In Easton, exposure claims frequently begin after an incident at a workplace, a nearby facility, or a location where hazardous materials are used—then the fight turns into one question: What can be proven, and when?
You’ll typically need evidence in three categories:
- Exposure proof (what substance, when, and where)
- Medical proof (what injuries or diagnoses resulted)
- Causation proof (why the exposure is medically connected)
The practical challenge is that critical documentation can be hard to obtain later—especially if incident reports, vendor paperwork, monitoring logs, or maintenance records are not preserved immediately.


