Many Palmetto residents first connect the dots after a diagnosis—then realize herbicide contact may have occurred in everyday ways, such as:
- Residential lawn care: using weed killers on driveways, sidewalks, and landscaped beds, including repeat seasonal applications.
- Landscaping and grounds work: working with or near herbicide spraying for community entrances, commercial properties, or private yards.
- Secondhand contact: family members exposed through clothing, gloves, boots, or equipment brought home from work.
- Mowing and trimming after treatment: handling vegetation soon after spraying, when residue can linger.
- Property-adjacent spraying: exposure when nearby areas are treated and drift or overspray reaches adjacent yards.
Because these situations are common, the key question becomes not just “was there Roundup?” but how, when, and in what conditions the exposure occurred.


