In small towns and surrounding areas, exposure stories often sound similar at first—“I used weed killer,” “I was around spraying,” “it seemed to happen all the time.” The difference between a claim that moves quickly and one that gets bogged down is usually documentation.
Right now, consider pulling together:
- Product evidence: photos of labels, the product name, concentration, or any remaining container information
- Timing evidence: approximate dates or seasons when applications occurred (spring/summer schedules often help)
- Exposure context: whether you handled the product, were nearby during application, or worked around treated property
- Work or property records: if you maintained yards, managed lots, cleaned up after spraying, or supported agricultural/maintenance tasks
Why this matters in Talladega: many people’s exposure happens across routine neighborhood and property maintenance, not a single dramatic incident. That means the “how” and “when” can be scattered unless you capture it early.


