Local exposure stories often look different than you might expect.
- Home or HOA landscaping: Many Tomball properties rely on scheduled applications for driveways, fences, and common areas.
- Roadside and drainage work: Commuters and residents near maintenance corridors may notice applications around ditches, culverts, and right-of-way edges.
- Family take-home exposure: If someone in the household works in lawn care, landscaping, or pest control, clothing and equipment contamination can become part of the family’s exposure history.
- Long-latency diagnoses: A diagnosis can surface years after exposure, which makes timelines harder to reconstruct—especially if product labels and application records are no longer available.
In these situations, the legal work often starts by turning your story into a clear “exposure-to-diagnosis” timeline that an attorney and medical experts can evaluate.


