Lebanon sits in a corridor where commuting patterns and freight traffic overlap. Many residents drive daily for work, school, errands, and appointments, often using routes that see a steady mix of passenger vehicles and commercial trucks traveling through or stopping locally. That mix matters because truck crashes frequently happen during:
- Morning and evening commute windows, when traffic compresses and following distances shrink
- Merges and lane changes near interchanges and busy connectors
- Stop-and-go slowdowns where a loaded truck needs more distance than drivers expect
- Local delivery runs (box trucks, flatbeds, service trucks) making frequent turns and stops
In practical terms: collisions here are often not “high-speed interstate-only” events. Many claims involve everyday local driving—rear-end impacts, unsafe lane changes, turning conflicts, and chain-reaction crashes.


