Seminole is largely residential, with many homes, HOAs, and neighborhood landscaping practices. That matters because weed killer exposure claims frequently depend on reconstructing the exposure environment—for example:
- Lawn and driveway treatments applied at residences or nearby properties
- Shared landscaping areas in planned communities
- Work involving groundskeeping, landscaping, or property maintenance
- Secondary exposure (family members or neighbors who were around application areas)
Florida weather and seasonal landscaping cycles can also affect when applications were likely performed. If your medical records show symptoms emerging over time, the legal question becomes whether the exposure history you can document aligns with that timeline.


