Roscoe residents often contact counsel after realizing their exposure pattern wasn’t “one-off.” Common scenarios include:
- Weekend yard and garden routines: Mixing, spraying, or mowing vegetation soon after application—sometimes without realizing how residue can cling to clothing, boots, or equipment.
- Landscaping and property maintenance: Being home when a contractor applies herbicide, or later discovering treated areas through family members’ schedules and routines.
- Work-related exposure: Jobs tied to groundskeeping, facility maintenance, landscaping, or agricultural-adjacent work where herbicides may be handled repeatedly.
- Secondhand exposure on clothing and gear: Residue brought home on work uniforms, gloves, tools, or vehicle interiors.
These patterns matter because liability and causation in Illinois depend on facts you can document—what product was used, where exposure occurred, and when symptoms began.


