Many people contact a lawyer after noticing a connection between illness and exposure tied to day-to-day life—common in and around Herrin:
- Property maintenance: frequent weed spraying on residential lots, barns, outbuildings, fence lines, or around gardens.
- Worksite exposure: landscaping, groundskeeping, agricultural support, facility maintenance, or mowing treated areas.
- Roadside and ditch treatment: work or commuting routes where herbicides are applied near shoulders, drains, and right-of-way vegetation.
- Secondhand exposure: a spouse or family member bringing residue home on work gloves, boots, jackets, or tools.
The key point isn’t just “chemicals were involved.” In a claim, the question becomes whether the specific product exposure and the medical condition connect in a way that can be supported with documentation.


