In a suburban community like Franklin Lakes, herbicide exposure claims frequently trace back to everyday, residential routines rather than large industrial worksites. Common scenarios include:
- Backyard and property treatment: Homeowners or hired landscapers applying weed killer along driveways, fence lines, and landscaped beds.
- Repeat seasonal applications: Multiple treatments over years (spring and fall) that can complicate timelines—but also make documentation important.
- Neighborhood residue and tracking: Product residue carried on shoes, work gloves, or equipment that later contacts other household members.
- Contractor or groundskeeping work: People working on residential properties may be exposed during mixing, spraying, cleanup, or equipment maintenance.
- Secondhand exposure in shared households: When one person brings contaminated work clothes home, symptoms may appear in another household member later.
A key local reality: many residents don’t keep product records once the weeds are under control—until a cancer diagnosis or other serious illness forces a second look. That’s why early evidence preservation matters.


