Sewage leak temporarily closes Bear River Middle School


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GARLAND, Box Elder County — Workers will spend the weekend deep-cleaning parts of Bear River Middle School, in Box Elder County, after approximately 1,000 gallons of sewage spilled inside.

Administrators say the problem at the school in Garland wasn't quite as bad as it sounds as all of that sewage was out of reach from students and staff.

The bigger challenge for the weekend will be getting rid of the smell.

The halls of Bear River Middle School were empty Friday because of Thursday's discovery.

"The school was smelly," Bear River student Benjamin Call said. "Like, I had to have my sixth hour in the computer lab instead of in the band room."

He said he didn't smell much of it, but he learned something was up after his class was moved further away from the problem.

"They found a sewer line, a 4-inch cast-iron sewer line had broken," Corey Thompson, director of facilities at the Box Elder School District, said.

The smell was much worse in crawl spaces than the building itself after about 1,000 gallons of sewage spilled into the school.
The smell was much worse in crawl spaces than the building itself after about 1,000 gallons of sewage spilled into the school. (Photo: Mike Anderson, KSL-TV)

He said the break led to the spill, but luckily it wasn't in a bathroom, classroom or hallway.

"And as they started to investigate, they opened up the access tunnels under the building where our utilities are and found that the smell was even worse," Thompson said.

Maintenance workers were able to fix the leak but the cleanup is going to take some professional help.

Corey Thompson, director of facilities at the Box Elder School District, said clean up will completed in time for classes to resume on Monday at Bear River School in Garland.
Corey Thompson, director of facilities at the Box Elder School District, said clean up will completed in time for classes to resume on Monday at Bear River School in Garland. (Photo: Mike Anderson, KSL-TV)

"It was quite a bit. It was pretty substantial," Thompson added.

He said students were sent home purely because of the smell.

"We have gas sniffers that'll sniff out any toxic fumes or dangerous substances and there was zero read on that," Thompson said.

Thompson believes it should be business as normal on Monday.

Hoses were all over the school hallways Friday as crews cleaned up the mess and smell at Bear River Middle School in Garland.
Hoses were all over the school hallways Friday as crews cleaned up the mess and smell at Bear River Middle School in Garland. (Photo: Mike Anderson, KSL-TV)

Students like Benjamin looked forward to setting aside the virtual learning.

"Yeah, seeing all my friends, too," he said.

Thompson said the cleanup company will be back at the school Saturday pressure-washing and steam cleaning that access tunnel.

There's also a chemical treatment to help get rid of the smell.

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Mike Anderson, KSLMike Anderson
Mike Anderson often doubles as his own photographer, shooting and editing most of his stories. He came to KSL in April 2011 after working for several years at various broadcast news outlets.

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