Many Kentwood-area claims start with a familiar pattern: exposure wasn’t a one-time event, and the product wasn’t treated like “evidence” at the time.
Common local scenarios include:
- Home and rental landscaping: herbicide use on lawns, driveway edges, or garden beds—sometimes by the homeowner, sometimes by a property manager, sometimes by a hired maintenance crew.
- Take-home exposure: family members who handled work clothes after yard work, pest control, or maintenance tasks.
- Neighborhood application drift: when applications occur near sidewalks, shared driveways, or property lines—especially during summer maintenance seasons.
- Worksite exposure: people employed in roles connected to landscaping, groundskeeping, or facility maintenance where herbicides are applied as part of scheduled upkeep.
Because Kentwood is built around residential neighborhoods with nearby commercial corridors, exposure documentation can be scattered—so organizing it early matters.


