Many herbicide injury cases in North Georgia don’t start with a factory job—they start with everyday exposure patterns common to suburban living:
- Lawn and garden maintenance: homeowners applying weed control, re-treating problem areas, or mowing treated grass soon after spraying.
- Landscaping and grounds services: workers applying herbicides and carrying residue on gloves, boots, or equipment.
- Neighborhood drift: treated areas near home—driveways, fence lines, common properties, or adjacent lots—where overspray can land on sidewalks and patios.
- Secondhand exposure: family members exposed when work clothing is taken into the home or stored in shared spaces.
Because these scenarios often involve different timelines and different kinds of documentation, your exposure story needs to be built carefully. In Cumming, that frequently means collecting proof tied to real-world use: product details, application dates, and the way your environment looked and behaved after treatment.


