A major crash on Sagehill Drive disrupted Wednesday morning traffic at 9:34 AM in Harris County. The collision occurred on a residential street that's seen an unusual spike in incidents over the past month.
According to LTA real-time incident data, this location has recorded 18 crashes in the past 30 days—17 of them major. That's the kind of frequency you'd expect on a busy freeway, not a neighborhood road. Over the past 90 days, the corridor's logged 51 total incidents. The pattern's consistent: crashes happen here at varied times throughout the day, though the single busiest hour is between 5 and 6 PM.
The specific details of this morning's crash—injury status, vehicle count, and lane closure information—are still being compiled. Responding officers handled the scene under clear skies and 87-degree temperatures.
Looking at the broader picture, state crash records from the Texas Department of Transportation show this stretch has recorded 202 crashes since January 2020. The most common factor cited by investigating officers was "Failed To Yield Right Of Way - Stop Sign," which appeared in 28 of those crashes. That contributing factor pattern suggests right-of-way violations are a recurring issue at this location.
Fridays have been the highest-incident day here over the past 90 days, with 8 crashes recorded on that day alone. But Wednesday mornings aren't immune—crashes occur across all days and times.
For perspective on Harris County's broader traffic picture: the county logged 18,842 incidents in the past 30 days, including 13 fatals. This single location accounts for a meaningful share of that volume.
The road should be reopened shortly as crews finish their work. If you're in the area, allow extra time while the incident clears.
This report was produced by LTA's editor-designed production system under the executive editorial direction of Dennis R. Mundy, Executive Editor. The system combines our proprietary data pipeline with AI-assisted drafting to deliver verified incident coverage to LTA's editorial standards.