Many Harrison households use weed control for driveways, pathways, and property edges—often during busy seasons when people are juggling work schedules. In other cases, exposure happens through landscaping services, property maintenance, or neighbors’ application practices.
Because exposure facts are often the hardest part to reconstruct later, your goal early on is to build a timeline that reflects real life:
- Where you were when exposure likely occurred (home perimeter, shared property areas, nearby application)
- When it happened (month/year is often a strong start)
- What was used (product name/label if available)
- How contact occurred (spraying, mowing after application, handling containers, track-in residue on shoes)
If your records are incomplete, that doesn’t automatically end the case. It means you may need to be strategic about what can be recreated using other documentation—something an attorney can help you plan.


