Many calls begin in a familiar way: a new cancer diagnosis, a neuropathy or symptom pattern that won’t improve, or a physician suggesting that exposure history be taken seriously.
In Newton, exposure concerns often show up in practical, local scenarios such as:
- Home and acreage weed control: applying herbicide along fence lines, driveways, or fields of grass that get treated repeatedly each season.
- Secondhand exposure during cleanup: mowing, pulling weeds, or removing treated vegetation before the product fully dries or after residue settles.
- Work-related exposure: jobs involving groundskeeping, facility maintenance, agriculture support, trucking/yard work around treated areas, or equipment handling where residue can transfer.
- Roadside and property-adjacent spraying: exposure from nearby applications on neighboring land or along routes that affect residential areas and commute corridors.
If any of these sound like your situation, the next step is not guessing—it’s documenting.


