In a suburb like Broomfield, many people have spent years building stable routines—work schedules, school schedules, family responsibilities, and medical appointments. When symptoms finally prompt questions about exposure history, the challenge is often practical: memories fade, addresses are forgotten, and records are scattered across providers.
That’s why the first phase of a strong case is usually about reconstructing a defensible timeline:
- where the claimant lived or worked during relevant periods
- what water sources were associated with those locations
- when symptoms began, worsened, or were formally diagnosed
A well-organized timeline matters because it helps your attorney connect the dots between where you were and what the medical records say happened next.


