In a community like San Luis, glyphosate exposure often comes up through familiar, non-industrial routines:
- Residential yard and landscaping: homeowners applying weed control, or yard services spraying near patios, driveways, and walkways.
- Community and commercial maintenance: property managers and facilities addressing weeds around parking areas, sidewalks, and perimeter landscaping.
- Secondhand contact: residue tracked on shoes, carried on work uniforms, or transferred from tools used for spraying.
- Farming and agricultural work: workers involved with vegetation control may face higher exposure risk depending on equipment, timing, and protective gear.
These everyday patterns matter legally. A claim is typically stronger when the evidence shows the product was present in the relevant environment and that the exposure aligns with your diagnosis timeline.


