For many people, the connection starts the same way: a doctor delivers a serious diagnosis, and then the patient (or a family member) begins looking back at years of yard work, property maintenance, or workplace tasks.
In a suburban community like Parma, exposure often comes from everyday routines, such as:
- Using weed killer on home lawns and driveways during weekend maintenance
- Handling landscaping materials after herbicide applications
- Working around treated areas at schools, parks, or commercial properties
- Coming into contact with residue on work boots, gloves, or outdoor equipment
Once symptoms persist or a diagnosis changes everything, the immediate goal becomes simple: get answers. The legal part—proving what product was used, when exposure occurred, and how it relates to your illness—requires careful documentation and a clear strategy.


