In suburban communities like Peachtree Corners, exposure doesn’t always occur in one obvious location. People are frequently moving between:
- Home and work (commuting during shifting air quality)
- Schools/daycare and after-school activities
- Businesses with HVAC systems (filtering, maintenance schedules, or ventilation settings)
- Longer indoor stretches during Georgia heat (doors/windows closed, air recirculated)
That “between places” pattern matters. Your legal strategy should track when symptoms began, what changed that week (air quality, time outdoors, HVAC use), and which environments were most likely to have increased exposure. When claims are built only on the general idea of “smoke season,” insurers often argue the timeline doesn’t connect to your medical records.


