In South Florida, herbicide exposure often happens in common, real-world ways—sometimes without anyone thinking much about it at the time. Residents may have been exposed through:
- Landscaping and lawn care around homes, condos, and common-area properties
- Work in groundskeeping, landscaping crews, irrigation/utility maintenance, or property management
- Neighborhood spraying schedules where treated areas are adjacent to walkways, driveways, or recreation spaces
- Secondhand exposure, such as residue brought home on clothing or carried on tools used for yard maintenance
- Mowing or trimming after application, when residue can cling to vegetation and spread during cleanup
The key is not just that herbicides were “used,” but that the exposure occurred in a way that can be tied to your specific illness timeline. A local attorney helps you organize what matters most for Boca Raton cases: the who/what/when/where.


