Wooster is a community with a mix of residential neighborhoods, small businesses, and industrial or maintenance work tied to commuting routes and regional deliveries. That environment can create exposure scenarios that are common in Ohio towns like ours:
- Maintenance and repair work: welding, cleaning, degreasing, or ventilation-related problems that expose workers and nearby residents to fumes.
- Cleaning and remediation: mold treatment, pest control, basement or crawlspace cleanups, and chemical-based restoration after leaks.
- Contractor activities at properties: service providers using products on schedules that don’t always match safety best practices.
- Retail and service settings: strong solvents, disinfectants, or industrial-strength cleaners used improperly or without adequate ventilation.
- Storage and handling issues: missing labels, outdated containers, or unsafe transfer practices during deliveries and storage.
In many cases, people don’t realize what they inhaled or touched until symptoms appear—burning skin, coughing, chest tightness, headaches, dizziness, or worsening breathing problems.


