In and around Springfield, glyphosate exposure concerns often surface in familiar, real-world ways:
- Property maintenance and landscaping: homeowners, landscapers, and grounds crews using weed killers on driveways, yards, parking lots, and fence lines.
- Roadside and easement spraying: application near rights-of-way and community spaces where residents may not expect chemical residue.
- Workplace exposure: people in facilities, agriculture-related jobs, and maintenance roles where herbicides are used on schedules.
- Secondhand exposure: residue carried on work boots, clothing, tools, or gloves—especially when someone else applied the product.
When cancer or other serious illnesses are diagnosed, it can feel unfair—especially if you followed instructions or didn’t realize the exposure could be harmful. Legal help focuses on connecting what happened in your day-to-day life to what your doctors are now diagnosing.


