In practice, Lyndon residents typically contact counsel after one of these exposure patterns:
- Residential lawn and garden treatment: Using weed killer at home, following application schedules, or handling concentrate products.
- Landscaping and property maintenance: Hiring crews for mowing, trimming, or weed control—then being present while treatments occurred or shortly after.
- Worksite exposure: People employed in landscaping, groundskeeping, agriculture, or facility maintenance where herbicides are part of routine vegetation management.
- Secondhand exposure: Laundry, gear, or clothing that carried residue from a treated site into a home.
- Neighbor/adjacent property contact: Living near areas where vegetation is sprayed, including along fence lines, drainage ditches, or roadside edges.
The most important thing is not just that glyphosate was “out there,” but that the facts support how exposure happened and when it happened relative to symptoms and diagnosis.


