People contacting a glyphosate lawsuit attorney in Bellingham commonly describe one or more of the following scenarios:
- Residential and property maintenance: Yard treatment, weed control for steep lots, or repeated spot-spraying around fences, driveways, and outbuildings.
- Work involving landscaping or grounds care: Regular use of herbicides for commercial property upkeep, including routine application schedules.
- Planting, trimming, or “cleanup” after spraying: Exposure that occurs while mowing, pulling weeds, or clearing areas that were recently treated.
- Secondhand exposure: Residue carried home on work clothing, boots, or tools—an issue that often comes up in households where one person worked with herbicides.
- Community-adjacent exposures: Time spent around treated areas in facilities, campuses, or managed properties where application was handled by others.
Because Bellingham is a community with many long-term residents and mixed residential/commercial neighborhoods, exposure histories can be spread out over years. That’s why the strongest cases usually start with a careful reconstruction of when and how exposure happened.


