In a suburban community like Jennings, exposure stories commonly follow predictable patterns:
- Home and lawn maintenance: repeated use on driveways, garden beds, or rental properties between tenants.
- Nearby application: landscaping or maintenance crews spraying around shared boundaries.
- Work-related exposure: roles involving groundskeeping, pest control support, or property maintenance where herbicides are part of the job.
- Backyard storage and reapplication: product moved around the garage/shed, making it harder later to identify what was used.
When exposure is tied to everyday routines, the hardest part isn’t usually whether someone felt sick—it’s reconstructing what was used, when it was used, and where it was applied. That’s where a structured approach matters.


