In a community like Hanahan, exposure often shows up in everyday places—yard maintenance, neighborhood spraying, and certain job sites where vegetation control is routine. Common patterns we see include:
- Property treatment around residences and rental homes: spraying for weeds along fences, driveways, or landscaping beds.
- Secondhand exposure from work clothing and gear: especially when herbicide is applied at a job and residue is carried home.
- Work involving groundskeeping or facility maintenance: where herbicides may be used repeatedly during the season.
- Exposure near treated areas: mowing, trimming, or handling vegetation after spraying.
- Long-term, “normal routine” exposure: where people don’t connect symptoms to product use until years later.
A local attorney’s job is to translate those day-to-day details into evidence that can be evaluated legally—not just medically.


