In our area, suspected glyphosate exposure frequently comes from practical, local patterns:
- Property maintenance and seasonal landscaping: yard treatments, weed control schedules, and mowing/trim work after spraying.
- Agricultural work and farm-adjacent living: exposure during planting/maintenance seasons or near fields where herbicides are applied.
- Secondhand exposure: residue brought home on work boots, clothing, tools, or equipment used for groundskeeping.
- Corridor and commercial site maintenance: treatments along roadways and business properties where crews may use herbicide concentrates and follow-up applications.
Because these scenarios are fact-specific, a good legal review starts with your exposure timeline—not just your diagnosis. That’s how your case gets built with credibility from the start.


