People in West Chicago commonly report exposure through:
- Residential lawn and garden treatment (mixing concentrates, spraying weeds, or handling treated areas shortly after application)
- Landscaping and grounds work for employers or contractors who apply herbicides as part of regular property maintenance
- Secondhand exposure—for example, work boots, gloves, or clothing brought home after outdoor job duties
- Proximity exposure near areas where spraying occurred (such as maintained lots, community landscaping, or nearby agricultural or industrial operations)
When the diagnosis arrives, it’s not unusual to feel like your timeline is “off.” A good attorney helps you rebuild it with practical records—product names, approximate application dates, job schedules, and medical documentation—so your claim is grounded in verifiable facts.


