In Burbank, many exposure stories share a pattern: lawn and property maintenance done at homes, rental units, or nearby landscaping services. Some residents also become exposed through community and neighborhood contexts—shared yard work, treatment of surrounding lots, or repeated contact with products stored and used around the home.
Because exposure details can fade, your first job is to create a defensible timeline. Not a “perfect story”—a consistent one supported by records.
Start with these questions:
- When did your symptoms first appear, and what did the first medical visits document?
- Where did the weed killer use happen (home yard, rental property, workplace, or a nearby application area)?
- Who handled application—was it you, a family member, a landscaping provider, or a maintenance worker?
- Do you have any proof of the product type used (photos, labels, receipts, or even emails/texts about what was purchased)?
In Illinois practice, the more clearly you can connect exposure timing to medical findings, the easier it is for counsel to evaluate causation and present your case in a way insurers take seriously.


