Oakland is largely residential with a mix of older lots, shared neighborhood maintenance practices, and people who handle yard work themselves or hire local crews. In that setting, exposure often comes from predictable, real-world patterns—such as:
- Mowing or weed-whacking treated areas shortly after spraying
- Touching residue on tools, gloves, gates, or outdoor furniture
- Secondhand exposure when someone in the household works with herbicides and brings residue indoors on clothing
- Drift during seasonal applications when weather and application timing make overspray more likely
These details matter legally. The strongest cases don’t just claim “chemical exposure”—they explain how exposure likely occurred in your specific home or workplace environment and how that aligns with your medical timeline.


