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A Faculty Chemistry Experiment Leaked Gas Inside USD's Churchill-Haines Building, Drawing Remote Hazmat Guidance From Sioux Falls

SDchemical spillemergency notificationmedium confidence
Confirmed Threat

On Tuesday, July 8, 2025, a faculty member working on a chemistry experiment at the University of South Dakota's Churchill-Haines Laboratory caused a small gas leak that prompted Vermillion Fire EMS to evacuate the building. Because Vermillion's local fire department lacks an in-house hazmat unit, Sioux Falls Fire Rescue's Hazmat Unit provided remote technical guidance to assess and mitigate the hazard. The building was ventilated, no injuries were reported, and Vermillion Fire EMS confirmed no ongoing threat to the community.

Alerts
2
Response
Killed
0
Injured
0
Institution
University of South Dakota
Public R2 · SD
~10,000 studentsUSD Alert
Confirmed Timeline

Alert Sequence

2 messages in sequence

Some alert texts below are approximate reconstructions from news coverage, not confirmed verbatim transcripts. Reconstructed texts are shown in italic with a dashed border. Verified verbatim texts have a solid border and are marked accordingly.

INITIAL ALERTSMS
Approximate reconstruction171 chars
USD Alert: Chemical spill reported at Churchill-Haines Laboratory. Evacuate the building immediately. Avoid the area. Vermillion Fire EMS is responding. Updates to follow.

This text has been reconstructed from news coverage and may not reflect the exact original wording.

Churchill-Haines Laboratory houses USD's Department of Chemistry — a building where small gas leaks during research are foreseeable
Vermillion is a small college town; the nearest dedicated hazmat unit is in Sioux Falls, approximately 60 miles north
Sioux Falls Fire Rescue's Hazmat Unit provided guidance remotely rather than physically responding — a documented rural-university hazmat-coverage model
ALL CLEARSMS
Approximate reconstruction212 chars
USD Alert Update: Churchill-Haines Laboratory has been ventilated and cleared. Vermillion Fire EMS confirms no ongoing threat. No injuries reported. The building has been reopened. Thank you for your cooperation.

This text has been reconstructed from news coverage and may not reflect the exact original wording.

The all-clear specifically named 'no ongoing threat to the community' — language designed to reassure Vermillion residents in addition to USD students
Building ventilation alone resolved the hazard, suggesting a volatile gas that dissipated quickly rather than a persistent contamination
The remote-guidance model from Sioux Falls Hazmat allowed for rapid all-clear without waiting for a physical hazmat-team arrival
Context

Background

The University of South Dakota is the state's flagship public university, located in Vermillion, South Dakota, with approximately 10,000 students. The Churchill-Haines Building houses USD's Department of Chemistry. On Tuesday, July 8, 2025, a faculty member working on a chemistry experiment caused a small gas leak inside the laboratory. Vermillion Fire EMS evacuated and ventilated the building. Because Vermillion's small-town fire department does not maintain an in-house hazmat team, Sioux Falls Fire Rescue's Hazmat Unit — based approximately 60 miles north — provided remote technical guidance by phone and radio to help assess and mitigate the hazard. No injuries were reported, and Vermillion Fire EMS confirmed there was no ongoing threat to the community. The case is significant for the archive because it documents the remote-hazmat-guidance model used by rural universities — where the nearest dedicated hazmat unit can be more than an hour away, and where local fire departments rely on technical assistance rather than physical mutual aid for chemistry-lab incidents. USD is one of the relatively few R2 public universities in the archive, and South Dakota remains underrepresented overall.
Analysis

Key Findings

A faculty chemistry experiment caused a small gas leak inside Churchill-Haines Laboratory on July 8, 2025
Vermillion Fire EMS evacuated and ventilated the building
Sioux Falls Fire Rescue's Hazmat Unit — 60 miles away — provided remote technical guidance rather than physical response
No injuries were reported among the faculty member, first responders, or building occupants
Vermillion Fire EMS confirmed no ongoing threat to the community
The incident illustrates the rural-university hazmat-coverage model where dedicated hazmat units provide remote guidance
USD is South Dakota's flagship R2 public university; the case adds rural-Midwest coverage to the archive
Outcome
Vermillion Fire EMS evacuated and ventilated the Churchill-Haines Building. Sioux Falls Fire Rescue's Hazmat Unit provided remote technical guidance via phone and radio. No injuries were reported among first responders or the faculty member or anyone inside the building. Vermillion Fire EMS confirmed there was no ongoing threat to the community.
Provenance

Sources

  1. News
  2. News
  3. News
  4. Official
Tags
chemical-spillgas-leakhazmatsouth-dakotavermillionusdchurchill-haineschemistry-labrural-universityremote-hazmat-guidancepublic-r2
Added May 2026Updated May 2026Via ingestion