In northeastern Oklahoma communities like Sand Springs, glyphosate concerns often come up through familiar, everyday situations:
- Residential spraying: homeowners or property managers using herbicide for weeds along driveways, fences, and landscaped areas.
- Secondhand exposure: residue on work gloves, lawn equipment, boots, or clothing brought indoors after yard work.
- Neighbor or nearby application: living near properties where herbicides are applied during the growing season.
- Work-related exposure: groundskeeping, landscaping, facilities maintenance, agriculture-adjacent work, or anyone responsible for vegetation control.
A strong claim doesn’t start with a label on a bottle—it starts with connecting the timeline of exposure to medical findings.


