Strongsville has a mix of residential neighborhoods, commercial corridors, and surrounding areas where lawn maintenance is common. That means herbicide exposure can happen in ways people don’t always recognize at the time, such as:
- Landscaping and grounds crews applying weed killer along sidewalks, retention areas, and property edges
- Backyard or driveway treatments done by a homeowner or a hired service
- Shared property exposure—spraying near common areas where neighbors walk their dogs or children play
- Carry-home exposure from work gloves, boots, or workwear that wasn’t properly cleaned
When someone in your household is diagnosed, the question becomes less “what chemical was it?” and more what exposure did you actually have, when it happened, and how it connects to medical findings.


