In smaller communities and fast-moving worksites, it’s common for key evidence to disappear quickly—photos get deleted, incident logs get “revised,” and the person best positioned to explain what happened is often busy handling operations.
In chemical exposure matters, the facts usually live in:
- safety data sheets and chemical inventories
- training logs and protective equipment policies
- maintenance/ventilation records
- incident reports and witness statements
- the timing of symptoms compared to the exposure event
A local attorney approach helps ensure those materials are requested and preserved early, rather than after the story has already hardened.


