Residents in and around Oak Harbor may be exposed through:
- Residential lawn and garden routines (homeowners and renters using herbicides around driveways and landscaping)
- Seasonal property management (turnover of tenants, maintenance schedules, and shared landscaping responsibilities)
- Work tied to outdoor upkeep (groundskeeping, landscaping, marina/shoreline maintenance, and other field work)
- Tourism-adjacent exposure patterns (illness timelines that don’t match “when the product was used,” because people may travel, help family property, or receive care long after exposure)
Because exposure details can fade quickly—especially when product bottles are discarded—Oak Harbor claimants often benefit from starting evidence organization early.


