Many people assume herbicide exposure only happens through direct spraying. In practice, residents and workers in Tippecanoe County often encounter glyphosate in other ways:
- Landscaping and grounds work: Employees applying weed control or trimming vegetation after treatment may be exposed to residue.
- Secondhand contact: Work clothes, boots, and tools can carry residue into homes.
- Property-adjacent spraying: Homes near treated fields or maintained corridors may experience drift or contact with re-treated areas.
- Seasonal maintenance routines: Repeated spring and summer yard work—especially during peak campus and neighborhood activity—can create multiple exposure “windows.”
A Roundup lawyer approach focuses on building a defensible exposure timeline based on what can be supported through records, product identification, and witness testimony.


