In and around Hanover, exposure concerns commonly come from scenarios like:
- Home and yard maintenance: using weed killer on driveways, borders, or lawn edges, sometimes without realizing how residue can remain on boots, gloves, or tools.
- Landscaping and property services: groundskeeping, mowing, and trimming after an application—when spray drift or treated vegetation is involved.
- Shared household exposure: when one person’s work clothes or work gear brings residue indoors.
- Local property corridors: vegetation control along roadsides and rights-of-way where applications are part of routine maintenance.
These details matter because liability often depends on showing how the product was used, where exposure occurred, and when it aligns with the development of symptoms and diagnosis.


