East Wenatchee is a community where many people maintain properties themselves or work in outdoor roles tied to landscaping, agriculture, and facility grounds. In these situations, glyphosate exposure can happen in ways that are easy to overlook:
- Yard and property applications during spring and summer, including repeat treatments year after year
- Workplace exposure for groundskeeping, agriculture support roles, and maintenance crews
- Secondhand exposure when work clothing or gear is stored indoors and residue transfers to family members
- Bystander risk when someone spends time near treated areas—such as while commuting, visiting a relative, or helping with outdoor tasks
When a diagnosis arrives, the timeline can feel blurry. A local attorney focuses on turning “I think it might be connected” into a clear, documented exposure story.


