The Columbia Press 1 Clatsop County’s Independent Weekly www.thecolumbiapress.com New middle school teachers are WHS alums 50 ¢ Vol. 5, Issue 37 September 10, 2021 Industrial park gets its first tenant Scoular plant will process fishmeal for pet food industry By Bruce Dustin For The Columbia Press By Cindy Yingst The old hats are back in town. There were three teaching positions to be filled at Warrenton’s new mid- dle school and all three were filled by Warrenton High School alumni, for- mer graduates. Ryker Thornton, a 1992 graduate of WHS, is teaching math and technol- ogy. His inspiration for becoming a coach and educator is Gary McBride. His motivation to return was to be more involved in his children’s edu- cation and sports. His daughter is a freshman at WHS and his son is in the seventh grade at WMS. Chelsea Anderson, formerly Neahring, is a 2008 WHS graduate. She is teaching English. She was in- spired to be an English teacher by Gail Whitney Welch. She was asked to return home by her elder sister, Dionne Marshall, the elementary school’s new vice principal. Juanantonio Salcedo, a 2015 WHS grad, is teaching physical education A fishmeal processing plant – the first occupant of the Port of Astoria’s Airport Industrial Park – is under construction and company officials are ready to hire a plant manager. “We started in late July and antic- ipate roughly a one-year build – so July 2022,” said Chad Gauger, gen- eral manager for the Scoular Com- pany’s high-value nutritional pro- tein division. “Nothing has changed in terms of the scoping of the project, type of activities or the investment – we locked that back in the early part of the year,” he said. “So it’s full steam ahead at this point.” The company plans a 14,400- square-foot factory that will pro- duce fishmeal, fish oil and shrimp shell meal using the offal, or entrails and other parts usually cast off by local processors preparing fish for See ‘Teachers’ on Page 3 The Columbia Press Above: Foun- dation work is under way at the Scoular plant on Airport Way. Cindy Yingst Left: A Big River Construction crew works on sewer lines near Brim Aviation at Astoria Regional Airport. Courtesy Port of Astoria See ‘Scoular’ on Page 4