Olathe sits in a corridor where commuter traffic and commercial trucking overlap. That mix can be unforgiving:
- Stop-and-go congestion meets heavy vehicles. Rear-end and “accordion” crashes often happen when traffic slows suddenly near interchanges or during rush hour.
- High-speed merges and lane changes. Trucks need more time and space; passenger vehicles often don’t realize how limited a tractor-trailer’s braking and visibility can be.
- Local delivery patterns. Box trucks and fleet vehicles moving between job sites, stores, and neighborhoods create more turning and backing risks than pure highway travel.
When a crash involves a semi, dump truck, delivery truck, or work fleet vehicle, the injuries are frequently more severe—not because you did anything wrong, but because the physics are different.


