In Central Florida neighborhoods, exposure stories often overlap with residential landscaping, HOA-managed common areas, and routine lawn-care schedules—and the paperwork is frequently the first thing to go missing.
Many people in Sanford tell us some version of this:
- A bottle was thrown out after a season
- The product label wasn’t photographed
- Symptoms showed up later, after routines changed
- Medical records exist, but exposure details are fuzzy
If that’s your situation, the fastest settlement progress usually comes from doing two things early:
- Lock down the exposure timeline (not just the diagnosis date)
- Build a defensible product-and-exposure link using what’s realistically available


