In King City, exposure isn’t limited to “when the sky looks scary.” Many people experience harm during everyday routines:
- Morning commutes and evening return trips when smoke lingers near roadways and valleys
- Outdoor work schedules (including seasonal and agricultural-adjacent labor) when smoke levels rise without much warning
- Indoor exposure through HVAC and ventilation—common in homes and workplaces where filters aren’t sized, maintained, or updated for smoke events
- Visitors and seasonal traffic that can increase the number of people affected in schools, retail, and community spaces during major smoke weeks
If your symptoms began after a documented smoke period, and they didn’t follow your usual pattern, that timing matters. The goal is to connect your health impacts to the exposure in a way that holds up under California insurance practices.


