Many Newberry cases don’t follow a “headline” pattern. Instead, exposure often comes through everyday settings where people are working near chemicals, handling products, or living near industrial activity. You might be dealing with:
- Construction, maintenance, and trades work: fumes or skin/eye exposure during painting, cleaning, flooring work, or solvent use.
- Workplace incidents: leaks, spills, or breakdowns involving cleaners, degreasers, adhesives, fuels, or other industrial materials.
- Residential and property-related exposure: unsafe use of pesticides, mold remediation chemicals, or improper ventilation during repairs.
- Events and public-facing environments: exposure risk can increase when cleaning products, sanitizers, or other chemicals are used at high volume with inadequate safety controls.
In each situation, the real dispute is usually the same: Was the chemical exposure significant enough to cause your injuries, and who had a duty to prevent it?


