In and around Whitehall, many people’s exposure stories aren’t limited to one “use.” They often involve a pattern—week-to-week outdoor activity, property maintenance, landscaping, or time spent near areas where herbicides are applied.
Common local scenarios include:
- Residential and neighborhood lawn maintenance: mowing, edging, or cleanup after a property was treated.
- Outdoor work routines: landscaping, groundskeeping, utility or facility maintenance, and other roles where vegetation control is part of the job.
- Secondhand exposure: residue on work clothing carried into a home, or contact with tools/equipment used on treated areas.
- Exposure near application sites: living or working near fields, rights-of-way, or properties where vegetation is managed using chemical herbicides.
These situations matter legally because liability turns on credible evidence of how you were exposed and when—not just whether a product contained glyphosate.


