Many Concord cases involve exposure during:
- Warehouse, maintenance, and logistics work where chemicals are stored, transferred, or used as part of routine cleaning or equipment service
- Contractor remediation after leaks, spills, or odor complaints (including situations where the chemical used isn’t clearly identified to workers or residents)
- Residential and apartment incidents tied to improper handling of cleaning chemicals, pest control products, or remediation materials
- Follow-up exposure after the initial incident—such as when ventilation is inadequate, protective gear is missing, or contaminated materials aren’t properly contained
The symptoms can be immediate (burns, coughing, nausea) or delayed (ongoing breathing issues, skin flare-ups, headaches, neurological-type complaints). Either way, the legal question is the same: what substance, how exposure happened, and who failed to take reasonable steps to prevent harm.


