Most people don’t begin with legal jargon—they begin with a diagnosis, a growing list of symptoms, and a nagging question: “Could my exposure have contributed?”
In Yelm and Thurston County-area communities, common exposure stories include:
- Property and yard care: using or storing weed killer, applying it during weekend maintenance, or handling treated areas soon after spraying.
- Work exposure: landscaping, groundskeeping, utility or right-of-way maintenance, farm or ag-adjacent roles, and facility maintenance.
- Secondhand exposure: residue brought home on work boots, gloves, jackets, or equipment.
- Near-spraying exposure: living or working near places where vegetation is regularly treated.
A local attorney can help organize these facts into a timeline that makes sense to medical providers and insurers.


