In and around Waverly, exposure concerns often show up in familiar ways:
- Property and yard maintenance: repeated treatment of lawns, gardens, driveways, or fence lines using herbicide products.
- Work around treated vegetation: groundskeeping, landscaping, facility maintenance, or help with agricultural property where spraying occurs seasonally.
- Secondhand exposure: residue on work boots, clothing, tools, or equipment that was brought home.
- Neighboring treatment: herbicide application on adjacent lots or nearby land that drifts or transfers during routine outdoor activity.
After a diagnosis, the questions tend to be practical: What matters legally? What do I need to prove? Who could be responsible? And what should I do first so I don’t lose important documentation?


