Local cases frequently involve scenarios tied to construction/maintenance work, agricultural and industrial sites, service businesses, and seasonal activity. People may not realize they’ve been exposed until symptoms show up—sometimes days later.
Common patterns we see include:
- Workplace exposures from cleaning products, solvents, pesticides, adhesives, degreasers, or welding/respiratory irritants.
- Site incidents where a release, leak, or improper storage creates fumes or contact hazards.
- After-hours or event-related exposure (including vendors or contractors) where chemicals are used to prepare, sanitize, or maintain spaces.
- Secondary exposure—when family members or coworkers are affected after contaminated clothing, equipment, or surfaces bring chemicals home.
If your symptoms don’t match what you were told at the time, that doesn’t mean your claim is weak. It means the facts must be organized and explained in a way that holds up under California injury claim standards.


