In smaller Indiana communities, herbicide exposure can happen in ways people don’t immediately connect to illness:
- Neighborhood landscaping and routine lawn care around homes, rentals, and shared properties
- Roadside and easement spraying that residents notice near commutes and school routes
- Seasonal work—lawn services, groundskeeping, farms, and maintenance roles where products are handled in rotation
- Secondary exposure within households (shared equipment, residue on clothing/boots, or care for family members)
Many claims stall not because the illness is real, but because the exposure story is incomplete. A fast settlement path usually starts with tightening the connection between where exposure likely occurred and what medical findings came later.


