Evanston is a dense, residential community with lots of shared spaces—front and back yards, shared driveways, older apartment buildings, and frequent landscaping services. In practice, that means exposure stories can be complicated:
- Landscapers and maintenance crews may apply herbicides on schedules that don’t match when symptoms later show up.
- Take-home exposure can occur when work clothes are brought into the home.
- Nearby application (along property lines, sidewalks, or common areas) can make it hard to identify exactly when exposure occurred.
Because illnesses can develop months or years after exposure, the early record you preserve—photos, invoices, treatment notes, and symptom history—often becomes the backbone of whether a settlement discussion can move quickly.


