Seguin residents run into exposure risks in real-world ways—through industrial and commercial work, maintenance and remodeling, and indoor air problems that don’t show up until health symptoms flare.
Common local patterns we see include:
- Industrial and shop-floor exposures: chemical handling, solvent-type fumes, dust, coatings, and ventilation breakdowns that worsen during shifts or equipment downtime.
- Construction and renovation contamination: problems from demolition, drywall dust, insulation work, or incomplete containment during projects in homes and commercial spaces.
- Indoor air complaints that escalate: lingering odors, respiratory irritation, headaches, or symptom patterns that appear after HVAC changes, water intrusion, or delayed remediation.
- “It started after…” symptom timelines: people often know the approximate window (a particular week, task, or event), but they’re missing the evidence that insurance companies need.
In these situations, the challenge isn’t only proving injury—it’s proving what exposure pathway is most likely and who had a duty to prevent or correct the risk.


