Many Newark-area cases begin with a familiar pattern: someone noticed persistent health changes after a period of heavy residential or commercial maintenance. Common local scenarios include:
- Property and grounds crews applying weed killers for apartment complexes, commercial storefronts, or building perimeter areas.
- Landscaping and maintenance work where workers mow or trim treated areas shortly after spraying.
- Secondhand exposure from residue brought home on work boots, tools, or work clothing.
- Nearby treatment where spraying occurred on adjacent lots, loading areas, or shared outdoor spaces.
Newark’s dense urban environment means exposures can be close together in time and location, but that doesn’t automatically make them legally easy. Your attorney’s job is to connect the dots between your exposure history and your medical records in a way that can withstand legal scrutiny.


