Aberdeen’s day-to-day rhythm can make smoke exposure more complicated to document and prove:
- Short commutes, repeated exposure: Even when you’re not “near the fire,” recurring smoky days can mean you’re exposed on your drive to work, at shift start/end, and while running errands.
- Indoor air you can’t fully control: Many workplaces and public-facing buildings rely on HVAC settings that may not be optimized during smoke events.
- Community events and visitors: Summer and fall activity can increase the number of people affected at the same time—important when timelines and symptom patterns matter.
Because smoke liability often turns on what could reasonably have been done to reduce exposure during known smoke conditions, your case needs a careful, Washington-focused approach.


