In a suburban community like Otsego, exposure stories often follow familiar patterns:
- Property and landscaping routines: spraying weeds around homes, using weed-killer products on driveways or retaining walls, or mowing vegetation that was treated shortly before.
- Seasonal maintenance overlap: projects that happen the same week multiple people are working—homeowners, contractors, or neighbors—so residue and contact can be hard to track afterward.
- Nearby field and right-of-way impacts: living close to areas where herbicides are applied for vegetation control, dusting residue can drift, and timing matters.
- Family take-home exposure: work gear or clothing handled at home after a landscaping or groundskeeping job.
If you or a loved one received a cancer diagnosis or another serious condition after years of exposure, it’s common to feel overwhelmed. The legal question isn’t “is glyphosate scary?”—it’s whether the facts of your exposure match what can be legally and medically supported.


