Roma families often experience smoke during predictable daily routines—before the heat of the day, during school pickup, or while working outdoors or in facilities with older ventilation systems. Because exposure can happen in short bursts (for example, driving through smoky stretches or running errands outdoors), your case usually turns on when symptoms started and how long they persisted.
Common Roma scenarios we see include:
- Outdoor shifts at landscaping, construction, ranch support, or other labor where breaks depend on air conditions.
- Commutes and errands when visibility drops and you’re still traveling through smoke.
- Indoor exposure when smoke enters through HVAC returns, open doors, or filtration that isn’t designed for wildfire particulate.
- Family caregiving where symptoms escalate at night or during sleep when air circulation changes.
A strong claim doesn’t rely on “it felt smoky.” It connects your symptom timeline to the smoke period using medical records and air-quality information.


