In Castle Pines, it’s common for glyphosate exposure concerns to arise in a few familiar ways:
- Residential lawn and garden use: Homeowners or hired landscapers applying weed killer around driveways, fences, and garden beds.
- HOA and neighborhood maintenance: Treatments in shared areas where residents notice spraying schedules, overspray, or treated vegetation.
- Secondhand exposure: Residue tracked on work boots, clothing, or equipment after yard work.
- Seasonal landscaping work: Grounds crews and part-time workers who apply herbicides during spring and summer.
Once you have a serious medical diagnosis, the question becomes practical: What can be proven about how, when, and how much exposure occurred? That is where legal evaluation becomes more than “guessing.”


