Meriden sits in the middle of major Connecticut routes, and that matters. When tractor-trailers, box trucks, and delivery fleets move between the Hartford and New Haven areas, collisions often happen in predictable local patterns:
- High-speed merges and lane changes near the I-91/I-691 connection, where drivers are sorting out exits and traffic stacks up quickly.
- Stop-and-go congestion that turns a moment of inattention into a rear-end impact with outsized force.
- Local delivery pressure on arterial roads—tight schedules, frequent stops, and drivers unfamiliar with Meriden’s intersections.
- Work-zone and detour confusion during seasonal road projects, when lane shifts and narrowed shoulders leave little room for correction.
The “local” part isn’t just geography—it’s how the crash happened, what evidence exists, and which agencies and insurers will be involved.


