While glyphosate exposure can happen in many ways, residents in and around Pullman often raise similar real-world situations:
- Property and yard maintenance in residential neighborhoods: Homeowners and renters may use herbicide products to control weeds along fences, driveways, and garden beds.
- Landscaping and grounds work: People working in groundskeeping, commercial landscaping, or campus-adjacent maintenance may handle applications or manage treated areas.
- Apartment and shared housing contact: In multi-unit properties, people can be exposed when treated vegetation, walkways, or storage areas carry residue.
- Seasonal routines around outdoor events: During busy spring and summer schedules—when Pullman families are outdoors more—people may come into contact with recently treated areas.
- Work clothes and secondhand exposure: If someone applies herbicides at work, residue on clothing or gear can be a concern for family members who launder or store those items at home.
A lawyer can help you sort which of these scenarios fits your timeline, what documentation is still available, and how to present it in a way that aligns with how Washington claims are evaluated.


