In and around Godfrey, herbicide exposure can be easy to overlook because it doesn’t always happen in one dramatic event. Instead, it often shows up as recurring, everyday contact:
- Backyard and property treatment: Residents may apply weed killer for driveways, fences, and landscape beds during warmer months.
- Landscaping and groundskeeping: Local crews may spray around homes, parks, or commercial properties, creating residue on surfaces people walk on.
- Worksite exposure: People employed in outdoor maintenance, construction support, or agricultural-adjacent roles may handle treated areas routinely.
- Secondhand exposure: Clothing, work gloves, or boots can carry residue into homes where family members are exposed.
The legal issue isn’t just “chemical exposure.” It’s whether the exposure was product-specific, timed appropriately, and connected to the illness in a medically credible way.


