Every case begins with how exposure likely happened. In the Pikes Peak region, common patterns include:
- Residential landscaping and HOA/contractor spraying: Weed control for driveways, fencing lines, and common areas can involve products containing glyphosate.
- Outdoor maintenance work: Landscaping, groundskeeping, facility maintenance, and certain construction-adjacent roles may involve routine vegetation control.
- Secondhand exposure at home: Residue carried on work boots, clothing, or tools can expose household members even if they never applied the product themselves.
- Seasonal property work near schools and parks: Spring and summer maintenance schedules can create repeated exposure over time.
- Visitors and event staff on treated grounds: People who work or attend events on maintained properties may come into contact with treated areas.
If you’re trying to connect the dots between exposure and illness, your attorney’s first job is usually to map out a credible timeline—what you used, when you were around treated areas, and what medical records show.


