In a community like Streamwood, herbicides may be used in ways that don’t feel “industrial,” but still create exposure. Common situations include:
- Home and lawn applications: concentrate mixing, spraying on driveways/side yards, or mowing treated grass shortly after application.
- Landscaping and property maintenance: work around treated areas at schools, parks, townhome complexes, or retail properties.
- Secondhand exposure: herbicide residue carried on work clothing, equipment, or gloves brought into a home.
- Nearby application drift: when spraying occurs along property lines or near roads and commercial corridors.
Because the way exposure occurs can vary, your claim evaluation needs more than a diagnosis—it needs a credible account of when, where, and how contact happened.


