Lebanon is a place where people commute, work onsite, and spend time both indoors and outdoors—sometimes all in the same day. During major wildfire smoke periods, we often hear similar stories:
- Morning-to-evening exposure: symptoms begin after leaving home, worsening after time outdoors, then intensifying inside when smoke infiltrates buildings.
- School and childcare impacts: children and teens with asthma or allergies may have flare-ups around pickup/drop-off windows, field days, or after outdoor activities.
- Workplace ventilation issues: employees working in facilities with HVAC or filtration limitations may experience prolonged exposure even when they’re “indoors.”
- Visitors and seasonal activity: visitors staying locally—or residents returning from travel—can bring exposure timelines that don’t immediately match “when the smoke started,” complicating causation unless records are handled correctly.
A claim can be affected by these timing realities. The goal is to build a clear timeline that matches Lebanon’s day-to-day routines and the way smoke tends to move through indoor and outdoor spaces.


