Missouri & Illinois School Buildings — Asbestos Exposure
School buildings constructed from the 1940s through the 1980s reportedly relied on asbestos-containing materials throughout their mechanical systems. Boilermakers who serviced cast-iron and water-tube heating boilers, pipefitters who maintained steam distribution systems, insulators who applied and removed pipe covering and block insulation, and HVAC mechanics who worked on air handling units may have been exposed to asbestos fibers in school buildings across Missouri and Illinois.
The Missouri Department of Natural Resources has documented asbestos-containing materials — including boiler insulation, pipe insulation, floor tile, ceiling tile, spray fireproofing, transite board, duct insulation, and gaskets — allegedly removed from hundreds of school buildings statewide. Missouri's boiler registry records heating equipment that may have required installation and maintenance work involving asbestos-containing insulation. Both data sets are public record. The information on this site is drawn from those public records and from publicly filed asbestos litigation. Nothing here constitutes legal advice or a finding of liability. Scroll down to find a specific school district.
Missouri Filing Deadline — Know Your Rights
Missouri law currently gives asbestos claimants 5 years from diagnosis to file under Mo. Rev. Stat. § 516.120 — one of the longest windows in the country. If you or a family member has been diagnosed with mesothelioma, asbestosis, or asbestos-related lung cancer and believe the illness may be related to work at a school building, consult a Missouri mesothelioma attorney to understand your options.
About the two deadlines: Missouri keeps the personal-injury clock (Mo. Rev. Stat. § 516.120) and the wrongful-death clock (Mo. Rev. Stat. § 537.100) on separate tracks. The 5-year personal-injury deadline runs from the date of diagnosis and applies to the diagnosed person's own claim while they are alive. The 3-year wrongful-death deadline runs from the date of death and applies to surviving family members. The two are independent — preserving one does not extend the other, and a Missouri asbestos attorney can keep both options open as the situation evolves.
Asbestos-Containing Materials Commonly Found in School Buildings
Reportedly serviced, repaired, and replaced cast-iron sectional boilers in school boiler rooms. Work of this type may have involved asbestos-containing refractory and boiler block insulation, and workers in these roles were allegedly exposed to elevated fiber concentrations during maintenance overhauls.
Pipefitters & Steamfitters
Maintained steam and hot-water distribution piping throughout school buildings. This work reportedly involved products such as Johns-Manville Thermobestos and Owens-Illinois Kaylo pipe covering — materials that may have released asbestos fibers when connections were broken or valves replaced.
Heat & Frost Insulators
Applied and removed pipe covering, block insulation, and boiler lagging throughout school mechanical rooms. Cutting and fitting operations of this type are alleged to have produced among the highest fiber concentrations of any trade working in school buildings.
HVAC Mechanics
Maintained air handling units and duct systems that may have been lined with asbestos-containing insulation. Workers in this trade allegedly encountered W.R. Grace Monokote spray fireproofing and similar materials above ceiling tiles during ductwork access.
Electricians
Ran conduit and wiring in mechanical rooms and above suspended ceilings that may have contained asbestos tiles. Work in boiler rooms and pipe chases allegedly placed electricians in proximity to deteriorating pipe insulation during normal job activities.
Maintenance Workers
School district maintenance employees worked year-round in facilities where routine repairs — cutting into walls, replacing ceiling tiles, servicing boilers — may have disturbed asbestos-containing materials reportedly installed during original construction.
If You Worked at a Missouri School and Have Been Diagnosed
Missouri law currently gives asbestos claimants 5 years from diagnosis to file under Mo. Rev. Stat. § 516.120. If you or a family member has received a diagnosis that may be related to asbestos exposure while working at a school building, time matters. More than 60 asbestos bankruptcy trust funds are available to Missouri claimants — each with its own separate documentation requirements that take months to prepare.
Find your school district in the list above, review the documented asbestos exposure history, and contact a Missouri mesothelioma attorney before your deadline expires.
For a full guide to asbestos in school buildings — where it was used, the risk to teachers, custodians, and staff, and AHERA rights for parents — see:
Mesothelioma Attorney for Missouri Asbestos Claims
If you were diagnosed with mesothelioma, asbestosis, or another asbestos-related disease after being exposed to asbestos — or you lost a loved one to one — you and your family may be entitled to significant compensation through asbestos trust funds and civil claims. An experienced asbestos attorney can evaluate the case — at no cost to you.
Living with a diagnosis?
If you were diagnosed with an asbestos-related disease, a filing deadline may already be running. You may be owed compensation now — and claims can often be pursued even if the company is out of business.
Lost a loved one to mesothelioma?
Surviving spouses and children may pursue a wrongful-death claim and asbestos-trust recovery on a loved one's behalf — a separate deadline that can run from the date of passing.
Free case review — no obligation to hire
No attorney fee unless a financial recovery is made
Personal-injury and wrongful-death claims both evaluated
Trust-fund claims and civil lawsuits pursued simultaneously
Filing deadlines may limit the time you have — the sooner the better
Asbestos & Mesothelioma Claims — for workers and their families.
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