Many Northport residents contact counsel after realizing their exposure wasn’t a one-time event. Common patterns include:
- Residential yard and landscaping use: repeated applications on home properties, rental homes, or HOA-managed areas.
- Landscaping and grounds work: workers applying herbicides, trimming treated vegetation afterward, or handling equipment that still has residue.
- Secondhand exposure: family members exposed through contaminated work clothes, boots, gloves, or shared storage spaces.
- Property maintenance near treated areas: mowing, clearing brush, or working around recently sprayed land near driveways, fence lines, or wooded boundaries.
- Seasonal routines: exposure tied to spring and summer maintenance schedules—when symptoms may be discovered months or years later.
These details matter legally because claims usually turn on a believable timeline: what product was involved, how the exposure happened, and how the illness developed.


