In New London, exposure often comes up in ways that sound small at first—but matter legally when paired with medical documentation.
Consider whether your situation could match one of these patterns:
- Landscaping and property maintenance: Groundskeeping at commercial sites, seasonal property work, or routine vegetation control near sidewalks, entryways, and building edges.
- Neighborhood and residential lawn care: Use of weed killer on home lawns and shared property borders—especially where overspray, residue, or repeated treatments occurred over time.
- Work gear and “carry-home” exposure: Yard work or maintenance duties where clothing, gloves, boots, or tools retained residue.
- Coastal and storm-season cleanup: After storms or seasonal overgrowth, some people and contractors re-treat vegetation quickly. If that overlaps with your symptoms and diagnosis timeline, it can become important evidence.
A lawyer’s job isn’t to assume causation—it’s to map where exposure likely occurred, what products were used, and how that aligns with your medical records.


