In and around Laurel, glyphosate exposure questions often arise from everyday routines and local work environments:
- Residential lawn and property maintenance: repeated spraying, mowing treated areas soon after application, or handling sprayers and concentrates during weekends and seasonal cleanups.
- Landscaping and groundskeeping work: herbicide use as part of maintaining schools, neighborhoods, and commercial properties.
- Agricultural and rural-adjacent settings: exposure while working around fields, ditches, fences, or areas where vegetation control is performed.
- Secondhand exposure: family members or co-workers carrying residue on clothing or work gear.
- Equipment and storage issues: reuse of sprayers, improper rinsing, or storing product where residue can spread.
These scenarios matter because liability typically depends on what happened in the real world—not just the fact that someone used a weed killer at some point.


