In and around Firestone, many people are exposed through everyday routines—not just deliberate spraying.
Common local scenarios include:
- Landscaping and lawn care: Concentrate handling, mixing, and application on residential properties or HOA-managed areas.
- Mowing after treatment: Yard work can stir residue that settles on grass, shrubs, and garden beds.
- Work near treated areas: Groundskeeping, facility maintenance, and contractors working along trails, drainage areas, or property perimeters.
- Take-home residue: Clothing, boots, tools, or gloves carried from a job site into a garage or home.
- Nearby spraying: Drift or overspray near neighborhoods, schools, or community open space.
When a diagnosis arrives, people often feel stunned and stuck—because they’re trying to connect medical facts to real-world exposure that happened months or years earlier. A local attorney can help you organize that connection in a way that holds up.


