In and around Charleston, many exposure stories don’t involve a single dramatic incident. Instead, they often come from repeating routines tied to the way people live and maintain properties.
Common situations we see include:
- Residential lawn and driveway treatment before events, seasonal landscaping, or property cleanups
- Work involving groundskeeping, landscaping, or property maintenance near schools, churches, and commercial lots
- Community/HOA or municipal-adjacent grounds work where herbicide application occurs on schedules
- Secondary exposure—when a household member applies weed killer and others are around afterward
Why this matters legally: the more consistent your timeline is (dates, locations, application patterns), the faster an attorney can evaluate likely exposure and focus the claim on the facts that can be supported.


