While every case is different, Parkland-area claims often involve one of these real-world scenarios:
- Residential and HOA landscaping: herbicide treatments on common areas, retention ponds, or perimeter landscaping.
- Secondhand exposure: residue carried on work boots, yard tools, or clothing from someone who applied products (or worked around treated areas).
- Outdoor work and maintenance: groundskeeping, landscaping crews, facility maintenance, or subcontractors who handle vegetation where spraying occurs.
- Time-and-place connections: symptoms that began after a particular season of heavy application—often when schedules align with school-year, spring growth, or pre-summer maintenance.
These patterns matter because Parkland cases typically hinge on documentation showing what was applied, where exposure occurred, and when symptoms or diagnosis followed.


