Jamestown residents typically run into exposure risks through residential properties, rural-adjacent landscaping, and local agricultural routines. In practice, that can mean:
- Homeowners treating lawns, gardens, or driveways and later discovering symptoms that don’t make sense medically
- People who handled weed control at farms or acreage, including seasonal work where product use was part of the job
- Family members exposed through household contact or secondary transfer (brought home on clothing/boots)
Because Jamestown communities are close-knit, witness accounts can be especially important—neighbors, co-workers, and family members often remember application habits, product names, and timing when records are incomplete.


