In our area, glyphosate exposure concerns often come from familiar situations:
- Property and yard maintenance: frequent weed control around driveways, fences, and irrigation edges.
- Seasonal outdoor work: groundskeeping, landscaping, ranch maintenance, or facility upkeep where spraying is routine.
- Secondhand contact: residue carried on work gloves, clothing, boots, tools, or equipment used by a family member.
- Near-spray conditions: exposure after application when vegetation is disturbed—such as mowing treated areas or cleaning up overspray.
These are the kinds of details that can make or break a case. The law doesn’t treat “chemical exposure” as a guarantee of liability—you still have to connect the how, when, and where to the medical condition.


