In Texas, a claim generally turns on proof of three things: (1) who may have had a duty to reduce preventable exposure, (2) how your exposure occurred during the smoke event(s), and (3) how your medical issues connect to that exposure.
In La Porte, exposure often shows up through real-life patterns:
- Workplace and shift schedules: People returning from early morning or night shifts when smoke was heaviest.
- Building air handling issues: HVAC settings, filtration upgrades that weren’t maintained, or barriers that didn’t keep smoke out.
- Commuting windows: Symptoms starting after time on the road, then lingering when you get home.
- Family caregiving: Parents or caregivers noticing flare-ups in children, older relatives, or household members with respiratory conditions.
A lawyer’s job is to translate those day-to-day realities into evidence that insurers can’t dismiss as “just seasonal allergies.”


