Warrenton High School (Oregon)

Warrenton High School (WHS) is a public high school in Warrenton, Oregon, United States. It is home to one of the first on-campus high school fish hatcheries and aquaculture programs in the state.

Warrenton High School
Address
1700 SE Main

, ,
97146

Coordinates46.147254°N 123.92826°W / 46.147254; -123.92826
Information
TypePublic
Opened1920
School districtWarrenton-Hammond School District
PrincipalJosh Jannusch
Teaching staff15.63 (FTE)[1]
Grades9-12
Number of students267 (2017–18)[1]
Student to teacher ratio17.08[1]
Campus size25 acres (100,000 m2)
Campus typeRural
Color(s)Purple and white          
Athletics conferenceOSAA
MascotWarrior
WebsiteWarrenton High School

Academics

In 2008, 86% of the school's seniors received their high school diploma. Of 70 students, 60 graduated, eight dropped out, and two were still in high school the following year.[2][3]

Fisheries program

The Fisheries Program at WHS started as the "fish farm club" and became the aquaculture class in the early 1960s. The program was conceived and began in the late 1950s. It started with rearing salmonids in buckets and releasing them into the on-campus Skipanon River, and grew to eventually being one of the pioneers of netpen rearing in the Pacific Northwest, with the first netpens built in the 1960s. Warrenton was founded under water and after its diking and incorporation as a city, it still was mostly wetland. The fish rearing operation had only a 2"x6" wide wooden catwalk as the only means of reaching the operation, until the early 1970s when the Oregon National Guard cleared and built a road to the pump shed. The first on-campus fish hatchery was built in 1974 by the aquaculture, shop, welding, and PE classes alongside community volunteers directing the engineering.

During the early to mid-1980s, the operations expanded to the Warrenton Municipal Sewer Ponds in the form of netpens. This operation recorded extremely high growth rates. The fish were tested and later released. The test results revealed that the fish were healthy and consumable, despite their environment.[4]

A new 2,000 sq ft (190 m2) fisheries rearing and research facility was built by Warrenton High Fisheries, Inc. (WarHF), a non-profit corporation founded in 2005 by a then sophomore, Henry Balensifer. It was finished in 2007.[5]

In 2010, WarHF received funds from the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife Restoration and Enhancement Board to assist in the construction of the first rain-powered hatchery in the state.[6][7] While it may be the first in the nation, that claim has not yet been officially vetted.

Wetlands and softball field construction

In 2009 in order to create a new softball field, the school needed to transplant an area of wetland. This project was to continue through 2011, until the wetland is once again fully functioning.

Notable alumni

gollark: It is engaged in capitalistic conspiracies.
gollark: Clearly it's good enough for some task/people combinations, because volunteer organizations exist.
gollark: I do not think altruism/"if no one does them they are not done" is a sufficient incentive to make people do necessary quantities of possibly-uninteresting work.
gollark: You need more formal systems to organize people at scale, and we need scale.
gollark: Many companies doing things will have more people than that in one department.

References

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