Clients from Lebanon and surrounding towns in the Upper Valley frequently describe herbicide exposure that doesn’t look like a “farm accident.” Instead, the circumstances tend to be routine and spread out over time, such as:
- Home and yard use: mixing/applying weed killer on driveways, walkways, or garden edges, then mowing or gardening before residue fully dissipates.
- Seasonal property care: hiring local contractors or doing recurring maintenance work where herbicide application is part of the routine.
- Worksite exposure: roles involving groundskeeping, facility maintenance, landscaping, or agricultural-adjacent work where spraying may occur off-hours or in phases.
- Secondhand contact: family members or roommates exposed through work clothing, boots, gloves, or equipment.
These details matter because liability depends on more than “I used weed killer.” The case must connect the product exposure pathway to the specific illness using credible records.


