Residents often connect the dots after a diagnosis—especially when exposure occurred around everyday routines. Common Jeffersontown scenarios include:
- Yard and landscaping maintenance: mowing or weed control on treated property, especially when residue settles on equipment, walkways, or garden beds.
- Property management and HOA services: crews applying herbicides for common areas, followed by residents’ contact with treated surfaces.
- Work outside the home: groundskeeping, landscaping, farm-adjacent work, or facility maintenance where applications occur seasonally.
- Secondhand exposure: family members or roommates who bring residue home on clothing, boots, or work gloves.
- Neighborhood proximity: nearby spraying or treated lots where drift or overspray may have been involved.
For a successful claim, the question isn’t just whether glyphosate is “in the conversation.” It’s whether you can show when, where, how, and what you were exposed to—and how that exposure lines up with your medical history.


