A major crash on Central Green Boulevard brought a residential Sunday morning to a halt around 7:32 AM. Responding officers worked the scene as traffic backed up through the area, with the incident marking the latest in a spike of collisions at this location.
The crash occurred in a neighborhood corridor that's seen considerable traffic disruption in recent weeks. According to LTA data, Central Green Boulevard has experienced 8 incidents over the past 30 days, with 4 classified as major. Over the past 12 months, the location has logged 29 total incidents, 9 of them major — a pattern worth noting for anyone who regularly uses this route.
State crash records provide additional context. Since January 2020, TxDOT CRIS data shows 88 crashes within about a quarter-mile of this location, with no fatalities recorded. Contributing factors as recorded by investigating officers show that "Failed To Yield Right Of Way - Stop Sign" accounts for 29 of those crashes, suggesting driver behavior at intersections remains a persistent issue in this corridor.
Weather conditions at the time of the crash were clear — few clouds and 83 degrees — so visibility and road surface weren't factors in this incident. That means driver actions, judgment, or mechanical failure likely played the primary role.
The 30-day incident count at this address underscores why local commuters should stay alert when traveling through residential corridors during off-peak hours. Even on a Sunday morning, when traffic volumes are typically lower, crashes still happen. If you use Central Green Boulevard regularly, conditions may still be slow as crews clear the scene and traffic flow restores.
As of publication time, specifics on lane closures, vehicle count, and injury status were not available. Check real-time traffic apps for current conditions if you're heading through the area. The incident should clear within normal timeframes for a major residential crash, though exact clearance times depend on how long investigation and cleanup take.
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.