In Eagle Mountain’s suburban neighborhoods, exposure stories often come from day-to-day routines, such as:
- Homeowners and renters treating driveways, landscaping beds, and turf along property edges
- Landscaping or maintenance crews applying products as part of scheduled services
- Secondary exposure when application occurs close to homes, parks, or shared community landscaping
- Older product containers that were used years ago and later discarded, making identification difficult
Because these exposures are frequently spread across time and people, the case often turns on whether the evidence can be organized into a believable timeline—before deadlines and document gaps make that harder.


