Many Fontana residents don’t think of herbicide exposure as “a legal issue” until something changes medically. In real life, exposure often comes from everyday routines:
- Landscaping and property maintenance near where you walk, park, or wait for school or work traffic
- Work settings involving groundskeeping, warehouse-area vegetation control, or outdoor maintenance schedules
- Residue transfer—herbicide residue tracked on clothing, shoes, or tools after spraying or mowing
- Neighbor and contractor spraying on nearby lots, common areas, or industrial-adjacent property
A strong claim depends on showing what was used, where exposure likely occurred, and how the timeline lines up with medical records.


