Many clients in the Helotes area describe a familiar pattern:
- Frequent yard or fence-line spraying—sometimes using concentrate products, sometimes with “spot treatment” that still involves repeated exposure.
- Working around treated grass or brush shortly after application (mowing, trimming, or clearing weeds).
- Secondhand exposure, such as residue on work clothes carried home from a landscaping or maintenance job.
- Community-adjacent spraying—properties near larger tracts, common-area landscaping, or crews maintaining greenspaces.
When symptoms persist or a doctor diagnoses a serious condition, the question becomes urgent: What happened, when did it happen, and what proof can connect exposure to the illness? That’s where local, organized case-building matters.


