In a smaller community like Superior, people frequently interact with the same outdoor spaces—homes near seasonal spraying, properties maintained by contractors, and workplaces that coordinate groundskeeping during warmer months. That means exposure often comes down to when something was applied, how it was used, and what you were near.
A strong claim typically depends on documenting:
- Dates and seasons when herbicides were applied nearby
- Where exposure likely occurred (home yards, nearby commercial property, workplace grounds)
- Whether exposure was direct (mixing/applying/handling) or indirect (residue on clothing, tools, or work gear)
Even if you’re confident you were exposed, a lawyer’s job is to translate your experience into a legally useful record—one that can survive scrutiny.


