Elon is a smaller community, but it sits in the middle of steady regional movement—commuters, campus traffic, and trucks cutting across the county to reach distribution routes and job sites. That mix creates a few patterns we see repeatedly:
- Speed changes and merging pressure as traffic transitions between local roads and higher-speed routes
- Rear-end and lane-change impacts when passenger vehicles and large trucks share short gaps
- Turning and backing incidents with box trucks and work trucks near shopping areas, neighborhoods, and multi-entrance properties
- Morning and late-afternoon congestion when local commuting overlaps with delivery schedules
What makes these cases harder isn’t just the size of the truck. It’s that the “story” of the crash often lives in company records—dispatch timing, driver hours, maintenance history, and onboard data—not just the police report.


