Calls we receive from the Seagoville area commonly involve one of these real-life situations:
- Yard and fence-line spraying: homeowners or family members using weed-control products repeatedly across seasons.
- Secondhand exposure at home: residue carried on work boots, gloves, or clothing after landscaping or maintenance work.
- Worksite exposure: people employed in groundskeeping, facility maintenance, or agricultural-adjacent labor where herbicides are applied as part of regular operations.
- “It looked harmless” assumptions: users who followed label instructions but later discovered the product could still be tied to ongoing symptoms or a new diagnosis.
In Texas, these cases can become complicated quickly because evidence is time-sensitive—product labels fade, memories shift, and medical records arrive at different speeds.


