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Mercury-Blue Jay Drive

 
Site Contact:
Eric Nold
On-Scene Coordinator

(nold.eric@epa.gov)

Site Location:
1011 Blue Jay Drive
Sabetha, KS 66534
response.epa.gov/MercuryBlueJayDrive

The Kansas Department of Health and Environment (KDHE) requested federal assistance from EPA Region 7 on July 31, 2025, regarding the release of approximately one tablespoon of elemental mercury at a high school in Sabetha, Kansas.

The source of the mercury was a laboratory thermometer that broke while moving a box in the classroom closet. The local fire department reported the release to the National Response Center (NRC), filed under report #1438505.

After KDHE provided the verbal request for federal assistance, they further facilitated communication between EPA and the Nemaha Emergency Manager who assisted with the response. The local fire department, along with school district personnel, responded promptly and secured the site. Approximately 20 individuals were evacuated from the high school after the release.

EPA Region 7 dispatched an OSC and another responder to assess the extent of contamination from the release of mercury. It was later determined that the source of the release was an antique wall barometer and not a broken thermometer.

EPA initiated a removal assessment due to the elevated risk of exposure and potential spread of contamination. The school’s remodeling contractor who reportedly caused the spill agreed to procure a cleanup contractor due to the elevated risk of exposure and the spread of contamination.

The contractors who reportedly caused the spill drove themselves to the hospital due to exposure and EPA’s OSC and responder screened the hospital hallways and patient rooms out of an abundance of caution and returned the contractors’ clothes to the high school to be removed along with other items sent away for disposal during the remediation process.

Contractors hired to perform the remediation performed the cleanup and removed three 55-gallon drums of debris during the cleanup process.

The EPA OSC returned after the cleanup was complete to verify mercury concentrations were below levels of concerns.

Once those levels were met, the cleanup was complete and no further actions are warranted.