions during fall and winter evenings, when glare, shadows, and poor visibility can become central to the dispute.
- Construction and road work that can shift traffic lanes, affect sightlines, or change normal pedestrian routing.
- Narrow roadway segments and turning movements where drivers may need to yield but claim they couldn’t see the pedestrian in time.
These facts matter because Washington insurance adjusters often focus on what “could have been seen” and when—so the timeline has to be supported by evidence, not just opinions.


