In Parker neighborhoods and nearby rural-adjacent areas, exposure often comes from everyday situations rather than factory settings. Common scenarios include:
- Property maintenance and landscaping: using weed killers on driveways, fence lines, or garden edges, then later handling the treated area.
- Mowing treated grass: mowing shortly after application or during ongoing weed control schedules.
- Secondhand exposure at home: residue transferred on work boots, clothing, tools, or lawn equipment.
- Community and HOA-managed spraying: when herbicide is applied on shared spaces, sidewalks, or retention areas and families spend time nearby.
- Working in outdoor roles: landscaping crews, groundskeeping, facility maintenance, or agricultural-adjacent work where herbicides are part of the job.
Because these situations vary, the strongest cases usually focus on how, where, and when the product was used (or how residue may have reached you) alongside medical documentation.


