In the High Country, exposure concerns don’t always come from one obvious source. People commonly contact attorneys after a diagnosis when they realize patterns they hadn’t connected before, such as:
- Yard and landscaping maintenance around homes, cabins, and rental properties—especially where weed killer is applied seasonally.
- Worksite or grounds responsibilities for people employed in landscaping, facility maintenance, or property upkeep.
- Secondhand exposure from residue carried on work boots, clothing, or tools.
- Use near high-traffic community areas (schools, trails, public facilities, or busy corridors) where vegetation control is routine.
- Seasonal symptom timing—when health changes show up after a period of repeated application or mowing treated areas.
A local attorney’s job is to translate those real-life details into an organized claim: what product was used, when exposure likely occurred, and how medical findings fit the theory of causation.


