Mount Kisco is a commuter-focused community, and many rides start and end around common daily patterns—school drop-offs, shopping trips, medical appointments, and quick pickups along roadways where traffic can move unpredictably.
After an Uber or Lyft incident, disputes often begin because:
- Multiple parties may claim different versions of “what happened next” (driver, rider, other motorists, witnesses).
- Rideshare timing matters—whether the vehicle was actively on a trip, staging nearby, or just pulling into position can affect coverage.
- Pedestrian and curbside injuries are frequently misunderstood—people outside the vehicle may be treated as “optional” rather than as accident victims, even when they were lawfully present.
- Insurance adjusters may push quick statements while you’re still trying to understand the extent of your injuries.
When you’ve been hurt on a road where traffic patterns and signal timing can be critical, you need a claim handled with local reality in mind—not guesswork.


