Many toxic exposure cases begin after something changes—new odors, worsening asthma/respiratory issues, rashes after time indoors, headaches during certain work shifts, or symptoms that appear after a renovation or maintenance event.
In Glendale, the pattern we see most often is exposure connected to:
- Indoor environments (older apartment buildings, mixed-use properties, schools, and workplaces)
- Construction and maintenance activity (drywall repairs, demolition, flooring replacement, waterproofing work)
- Shared ventilation and common areas (where problems can spread beyond one unit)
The difficulty is that delays are common. People may attribute symptoms to allergies, stress, or “getting sick,” while the underlying cause remains ongoing. By the time a connection is made, evidence may be incomplete—records get lost, air samples aren’t taken, and building conditions change.


