In suburban communities like Seven Hills, exposure stories often look like this:
- Weekend yard work and landscaping: mowing, edging, or trimming after herbicides were applied.
- Apartment/HOA-style maintenance rhythms: properties treated on a schedule, with neighbors and family members still nearby.
- Secondhand exposure: contaminated clothing or tools brought indoors after a family member or contractor handled spraying.
- Outdoor work commuting patterns: people who work outside before heading home—then noticing symptoms months or years later.
When a medical diagnosis arrives, it can feel unfair—especially if the exposure happened during normal living. Legal help can clarify whether the facts support a claim and how to document exposure in a way that matters.


