Residents may be exposed at locations that don’t always “look dangerous,” including:
- Commercial and industrial sites tied to logistics, construction, and maintenance activity in the region
- Workplaces where cleaning products, solvents, adhesives, fuels, or industrial chemicals are used and ventilation is inconsistent
- Homes and neighborhoods where moisture intrusion can lead to hidden mold growth, and remediation decisions affect indoor air quality
- Community-adjacent environments, where odors, dust, or runoff concerns raise questions about air and water contamination
In practice, the hardest part is that exposure may not be obvious at first. By the time symptoms become clear—respiratory issues, skin problems, neurological complaints, fatigue, or other long-term effects—evidence can be harder to obtain.


