In Westbury, many potential exposure pathways are tied to everyday routines—lawn care, landscaping, and routine property maintenance around homes, apartment complexes, and commercial lots.
Common scenarios we see in this area include:
- Residential lawn and garden treatment: Using weed killer on driveways, sidewalks, or landscaping beds, then exposure from residue on surfaces or tracked-in dust.
- Landscapers and grounds crews: Herbicide application on schedule for HOAs, commercial properties, or managed landscaping services.
- Secondhand exposure: Family members exposed through work clothes, tools, gloves, or storage areas used by someone who handled herbicides.
- Nearby spraying: When applications occur close to where people live, children play, or pets roam—leading to concern about residue drift or contact with treated areas.
A key point for Westbury residents: it’s not enough to say “there was a chemical.” Your case usually turns on what product was used, how it was applied, where exposure likely occurred, and how that lines up with your diagnosis and medical timeline.


