In and around Suffern, exposure concerns often surface in familiar places:
- Suburban housing and older building stock: mold after moisture intrusion, problems tied to building materials, or indoor air issues that worsen room-by-room.
- Home improvement and remediation work: renovation dust, improper handling of chemicals, or incomplete cleanup after leaks.
- Local commutes and event-heavy seasons: symptoms can appear after time spent in enclosed spaces—carpools, offices, schools, and event venues—making it harder to connect the dots.
- Industrial and logistics work nearby: warehouse and manufacturing environments can involve solvents, fuels, cleaning chemicals, or fumes when safety controls fail.
What matters legally is often the same thing that matters medically: connecting the exposure timeline to diagnoses. In New York, that requires careful documentation and a strategy that doesn’t rely on assumptions.


