Selma residents may be affected by chemical hazards in ways that look ordinary at first: routine maintenance, cleaning and remediation work, or repairs after plumbing and supply-line problems. The exposure might occur in a workplace setting, during contractor work, or in a residential environment where ventilation, labeling, and protective equipment weren’t handled correctly.
In Texas, disputes often turn on documentation—what was known at the time, what safety steps were required, and what was actually followed. That’s why a strong chemical exposure case depends on more than a diagnosis. It requires collecting the right records early and preserving them before they disappear.


