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The school was evacuated Thursday around 1 p. Two dozen were affected initially, but the district believes twice as many sought treatment over the weekend. Rachelle Johnson's two daughters who attend Canyon View both showed symptoms of carbon monoxide poisoning. One of them was in the hall where the alarm went off. Johnson said they spent the night in a hyperbaric chamber, which is a therapy method using pure oxygen in a pressurized environment. It makes me nervous," she said.
The district said in an announcement Sunday that the Cedar City Fire Department performed tests within about 15 minutes of the alarm going off, and they found "small amounts" of the toxic gas. However, by the time first responders arrived, the school had already opened all doors and windows, so the exact levels at the time of the incident were not recorded.
Students in that area of the school were tested, and their levels were found to be normal. Students were then cleared to re-enter the building. The district says the fire department returned Friday morning to conduct more tests throughout the school, and they found no dangerous CO levels.
The fire department and Dominion Energy then tested the building later that afternoon due to a "possible exposure," but they deemed it safe. Then on Saturday, more tests were performed after reports of possible exposures at basketball games, but again no dangerous levels of CO were detected.
Taking it one step further, the district called in the help of the Utah National Guard 85th Civil Support Team, which has equipment to test for CO at the "parts per billion level" instead of "parts per million. The district says there were no traces of harmful gasses after about four hours of testing. The Guard's equipment can reportedly detect more than , potentially harmful particulates.