In and around Canal Winchester, people often come to us after one of these real-life scenarios:
- Property and landscaping treatments: Herbicides applied on neighboring lots, subdivisions, or along rights-of-way near where families walk, mow, or maintain gardens.
- Worksite exposure for local trades: Groundskeeping, landscaping, facility maintenance, and crews that handle vegetation where herbicides were recently applied.
- Secondhand contact at home: Clothing or gloves brought back after yard work or a shift outdoors, with residue transferring to laundry or shared spaces.
- Seasonal “spray-and-forget” routines: People may not realize when a product was used or what it was until symptoms appear later—after a diagnosis triggers a closer look.
A strong case isn’t built on fear or assumptions. It’s built on credible timelines—when exposure likely occurred, how it happened, and how it aligns with what doctors diagnosed and when.


