Many people in the Central Coast don’t connect symptoms to weed killer until well after the exposure. In Morro Bay, that’s especially common because residents may be exposed through:
- Residential landscaping (spraying along driveways, fences, and coastal yards)
- Secondhand exposure when products are used nearby and residue gets tracked indoors
- Tourism and seasonal property maintenance at rentals and commercial sites
- Outdoor work tied to agriculture, parks, and groundskeeping
When the product bottle is long gone, the timeline can blur—California attorneys often rely on multiple evidence sources (not just one receipt) to reconstruct what happened.


