In Gillette, a lot of people spend long hours commuting between job sites, maintaining equipment, or working in environments where ventilation and filtration can be inconsistent. If you were exposed during a run of smoky days—then symptoms followed or worsened over the next days—you may face the same problem many residents do: insurers try to treat it like a general “seasonal” inconvenience.
What’s different in a claim is showing a defensible link between:
- Your timeline (when smoke conditions were present and when symptoms began)
- Your medical record (what clinicians documented and how they described triggers)
- The setting (indoor air quality, HVAC use, and workplace conditions)
When smoke is part of a pattern—noticeable every time air quality drops—claims often become more credible because the exposure isn’t isolated.


