In a community like Ivins, herbicide exposure can be tied to everyday life:
- Homeowners and renters who treat weeds along driveways, fences, and landscaping beds
- People maintaining properties for others (including seasonal help)
- Landscaping and grounds teams who apply chemicals at commercial locations and then return to surrounding neighborhoods
- Secondhand exposure from residue on work boots, tools, lawn equipment, or clothing
For many clients, the connection starts when a doctor identifies a serious condition and they begin asking whether prior chemical exposure could have played a role. That’s when legal evaluation becomes about more than “chemical exposure”—it’s about what happened locally, when it happened, and how it connects to your medical records.


