Every case is different, but Greensboro-area patterns often look like this:
- Landscaping and grounds work: employees who spray, apply, or service commercial properties around shopping centers, apartment complexes, or facilities.
- Residential property maintenance: homeowners or contractors who apply weed control to driveways, fence lines, or wooded edges near homes.
- Mowing treated areas: people who routinely mow after a spray application—sometimes without realizing residue can be disturbed and tracked.
- Secondhand exposure: family members or roommates exposed through work clothing, boots, gloves, tool handles, or vehicle interiors.
- Parks, trails, and event venues: staff involved in seasonal groundskeeping for public spaces and local event preparations.
In legal terms, these scenarios matter because they help define what “exposure” means in your specific life—when it happened, how it happened, and what documentation supports it.


