In many cases, the question isn’t whether a product contained glyphosate—it’s whether your exposure was the kind and the timing that could be medically relevant.
El Cerrito households and workplaces commonly involve:
- Residential spraying or mowing after herbicide application (including treating weeds along fences, driveways, and landscaped areas)
- Property maintenance and landscaping work where herbicides are applied seasonally, then followed by routine cleanup and mowing
- School or public-land adjacency—nearby maintenance can create drift or residue concerns depending on when applications occurred
- Secondhand exposure where a worker’s clothing, boots, or tools are stored or handled indoors
Your attorney’s job is to document how you were exposed, what products were involved, and how your medical records connect the dots.


