Many people in Elizabeth don’t connect the dots until after a diagnosis. Common starting points include:
- Property and landscaping routines: weed control on sidewalks, parking lots, drainage areas, or shared courtyard spaces.
- Contractor-applied herbicides: when a company sprays and residents notice odors, overspray, or treated areas before symptoms appear.
- Workplace exposure: groundskeeping, facility maintenance, or roles that involve cleaning outdoor spaces where herbicide is used.
- Secondhand exposure: contaminated clothing or gear brought home after a shift.
Because Elizabeth is a dense community with many shared outdoor areas, exposure facts may be spread across several settings. That’s why your attorney’s first job is usually to map your timeline clearly—what happened, where it happened, and when medical issues emerged.


