In a smaller community like Cortland, exposure histories often look different than people expect. Instead of a single workplace incident, concerns may involve a pattern:
- Helping with property maintenance during peak growing seasons
- Working for landscapers, grounds crews, or agricultural employers
- Using store-bought weed killers at home (or maintaining properties where others apply them)
- Handling or mowing areas after treatment where residue may remain on equipment
- Living near properties where herbicides are applied seasonally
When symptoms persist—or when a doctor links your condition to potential chemical exposure—many families realize they need more than medical answers. They need a legal plan for how to document exposure, connect it to medical records, and pursue accountability.


