In El Segundo, many people are exposed through ordinary routines—workplace maintenance, cleaning products, warehouse operations, lab or industrial processes, or building systems that aren’t properly ventilated. Others experience exposure connected to the places they pass through every day: offices, shared facilities, multi-tenant buildings, and construction-adjacent environments.
A common pattern we see is this:
- symptoms start subtly (headaches, skin irritation, shortness of breath, fatigue)
- the person keeps working or driving through the next days/weeks
- the link to a specific chemical or environment only becomes clearer after multiple medical visits
Delays are understandable. But from a legal standpoint, delays can make it harder to connect the dots—especially when records are incomplete or hazards are cleaned up quickly.


