In a smaller community like Greensburg, herbicide exposure often shows up through everyday routines rather than obvious “industrial” settings. Common scenarios include:
- Residential lawn and garden care: repeated application on property, sidewalks, driveways, or fence lines.
- Mowing or yard work after spraying: handling grass or brush that was treated shortly before.
- Agricultural-adjacent exposure: living or working near fields where herbicides are applied during certain seasons.
- Secondhand residue: contamination brought home on work boots, clothing, tools, or trailers.
- Employment-related exposure: landscaping, groundskeeping, facility maintenance, or outdoor services where herbicides were part of the job.
Because exposure patterns can differ from person to person, a strong claim usually starts with a clear timeline: when the product was used, how it was used, and what symptoms or diagnoses followed.


