Many Calera residents contact an attorney after realizing their exposure didn’t come from one moment—it came from routines.
Common scenarios include:
- Lawn and landscaping treatments at residences and rental properties, including repeat applications during growing seasons.
- Residential neighbors’ overspray or drift—especially after treatments are made and the area is later walked, mowed, or maintained.
- Secondhand exposure from clothing, boots, or tools brought home by someone who applied herbicides for work.
- Groundskeeping and maintenance roles connected to schools, facilities, or property management where vegetation control is frequent.
- Outdoor commuting and community spaces, where residents may move through treated areas more often than they realize.
The key isn’t just whether glyphosate was “out there.” It’s whether the facts support that your exposure was real, consistent, and connected to the illness your doctor diagnosed.


