In a suburban community like Ballwin, glyphosate exposure often shows up through everyday routines. Common scenarios include:
- Homeowners and DIY yard care: mixing concentrate, applying weed killer in driveways/side yards, or mowing treated areas before residue fully dissipates.
- Landscaping and groundskeeping work: people who maintain commercial properties, HOA-managed areas, or facilities that contract herbicide application.
- Secondhand exposure: residue brought home on work boots, gloves, tools, or clothing—especially when someone else in the household applies or transports the product.
- Spraying near high-traffic suburban paths: lawns and landscaping edges along sidewalks, parking lots, and shared property lines where overspray can occur.
These details matter legally because they help connect where and how exposure occurred to the medical record that supports your condition.


