People typically reach out after one of these situations:
- Residential landscaping exposure: Repeated weed control around homes, shared walls, driveways, or backyards—sometimes handled by homeowners, sometimes by hired maintenance.
- School and commuting-adjacent risk: Herbicide application near sidewalks, medians, or school grounds can lead to residue on shoes, clothing, or hands.
- Apartment and HOA maintenance: Shared grounds work can mean exposure before a tenant even realizes it—then symptoms appear later.
- Secondhand contact: A family member who handled herbicides brings residue home on work clothes or tools.
A lawyer’s job is to take your real-world exposure story and connect it to verifiable facts: what was used, when it was applied, where contact likely occurred, and what medical professionals say about the diagnosis.


