Published 2 days ago • loading... • Updated 2 days agoShow Less IconStudents help shape the future environment in town Summary by The West AustralianMargaret River students have helped shape the future environment in town, with 75 year 2,3 and 6 students from St Thomas More Catholic Primary School joining environmental specialist planting native seedlingsShare menu2 Articles2 ArticlesAllLeftCenterRight1Search IconSort IconThe West AustralianAugusta-Margaret River TimesView articleCaret Right IconReposted by Augusta-Margaret River TimesLean RightFactualityOwnershipStudents help shape the future environment in townMargaret River students have helped shape the future environment in town, with 75 year 2,3 and 6 students from St Thomas More Catholic Primary School joining environmental specialist planting native seedlings2 days ago·AustraliaRead Full ArticleThink freely.Subscribe and get full access to Ground NewsSubscriptions start at $9.99/yearSubscribeBlindspot Title And LogoStories disproportionately reported by the Left or the RightSee More Blindspots4th of July SaleGet 40% off Vantage subscriptions for yourself or a friend.Get StartedCoverage DetailsTotal News Sources2Leaning Left0Leaning Right1Center0Last Updated2 days agoBias Distribution100% RightBias Distribution Too Big Arrow IconToo Big Arrow IconCaret Up Icon100% of the sources lean Right100% RightR 100%Untracked biasFactuality Info IconTo view factuality data please Upgrade to PremiumOwnership Info IconTo view ownership data please Upgrade to VantageThe West Australian broke the news in Australia 2 days ago on Thursday, July 2, 2026.Too Big Arrow IconCaret Down IconSources are mostly out of (0)Similar News TopicsEnvironment Plus IconMargaret River Plus IconShow AllBlindspot Title And LogoStories disproportionately reported by the Left or the RightSee More BlindspotsSimilar News TopicsEnvironment Plus IconMargaret River Plus IconShow All