In our region, glyphosate exposure often shows up in everyday settings:
- Property and yard maintenance: repeat applications on residential lots, rental properties, and HOA-managed areas.
- Landscaping and outdoor services: workers who mix, spray, and clean equipment—sometimes without consistent respiratory protection.
- Secondhand residue: contamination carried on work boots, gloves, jackets, or mowing/yard tools.
- Seasonal “treatment windows”: exposure patterns that match spring/summer weed control schedules.
When someone in the household later develops cancer or another serious illness, questions arise: Was the exposure real and significant? Did it happen in the timeframe the medical records show? And who bears legal responsibility? A local attorney helps answer those questions using documentation—not assumptions.


