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Ossining High School Advances To State Envirothon Finals

OSSINING, N.Y. -- A team from Ossining High School was named Westchester's highest scoring group at this year's Hudson Valley Regional Envirothon at the Sharpe Reservation in Fishkill Wednesday, April 15. 

Ossining High School was named Westchester's highest-scoring group at this year's Hudson Valley Regional Envirothon.

Ossining High School was named Westchester's highest-scoring group at this year's Hudson Valley Regional Envirothon.

Photo Credit: Contributed

Twenty-five high school teams from the Hudson Valley competed in this year’s regional competition and Ossining’s five-member Team 17, led by teacher Valerie Holmes, finished fourth.

As the highest-ranking team from Westchester County, Ossining Team 17 has qualified to compete in the May 27-28 New York State Envirothon at Hobart and William Smith Colleges in Geneva, N.Y. The 2015 North American Envirothon will be July 27 to Aug. 2 in Missouri. Last year, a New York team won the North American competition.

“Congratulations to Ossining Team 17. They are making Westchester proud as they take on other teams from around the state.  We wish them the best of luck,” said Westchester County Executive Robert Astorino.

Astorino also lauded the participation of the nine other Westchester teams who competed in the regional event, commending their environmental stewardship and academic competitiveness.

The following Westchester schools participated in the regional Envirothon and sent either one or two teams:

  • John Jay High School, Katonah-Lewisboro School District, Cross River.
  • Hastings High School, Village of Hastings-on-Hudson.
  • Ossining High School, Village/Town of Ossining.
  • Yorktown High School, Town of Yorktown.
  • Tech Center High School, Putnam-Northern Westchester BOCES, Yorktown Heights.
  • Walter Panas High School , Lakeland Central School District, Cortlandt.

The Envirothon is an annual environmentally themed academic competition for high school students organized by the region’s county Soil and Water Conservation Districts. 

The competition is on regional, state and bi-national levels and combines in-class and hands-on environmental education, testing students on aquatic ecology, forestry, soils and land use, wildlife and a fifth current environmental issue that changes each year. 

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