In communities like Selma, exposure can happen in everyday ways—at a home where applications were common, near a workplace where groundskeeping occurs, or along routes where maintenance crews treat vegetation. The problem is that key proof often gets lost early:
- Product containers get thrown out after a job is done
- People forget the exact product name once the season changes
- Medical providers have the diagnosis, but not always the exposure timeline details
- Employment or maintenance records aren’t requested until much later
Because of that, the “fast settlement guidance” most people need isn’t about rushing to sign something—it’s about starting the evidence trail now, before memories fade and records become harder to obtain.


