For many people, the concern starts after a doctor delivers difficult news. In Chino, that realization often follows a pattern:
- Landscaping and property maintenance: yard work performed after herbicide application, including mowing treated areas.
- Secondhand exposure at home: residue carried on work clothes, shoes, gloves, or tools from a groundskeeping or maintenance job.
- Worksite exposure: employers that use herbicides for dust control, weed management, or vegetation control near facilities.
- Community proximity: living near properties where herbicides are applied and then tracked around by foot traffic or pets.
If you’re dealing with ongoing symptoms after herbicide exposure—or you’ve been diagnosed with a condition you believe is linked to glyphosate—your first move is medical care. Your second move should be preserving the facts that connect your health to what happened in your daily life in Chino.


