Unlike workplace exposures that may be documented annually, suburban exposure is frequently scattered over time:
- Home use: spot-treating weeds in driveways or garden beds.
- Neighbor proximity: applications nearby that drift into yards, patios, or shared outdoor spaces.
- Contractor services: landscapers or maintenance teams applying herbicides while residents are at work or commuting.
- Seasonal patterns: late spring and early fall applications that blur together once symptoms appear years later.
In New Jersey, the legal timeline and evidence expectations still depend on what can be proven—not what feels most likely. That’s why we focus early on building a clear exposure story: product type, application method, timeframe, and how the chemical could have reached the person who became ill.


