Cases in Milwaukee often turn on how exposure happened in real-world settings—places where people spend time, commute, or maintain property.
Common situations include:
- Suburban and residential lawn care: Yard spraying, weed control routines, and mowing/handling vegetation after treatment.
- Apartment and shared-property landscaping: Groundskeeping practices around apartment complexes, including seasonal weed control.
- Secondhand exposure: Residue carried on clothing, boots, or tools used after herbicide application.
- Industrial and maintenance work: Facility maintenance, loading dock areas, and grounds work where weed control may be performed on a schedule.
- Property proximity in dense neighborhoods: Residents living near treated areas (for example, along corridors where vegetation is controlled) may need help reconstructing what was applied and when.
Because these circumstances can be easy to misremember—especially when you’re juggling appointments and work—an attorney’s job is often to build a clear, defensible timeline.


