Many clients describe the same pattern: the diagnosis comes first, then the questions begin.
For San Jose families and workers, exposure concerns often trace back to:
- Landscaping and grounds crews applying herbicides in parks, commercial properties, campuses, and office complexes
- Warehouse and industrial sites where weeds and perimeter vegetation are treated regularly
- Home maintenance—spraying in driveways, backyards, HOAs, or community common areas
- Secondhand exposure through contaminated clothing, work boots, equipment, or cleaning residue
- Sidewalk and trail-adjacent properties where vegetation control is performed near pedestrian routes
When you’re trying to connect those real-world circumstances to a medical diagnosis, evidence matters. A lawyer can help you identify what’s relevant, what’s missing, and what should be preserved before it disappears.


