Many herbicide-related cases in the area start in familiar places:
- Home and property maintenance: using weed killer for driveways, fence lines, or yard edges, often without tracking the exact product batch or application dates.
- Secondhand exposure: mowing or trimming vegetation that was recently treated, or handling yard tools that weren’t cleaned.
- Community and shared landscaping: exposure can affect multiple households when maintenance is handled by contractors or recurring service schedules.
- Work-related contact: landscaping, groundskeeping, facility maintenance, and agricultural work in the broader region.
For Lockport residents, the challenge is often practical: it’s easy to remember that you sprayed, but much harder to recall which product was used, how it was applied, and when symptoms began.


