Many people in the Elkhorn area don’t think of herbicides as “workplace chemicals” if they were used at home. But exposure can happen through:
- Residential yard and garden spraying (including repeat seasonal applications)
- Mowing or trimming after treatment, when residue can transfer to skin or clothing
- Landscaping and groundskeeping roles tied to local commercial properties, churches, parks, and schools
- Secondhand exposure—for example, when a household member brings residue home on work boots, uniforms, or tools
- Rural-adjacent property contact where spraying may be part of nearby land management
When someone later receives a serious diagnosis, the timeline can be hard to reconstruct. A local attorney can help organize the facts you already know—and identify what documentation may still be available.


