While every case is different, Shelton-area patterns often look like this:
- Lawn and property treatments around homes, including repeat applications by the homeowner or a hired service.
- Landscaping and grounds maintenance for commercial properties, schools, and outdoor facilities—where herbicide is applied along fence lines, walkways, or drainage areas.
- Residual exposure carried on work gloves, footwear, or clothing—especially when someone helps with cleanup after spraying.
- Nearby overspray and drift from adjacent properties, wooded lots, or shared outdoor spaces.
- Seasonal timing: symptoms and diagnoses may surface well after the period of application, making it harder to remember exact dates without records.
In these situations, the legal question isn’t just whether glyphosate was involved—it’s whether the specific exposure you experienced matches the medical theory of harm and can be documented.


