In suburban communities like Santee, exposure stories often come from repeat patterns rather than one-time incidents:
- Home or rental landscaping (driveway edges, backyard weeds, side-yard maintenance)
- HOA or property-manager spraying schedules
- Work exposure for people in landscaping, groundskeeping, maintenance, pest control, or construction-adjacent roles
- Secondhand exposure through shared outdoor spaces (kids playing near treated areas, bringing residues indoors on shoes/clothing)
- Commuter or school-area proximity where application occurs near regularly walked routes
To move quickly, your first task is not “proving the case”—it’s building a timeline you can stand behind.
Start with dates you can anchor: when symptoms began, when you received diagnoses, when you changed products or stopped use, and when application happened at your home, workplace, or nearby property. If you can’t recall exact dates, that’s common—your attorney can help reconstruct likely windows using records you already have.


