People in and around Kingsburg often describe exposure that doesn’t look like a one-time accident. Instead, it may involve:
- Yard and property maintenance: using weed control products on driveways, sidewalks, or around landscaping beds.
- Agricultural-adjacent living: living near fields or drainage areas where herbicides are applied seasonally.
- Worksite or commuting contact: helping with outdoor work, handling tools used near sprayed areas, or being around application zones while traveling locally.
- Secondhand residue: contamination on clothing, gloves, boots, or equipment brought into the home.
If you’re dealing with a diagnosis that your doctors are connecting to serious health risks, it’s normal to wonder whether herbicides could be part of the story. Legal help can focus on building a clear, defensible connection between exposure history and medical evidence.


