In a suburban community like Maywood, glyphosate exposure often shows up in patterns that don’t look like “farm work.” Many claims start with real-life scenarios such as:
- Lawn and property maintenance: recurring applications by landscaping crews for residential lots, HOAs, or nearby commercial properties.
- Shared outdoor spaces: exposure while mowing, weeding, or using treated areas after application.
- Secondhand contact: residue tracked into homes on clothing, gloves, boots, or tools used by a worker who applied herbicide.
- Proximity to treated areas: symptoms arise after repeated time spent near properties where spraying occurs.
When symptoms persist and a doctor links the condition to possible toxic exposure, the next step is not guessing—it’s building a case around what can be proven.


