In Rialto, many exposure stories don’t look like “one-time use.” They often involve repeated contact over months or years, including:
- Residential spraying: homeowners, property managers, or landscapers treating driveways, fences lines, and backyard weeds.
- Secondhand exposure: residue carried on clothing, work boots, tools, or equipment brought home after yard maintenance.
- Community and roadside vegetation control: herbicide application near commercial corridors, industrial frontage, and maintained public spaces.
- Outdoor work schedules: groundskeeping, landscaping crews, and facilities teams who handle vegetation after spraying.
Because exposure can occur in more than one setting, a legal review in Rialto often starts by mapping out where contact likely happened—at home, at work, and during the commute or daily errands.


