In Lake Elsinore, many suspected exposures don’t come from a single dramatic incident. They come from the everyday patterns of a residential community:
- Property maintenance: homeowners and contractors using herbicides for driveways, landscaping, and weeds along fence lines.
- Secondary exposure: family members who were around treated areas after application.
- Neighborhood drift: product use near shared boundaries, parks, or common-adjacent areas.
- Seasonal timing: application practices that cluster in certain months, which can affect how you reconstruct the timeline.
Because exposure is often “distributed,” evidence is frequently scattered—receipts in a drawer, photos on a phone, notes about when treatment occurred, and medical records that don’t automatically mention herbicide exposure.


