In East Texas communities like Kilgore, herbicides can show up in everyday settings—think yard maintenance, property upkeep, roadside or easement spraying, and agricultural or landscaping work around town. For many people, exposure concerns don’t start with a legal question; they start after a diagnosis, a growing list of symptoms, or new medical advice that prompts them to look back.
Common Kilgore-related scenarios we see include:
- Home and yard use: repeated application or mowing/handling vegetation after spraying.
- Worksite exposure: landscaping, groundskeeping, facility maintenance, or farm/utility-adjacent work where herbicides are used seasonally.
- Secondhand exposure: residue on work boots, gloves, or clothing brought into the home.
- Nearby spraying: living or working near areas where vegetation is routinely treated.
The point isn’t to guess. It’s to build a clear exposure story that medical and legal teams can evaluate.


