People in Geneva often contact attorneys after they recognize a pattern that may involve:
- Lawn and landscaping maintenance: repeated use of weed control products on residential properties, rental homes, or HOAs (including hiring a landscaper and later learning about application timing).
- Outdoor work near treated vegetation: groundskeeping, landscaping crews, farm-adjacent maintenance, and facility work where herbicide application and cleanup take place on a regular schedule.
- Secondhand exposure: residue carried on work clothes, boots, gloves, or tools—especially when outdoor work happens in seasons when people also spend more time at home.
- Property-adjacent spraying: exposure that occurs when herbicide is applied near driveways, walkways, or shared-use areas.
In these situations, the key isn’t just that glyphosate was used—it’s how it was used, when it was used, and how the exposure likely reached you.


