In smaller Idaho communities like Jerome, it’s common for exposure to happen through everyday routines—yard care, farm-adjacent properties, landscaping around businesses, or maintenance work connected to irrigation and roadside vegetation. The problem is that exposure details often fade fast:
- product containers get tossed after the season
- recollections become less specific once symptoms start months or years later
- co-workers, neighbors, and contractors move on
- medical records may arrive in pieces or with inconsistent naming
When you’re trying to pursue a claim, the “missing piece” is rarely the diagnosis—it’s usually the exposure timeline and the product details.


