Many people in the Tehama County area don’t think of “product exposure” as a legal issue—until a diagnosis changes everything.
Common local scenarios include:
- Property and landscaping work: frequent weed control on home lots, ranch properties, or small commercial sites.
- Outdoor employment: groundskeeping, landscaping, utility right-of-way maintenance, or farm-adjacent work where herbicides may be applied.
- Secondhand exposure: residue carried on work boots, gloves, or clothing after outdoor shifts.
- Near-spray situations: living or working close to areas where vegetation is treated seasonally.
These real-world patterns matter because a strong claim typically depends on showing how exposure likely occurred—then connecting that timeline to medical findings.


