In suburban communities like San Pablo, exposure stories often aren’t as simple as “I used the product myself.” People frequently report contact through:
- Property maintenance around homes, fences, and driveways
- Sidewalk and street-adjacent landscaping where herbicides may be applied seasonally
- Share-a-space routines—working in yards, caring for family members, or helping with maintenance at properties near application areas
- Work schedules tied to commuting and public access (outdoor work, groundskeeping, or industrial/maintenance roles)
Because the exposure pathway can be indirect, early documentation matters even more. If your records are incomplete, you may still have options—but your attorney will need a structured way to build a credible exposure narrative.


