Many Katy residents don’t realize they may have a claim until years after the exposure—often after a medical event, new symptoms, or a specialist’s diagnosis. When that happens, the biggest challenge isn’t that evidence doesn’t exist; it’s that it’s scattered.
A good case file usually follows a timeline like this:
- When exposure likely happened (yard work, landscaping services, school/community grounds, HOA/neighbor applications)
- Where exposure occurred (home exterior, driveway edges, fence lines, shared green spaces)
- How exposure happened (direct use, handling concentrates, mowing treated areas, secondary exposure in the home)
- When symptoms began and when you received diagnosis or key pathology results
In Katy, that timeline can be complicated by typical household routines—seasonal yard care, multiple products used over time, and changes in who handled landscaping.
Fast settlement guidance usually means you don’t wait until everything is perfect. Instead, you build an organized record early so counsel can evaluate the strongest parts of your story and identify what’s missing.


