CPS Board Approves $800K Payouts to Settle 2015 Prussing Elementary Carbon Monoxide Leak Lawsuits

Prussing Elementary (Google Earth)Prussing Elementary (Google Earth)

The Chicago Board of Education approved payouts totaling more than $800,000 to settle a pair of lawsuits after dozens of students were hospitalized following a carbon monoxide leak at Prussing Elementary in 2015.

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The seven-member board voted unanimously in favor of the agreements, which would settle a pair of lawsuits filed by Prussing parents after at least 71 students and seven adults were taken to the hospital as a result of the leak.

The settlement agreements were in the amounts of $230,000 and $612,000, according to the board agenda.

The Jefferson Park neighborhood elementary school was evacuated around 9:30 a.m. on Oct. 30, 2015, after one student began suffering a headache, nausea and dizziness, according to DNAinfo.

Chicago firefighters subsequently discovered dangerously high levels of carbon monoxide in the building, DNAinfo reported at the time.

A CPS spokesperson this week said that “Chicago Public Schools is committed to ensuring that all students have a safe learning environment.”

According to CPS, all schools are now outfitted with carbon monoxide detectors beyond what the city code requires, and all district-run schools have funding allocations for a full-time engineer.


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