Again, that's too bad. With his reach, he could actually do something positive, if it behooved himCFR Title 40 Vol 24 (in part) - Federal Regulations re Glyphosate Maximum Resides in various products
Given the allowed levels, if Mike's lab hadn't found Glyphosate his lab would be absolute {animal droppings}. As it is, its certified {specific animal dropping}, and poorly qualified to test much of anything - as can be seen when you look at the lab's website for what they do test for. In the late 1980s, I briefly worked at a lab in a local engineering firm which was both larger and better equipped (as well as being certified to conduct many more tests than Mike's lab). It occupied a tiny corner of a civil engineering firm in a not particularly large town. Most of their work was testing water samples, coming and going, from local municipalities. I don't even see a mass spec in Mike's lab.