Homer Glen is built around a residential, “get-in-the-car” lifestyle. That means a lot of daily driving on multi-lane roads and connectors where trucks are common—especially during peak commuting hours and active construction seasons.
Local patterns we often see include:
- Rear-end and chain-reaction crashes when traffic compresses near major routes and busy intersections
- Unsafe lane changes by large vehicles where sightlines are limited and merging happens fast
- Wide-turn incidents near shopping areas, subdivisions, and arterial roads where trucks swing left to turn right
- Construction-related truck traffic (dump trucks, equipment haulers) that increases risk when zones shift or signage is confusing
These aren’t “rare scenarios.” They’re the kinds of real-world situations that can produce serious injuries for people in smaller vehicles.


