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    Classes resume, businesses reopen as large chunk of evacuation zone is cleared in Garden Grove hazmat threat
    • May 26, 2026

    After a long, confusing holiday weekend of being evacuated due to concerns that a malfunctioning tank containing a flammable, volatile chemical could explode, families and businesses alerted late Monday evening they could return are now trying for a return to normal.

    A dozen Garden Grove Unified School District campuses had been in the evacuation zone established Friday, but Tuesday only three, Alamitos Intermediate, Lawrence Elementary and Wakeham Elementary, were still affected after authorities drew new evacuation maps more tightly surrounding the aerospace plant in West Garden Grove where crews are still trying to contain a smaller explosion or spill potential.

    At Barkey Elementary School, now outside the evacuation zone, parents returned to business as usual — or at least tried to.

    “Thank you so much for showing up today,” a woman’s voice rang over the loudspeaker Tuesday morning.

    “It’s pretty awful,” said Jackie M., holding her toddler in one arm. “They told us to come back right after last night’s press conference. I wish they could have given us some time to recoup.”

    The 34-year-old Garden Grove mother said her family evacuated Friday and received notice to return Monday night. “It was like, ‘OK, we gotta do this.’”

    Not everyone was as affected.

    “He didn’t even know there was anything going on,” said Tri Truong, 41, referring to his 5-year-old son. The Garden Grove father said his family lives outside the evacuation zone and took advantage of the Memorial Day weekend.

    Tiffany Silva, 38, who recently moved from Garden Grove to Huntington Beach shortly before the hazmat incident, described the disruption caused by evacuations and ongoing uncertainty surrounding schools and day-to-day logistics.

    “Everyone’s just scrambling. The teachers didn’t even really get a heads-up,” Silva said.

    Though she no longer lives directly in the affected neighborhood, many of her responsibilities and obligations remain tied to the area as she continues transitioning to her new home.

    “Everything is still in the vicinity. I’m like, I can’t do any of it right now,” she said.

     Orange County Register 

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