In Guthrie, exposure often comes from day-to-day contact rather than industrial settings. Common scenarios we hear about include:
- Lawn and property applications: repeated spraying, mixing concentrate, or treating weeds along fences, driveways, and outbuildings.
- Landscaping and grounds work: routine vegetation control for businesses, faith organizations, and municipal or contracted properties.
- Roadside and easement areas: contact after spraying in nearby corridors, including drift, residual overspray, or walking through treated areas.
- Secondhand exposure: contaminated work clothing, gloves, tools, or equipment brought into garages and homes.
- Seasonal timing: symptoms noticed after particular treatment seasons—helpful when matching medical records to an exposure timeline.
These patterns matter legally because your claim typically depends on proving not just that glyphosate was “out there,” but that it was present in the way and timeframe relevant to your illness.


