When symptoms show up after a chemical incident—burning eyes, coughing, rashes, headaches, dizziness, numbness, or breathing trouble—the first priority is medical care. Urgent treatment matters because some chemical-related injuries can worsen over time.
Then, in Albany, act quickly to preserve the evidence that often disappears in the days after an incident:
- Get copies of any incident reports, safety logs, and treatment visit notes.
- Write down the timeline while it’s fresh: when the exposure occurred, what tasks you were doing, what chemicals were involved, and what protective equipment was used.
- Save communications (texts/emails) about the event, especially anything that mentions cleanup, fumes, spills, or “temporary” safety measures.
If you’re trying to decide whether to contact counsel, think of it this way: the sooner your claim is organized, the better prepared you are when insurers ask for proof of exposure, causation, and damages.


