Residents often report herbicide contact in ways that don’t look dramatic at first—but can still be legally important when a pattern and documentation line up.
- Property and yard maintenance: Using weed control products at home, applying concentrate, or mowing/clearing vegetation shortly after treatment.
- Agriculture and land work: Handling herbicides on farms, participating in spraying/seasonal weed control, or working around fields where applications are routine.
- Landscaping and groundskeeping: Regular exposure when crews maintain lots, parks, or outdoor facilities in and around Neosho.
- Secondhand exposure: Residue carried on work clothes, boots, gloves, tools, or equipment—common when household members share the same spaces after jobsite use.
If your diagnosis came after years of repeated contact, or after a specific period of intensive exposure, your attorney will focus on building a timeline that matches your medical story.


