In Roswell, herbicide exposure concerns often surface in situations tied to residential landscaping, seasonal property maintenance, and outdoor work. Many people don’t connect the dots until after a diagnosis—especially if exposure happened years earlier.
Common Roswell-area scenarios include:
- Yard and property spraying: homeowners or contractors applying weed control products, then mowing or trimming treated vegetation soon after.
- Secondhand exposure: family members encountering residue on work clothing, boots, tools, or gloves brought home from a job site.
- Outdoor maintenance and facility work: groundskeeping, landscaping crews, facility maintenance, or agricultural-adjacent work where herbicides are applied as part of routine vegetation management.
- Dust and reentry concerns: returning to treated areas before surfaces have dried or before protective steps were followed.
Because exposure can occur in multiple ways, the strongest cases usually start with a clear timeline: when you were exposed, where it happened, and what was used.


