In Round Rock, many people come to us after realizing their exposure story doesn’t fit a single “sprayed once” event. Instead, it often involves repeat contact in everyday settings:
- Residential landscaping and lawn care: Homeowners and contractors may apply weed killer along fence lines, driveways, parking edges, and landscaped beds—sometimes with limited protective equipment.
- Neighborhood common areas: Treated paths, retention ponds, and greenbelts can create ongoing contact, especially when mowing or trimming follows application.
- Workplace exposure: People who work in groundskeeping, landscaping, facilities maintenance, agriculture, or outdoor construction may handle herbicides, clean equipment, or work near active application zones.
- Commuter-era and schedule exposure: Round Rock’s fast-paced routines can mean people are exposed during early morning or after-work treatments—then later discover symptoms only after a diagnosis.
- Secondhand exposure: Residue can be carried on work boots, clothing, gloves, tools, and vehicles—leading to household exposure even when only one person applied or handled the product.
Because these scenarios are fact-specific, your attorney’s job is to translate your real-world timeline into a legally useful evidence record.


