Many cases in Middlesex County don’t start with a dramatic “chemical accident.” They start with routine life.
Common Sayreville scenarios include:
- Residential landscaping and lawn care: mowing or trimming after herbicide applications, or handling treated yard areas without realizing residue can transfer to clothing.
- Secondhand exposure: a family member works with herbicides (groundskeeping, maintenance, landscaping) and brings particles home on work boots or gear.
- Property turnover and seasonal work: short-term contractors or recurring maintenance during spring and fall, when treated vegetation is handled frequently.
- Work around treated areas: people who maintain outdoor grounds at facilities, warehouses, or industrial sites where vegetation control is routine.
If your symptoms or diagnosis came after these kinds of exposures, the key question becomes: can your specific illness be tied to the way glyphosate was used and the timeframe of your exposure?


