Many residents first connect their symptoms to herbicides after a diagnosis—and then start reviewing earlier years. In Temecula and nearby areas, common exposure scenarios can include:
- Residential landscaping and weed control: repeated applications for weeds along driveways, walkways, and retaining walls.
- HOA and community maintenance: herbicide use by contractors for common areas, with overspray or residue settling on nearby patios.
- Side-yard and ranch-edge properties: vegetation management near fields or open land where seasonal spraying may occur.
- Secondhand exposure: a spouse, family member, or worker who applied herbicides and brought residue home on gloves, boots, or clothing.
- Equipment and storage: handling concentrate, cleaning sprayers, or storing products in sheds/garages without consistent protective gear.
In California, the details matter because liability and causation are proven through evidence—not assumptions. Your case needs a clear timeline tying together where the exposure occurred, what products were used, and how medical records connect the diagnosis to that exposure theory.


