Fitchburg is a suburban community with busy commuting corridors, frequent crosswalk use, and lots of everyday foot traffic—especially near shopping areas, school routes, and neighborhoods where people walk for errands.
That means pedestrian crashes often come from predictable “timing” problems, such as:
- Turning vehicles cutting across a pedestrian’s path near intersections
- Late braking or missed yield when someone is in a crosswalk or near a curb line
- Low-visibility driving during Wisconsin winter conditions (snow glare, dark mornings/evenings, slush)
- Construction and detours that change sightlines and confuse traffic patterns
- Distracted driving on routes where commuters are used to moving quickly
In these situations, the question isn’t just “who looks at fault.” It’s whether the driver had a clear opportunity to avoid the collision—and whether the scene supports your account.


