Pine Bush High School

Pine Bush High School is the central high school for the Pine Bush Central School District, located on Route 302 in the hamlet of Pine Bush, New York, United States. Drawing over 2,000 students from northwestern Orange County and the adjacent portions of Sullivan and Ulster counties.

Pine Bush High School
Location
Coordinates41°36′06″N 74°18′28″W
Information
TypePublic
Established1938
School districtPine Bush Central School District
PrincipalMr. Hopmayer
Faculty133[1]
Grades9-12
Enrollment1,708 (2016-17)[2]
Color(s)Blue, Gold         
AthleticsTennis, Football, Cross-country, Volleyball, Field Hockey, Swimming, Track, Basketball, Baseball, Golf, American Football, and Lacrosse
MascotBushmen
WebsiteSchool Homepage

The school no longer offers the International Baccalaureate degree program. It had been authorized to do so since 2002.[3]

Notable alumni

Controversy

Pine Bush High School has been involved in several well-known controversies over the last 10 years.

  • In 2012, five Jewish students brought a lawsuit against Pine Bush Central School District claiming that they experienced anti-Semitic slurs, graffiti, physical attacks, and jokes related to The Holocaust during their time in elementary, middle, and high school. New York Governor Andrew Cuomo ordered an investigation into these allegations in 2013. Pine Bush Central School District settled this lawsuit in 2015, and paid the plaintiffs $4.48 million.[4]
  • In 2015, a student read the Pledge of Allegiance in Arabic in an effort to celebrate national Foreign Language Week. This caused school and community-wide controversy as students and community-members associated the reading with conflict in the Middle East. This incident garnered nation-wide attention and resulted in an apology from the school principal, Aaron Hopmayer.[5]
  • In 2019, The New York Times wrote a follow-up article about how anti-Semitism still plagues Pine Bush Central School District. The article explains that the school district surveyed a portion of their students and found that 766 respondents in middle and high school said that they had seen or heard anti-Semitism in school in the last year.[6]
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References

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