Many Oviedo clients don’t start with legal terms. They start with a doctor’s words, new symptoms, and the uncomfortable realization that similar illnesses have been discussed in connection with weed killers.
Local exposure can occur through:
- Lawn and landscaping services that apply herbicides around homes and common areas
- HOA-managed properties and neighborhood groundskeeping
- Work in landscaping, grounds maintenance, or facilities where vegetation is routinely treated
- Secondhand exposure, such as residue tracked on clothing after yard work or maintenance
- Mowing or cleanup after application, when dried residue may still be present
In these situations, the most important question isn’t just “was there chemical exposure?” It’s whether the exposure you experienced was tied to the product use pattern and timeframe that matters for your medical condition.


