In a community like Nogales, exposure questions often come up after a diagnosis—then families start comparing notes about where herbicides were used.
Common local scenarios include:
- Yard and landscaping routines: homeowners, renters, or property managers using weed killer for driveways, fences, and vacant-lot vegetation control.
- Worksite exposure: people who maintain commercial properties, manage irrigation areas, or perform groundskeeping where herbicides are applied seasonally.
- Secondhand contact: residue carried on clothing, gloves, tools, or work boots—especially when household members share laundry and storage spaces.
- Seasonal timing confusion: symptoms may show up months or years later, making it hard to remember the exact product, dates, and application methods.
A lawyer’s role is to turn those memories into a clear record—so your claim is evaluated based on documented exposure and medical support, not assumptions.


