Fort Lee is dense, and many residents share similar exposure realities, even when their situations look different on the surface:
- Residential property maintenance: herbicide use on sidewalks, landscaping borders, and shared outdoor spaces.
- Commuter and workplace overlap: people who work at facilities where vegetation is controlled may also handle clothing, tools, or protective gear at home.
- High-traffic neighborhood routines: mowing, weeding, and cleanup after spraying can lead to contact with residue.
- Multi-location living: families may encounter herbicides at home, then later through another setting (work, caretaking, or community maintenance).
In these cases, the question isn’t just whether exposure occurred—it’s when, how, and what product was involved. A strong evaluation in NJ starts by building a clean, defensible timeline.


