People in and around Shiloh often describe exposure routes that look different from what you might hear in other states:
- Home and rental property maintenance: residents may supervise or hire local help for weed spraying, then later learn product residue can be tracked indoors on shoes or clothing.
- Roadside and commercial groundskeeping: landscaping crews may apply herbicides on schedules that align with peak commuting and outdoor activity.
- Outdoor family routines: kids and pets spend time where vegetation is treated—sometimes before a “do not enter” period is fully understood.
- Worksite exposure: jobs involving groundskeeping, agriculture-related labor, construction site maintenance, or facility upkeep can bring repeated contact.
When symptoms show up or a diagnosis is made, the questions tend to become urgent: Was the product actually used in the way that could matter? When did exposure likely occur? What medical findings connect the illness to that exposure? A local attorney can help organize answers that hold up.


