In Colleyville, many residents spend time on the move—driving to work, dropping kids off at school, walking neighborhoods, running errands, or exercising outdoors. During smoke events, exposure can happen in predictable places:
- Morning commutes when smoke is thickest and visibility drops
- Outdoor workouts and field activities when air quality is already degraded
- Time spent in parking lots and near roadways where people are still “on the go” rather than sheltering
- Home-to-work transitions where people assume symptoms are “seasonal allergies”
What matters legally is the connection between when you were exposed and when your symptoms started or escalated, supported by medical documentation.


