In Georgetown, exposure concerns often surface in familiar, real-life ways:
- Residential spraying and landscaping: Homeowners, property managers, and landscaping crews may apply herbicides during spring and summer growth cycles.
- Commuter and job-site exposure: People who work around groundskeeping, facilities, agriculture support, or outdoor maintenance may encounter treated vegetation and residue.
- Secondhand contact at home: Work clothes, boots, tools, and backpacks can carry herbicide residue indoors.
- Community proximity: Living near treated areas can mean ongoing contact through lawn care, shared pathways, or routine maintenance.
When cancer or another serious condition follows, the hard part isn’t only medical—it’s connecting the dots between when exposure happened and what your records show.


