Many people in Effingham County don’t think of themselves as “chemical exposure” victims. Yet herbicide contact can occur in ways that don’t feel dramatic at the time:
- Outdoor property upkeep: homeowners, landlords, and tenants may handle weed control before memorializing product details.
- Workplace groundskeeping: landscaping crews, maintenance teams, and facility workers may be exposed during routine applications.
- Agriculture-adjacent routines: living near fields or working around areas where vegetation is routinely treated can create repeated contact over time.
- Secondhand exposure: residue can transfer from work boots, gloves, or clothing to family members.
When you’re trying to figure out whether glyphosate exposure is legally meaningful, the timeline matters—what was used, when it was used, and where exposure likely happened.


