Âé¶¹Ô­´´

Âé¶¹Ô­´´

Hazmat incident at S.C. Chick-fil-A sends 3 to hospital

Richland County EMS examined 13 people at the scene in Columbia, with three transported to a hospital

By Noah Feit
The Sun News

COLUMBIA, S.C. — A Chick-fil-A in South Carolina was closed Saturday after people inside the fast food restaurant said they felt sick, according to the Columbia Fire Department.

Three people were hospitalized, authorities said.

Members of the fire department, including the hazmat team, responded to the Chick-fil-A on Garners Ferry Road late Saturday morning, the fire department said in a social media post.

Two chemical products used for cleaning mixed after being poured down a drain at the restaurant that was backed up, according to the post. This created an odor that made several people inside the building feel unwell, the fire department said.

Members of the Columbia Fire Department respond to a Chick-fil-A where the restaurant was evacuated. Columbia Fire Department

The restaurant, near a Walmart Supercenter and Exit 9 on Interstate 77, was evacuated while firefighters worked to remedy the issue and ventilate the building, according to the post.

There were 13 people who were examined by Richland County EMS at the scene, and three of them were taken to an area hospital, the fire department said. Further information on their conditions was not available.

Out of an abundance of caution, Chick-fil-A officials chose to keep the restaurant closed for the rest of Saturday, according to the release. Chick-fil-A’s are traditionally closed on Sundays.

A Chick-fil-A official said the restaurant will reopen on Monday, WLTX reported.

© 2025 The Sun News (Myrtle Beach, S.C.).
Visit .
Distributed by

Trending
Since the shutdown of Crozer-Chester and Taylor hospitals, ambulance response times in Delaware County have risen to an average of 12 minutes
Severely impaired and terminally ill residents account for most preventable transfers, often tied to feeding tube issues, infections and falls, according to a national study by Florida Atlantic University
The law requires annual training and emergency protocols to treat traumatic injuries before EMS arrives
In a roundtable with Rep. Eric Sorensen, fire and EMS officials highlighted how underfunding, Medicaid cuts, and unfunded mandates are straining rural departments