In a suburban community like Foster City, exposure can come from places people don’t immediately connect to illness—home landscaping, HOA or municipal maintenance, garden centers and lawn-care products, and secondary exposure that happens when products are applied nearby.
Many residents first realize something is wrong after a diagnosis, then scramble to reconstruct:
- which products were used (and when)
- whether the same chemicals were used across seasons
- who applied treatments (you, a contractor, a neighbor, or a maintenance team)
- where application occurred (patio, driveway, community landscaping, garden beds)
When that information is incomplete, it can slow down a claim. The sooner you build a usable “paper trail,” the faster your case can be evaluated.


