Harrison residents may encounter toxic exposure risks in ways that aren’t always obvious at first. Some of the most frequent scenarios we see involve:
- Home moisture and mold conditions after plumbing issues, roof leaks, or persistent humidity—often showing up as respiratory irritation, headaches, or worsening allergies.
- Contaminated or improperly maintained water systems, including problems tied to testing failures, delayed repairs, or inadequate filtration and monitoring.
- Pesticide and chemical use around residential properties, such as lawn treatment products used improperly or without adequate notice/containment.
- Worksite chemical exposure for people who commute to industrial, maintenance, construction, or warehouse environments—where ventilation, labeling, or protective equipment may be inadequate.
- Fume exposure from nearby operations (including periodic releases) that can affect nearby neighborhoods, especially when conditions limit ventilation inside homes.
Because suburban exposure can be intermittent—noticed after a specific day, odor, spill, or maintenance event—residents often delay seeking help. That delay can make evidence harder to connect to symptoms later.


