Every case is different, but residents in Brevard County often describe exposure patterns that follow their day-to-day routine:
- Residential lawn and yard care: Using weed killer on driveways, patios, and landscaping beds—sometimes repeatedly over several seasons.
- Outdoor work and maintenance: Groundskeeping, landscaping, property maintenance, and facility upkeep where herbicides may be applied during the workweek.
- Backyard “re-entry” exposure: Getting back into an area soon after spraying, mowing or trimming treated vegetation, or handling residue that clings to clothing.
- Secondhand exposure through work gear: Clothes, gloves, boots, or tools brought home after a shift.
- Community proximity: Homes near properties where spraying is performed seasonally (including commercial or agricultural sites).
These are the kinds of practical details that matter legally—because they help connect when and how exposure happened to when symptoms appeared and what doctors diagnosed.


