Chemical exposure claims don’t look the same for everyone. In Temple, we often see patterns tied to how people work, travel, and spend time around industrial and commercial activity.
**You may be dealing with a chemical exposure incident if: **
- You were exposed to fumes or irritants while working on or near construction/maintenance activities (including cleaning, coatings, degreasers, or solvents).
- Your symptoms began after using products at home or on a nearby property (strong cleaning chemicals, pool/spa chemicals, pest control applications, or poorly ventilated handling).
- You were in a shared work environment where ventilation, storage, or safety training wasn’t consistent—especially during shift changes or busy daytime hours.
- Your health changed after a facility event (maintenance, leak response, chemical delivery, or emergency shutdown) and the symptoms didn’t show up instantly.
- You were affected while commuting to or from a worksite and later realized the timeline doesn’t match “normal” seasonal illness.
Regardless of the setting, the practical question is the same: how do you connect exposure to injury in a way that stands up to Texas insurance and defense scrutiny?


