Many Galveston-area cases don’t start with a clear “here’s the bottle” moment. Instead, exposure is pieced together from everyday routines—residential landscaping, property maintenance around rental homes, seasonal yard work, or work performed in areas where weed control is routine.
Common local patterns we see include:
- Coastal property maintenance: weed control around fences, sidewalks, and driveway edges where products were applied more than once.
- Storm-season cleanups: reseeding and re-treating yards after wind damage, when timelines can blur.
- Visitor and rental properties: landlords or maintenance teams applying weed killer, with limited documentation provided to tenants.
- Industrial and grounds roles: people working in facilities or on grounds where vegetation management is part of the job.
When the “where/when/how” is fragmented, the claim still may be viable—but the case needs an organized approach to build a credible exposure narrative.


