Many people contact a lawyer after noticing a pattern—like repeated exposure over seasons while caring for property, working in grounds maintenance, or handling landscaping equipment.
In Chandler, these are the situations that frequently come up:
- Lawn and landscape maintenance: homeowners and contractors applying weed control during the same months each year, sometimes using products with glyphosate.
- HOA and commercial landscaping: treatment decisions made for shared areas, with residents later noticing symptoms and trying to understand what products were used.
- School, park, and facility grounds: questions about what was applied near sports fields, walkways, and play areas, and how treatment schedules were communicated.
- Secondhand exposure: family members or workers who carried residue on work gloves, boots, or vehicle mats into the home.
- Worksite exposure: landscaping crews, facility maintenance teams, and other roles where herbicides may be applied as part of routine upkeep.
In these cases, the legal challenge is usually not “chemical exposure happened.” It’s proving the specific product exposure and connecting it to your medical diagnosis in a way that can stand up to scrutiny.


