In a suburban community like South Plainfield, exposure often isn’t limited to a single “user” of weed killer. Many cases start with one of these real-world scenarios:
- Homeowners and caregivers treating driveways, lawns, or garden areas around the same time health issues began.
- Rental households where landscaping was maintained by a property manager, landlord, or outside crew.
- Shared-adjacent properties (neighbors applying products close to fences, walkways, or shared landscaping).
- Take-home exposure—product residue on work clothes or household items brought in by someone who used herbicides at a job.
The practical challenge is timing. In New Jersey, the strength of an herbicide-related injury claim often depends on whether your timeline of exposure and diagnosis can be supported with records—not just memory.


