Many cases in the area begin with a diagnosis—then a painful realization: the illness may align with years of contact with herbicides.
Common local scenarios include:
- Seasonal lawn and landscaping schedules: workers applying weed control in spring and summer, sometimes with limited time between treatment and mowing/cleanup.
- Residential “around-the-house” exposure: mixing, spraying, or applying products near driveways, sidewalks, or garden areas where family members walk and play.
- Secondhand exposure from work gear: clothing or equipment brought home after groundskeeping, maintenance, or construction-adjacent work.
- Community property maintenance: exposure risks can occur when herbicides are applied to shared spaces, parks, or commercial landscaping along busy corridors.
The goal isn’t to assume liability—it’s to document how exposure happened in your specific life and how your medical condition is explained by that exposure.


