People in Redmond commonly raise the same concerns:
- Home and property use: repeated weed control on driveways, fence lines, and landscaping during spring and summer.
- Outdoor work exposure: groundskeeping, landscaping, ranching-related duties, facility maintenance, and other jobs with regular vegetation management.
- Shared-contact exposure: residue tracked on clothing or gloves after work, or herbicides applied near where family members play or walk.
- Delayed symptoms: a diagnosis that arrives months or years after exposure, making it feel like the timing doesn’t “match.”
A key point for Oregon residents: a claim is not about panic—it’s about evidence. The more clearly you can document when exposure likely happened and what products were used, the easier it is for an attorney to evaluate causation and potential liability.


