In a suburban community like Lauderdale Lakes, herbicide exposure often doesn’t come only from a person using a sprayer at home. Many residents discover the issue after they realize how exposure may have happened through everyday life, such as:
- Landscaping and grounds crews applying weed control around residential properties, parking areas, and common-use areas
- Property maintenance treating fence lines, drainage edges, and walkway borders
- Secondhand exposure—residue carried on work clothing brought inside, or lingering on gloves, shoes, or tools
- Frequent yard work after applications (mowing, trimming, or sweeping treated vegetation)
When a diagnosis arrives, families often need a clear, evidence-based path—not speculation. The right legal support focuses on building a timeline of exposure that fits the way herbicides were used in real life.


