Many people in the Grandview area contact counsel after realizing their illness may connect to long-term or repeated contact with weed control products. While every case is different, the most common triggers we see locally include:
- Property and lawn maintenance: Yard treatment at a home, rental property, or HOA-managed area, plus later exposure from mowing or cleanup.
- Secondhand residue: Herbicide residue on work boots, clothing, tools, or equipment brought indoors after a day on landscaping or grounds work.
- Workplace application or cleanup: Groundskeeping, landscaping, facility maintenance, or seasonal roles where herbicide is used near entrances, loading areas, or outdoor walkways.
- Nearby spraying: Exposure concerns after herbicides are applied close to a residence—such as along boundaries, drive lanes, or areas used by children and visitors.
If you’re thinking, “I didn’t use the product myself,” that doesn’t automatically end the conversation. What matters is whether your medical condition can be connected—through records and documentation—to exposure that fits the way glyphosate products are typically used.


