If you have a kid at North Mason High School or the middle school, the April 28 levy result matters to you in a different way than it does to most other voters in the district — and the leading numbers do not mean what most people are assuming.
The levy is currently passing with 53.50% yes votes (2,130 to 1,851) in combined Mason and Kitsap county totals. The Mason County Auditor will certify the result on May 8, 2026, after the challenged-ballot review on May 7. Until then, results are preliminary.
The honest framing for North Mason parents is this: passage stabilizes the floor. It does not bring back what was already cut, and it does not change anything for the 2026-27 school year that starts in September. Here’s what that actually looks like for your student.
What you should expect for fall 2026 either way
Even if the levy is certified passing, the first revenue does not reach the district until April 2027 at the earliest. That timing is a hard constraint of how Washington school levies work: they are collected on property tax bills the following calendar year.
So the practical answer to “Will my kid’s program be back in September?” is: the programs and positions that were already eliminated — the two administrative positions, the $1.3 million in cuts the district made before the vote, and the roughly $4.5 million cut after the second 2025 defeat — are not coming back for 2026-27. Superintendent Kristine Michael said this publicly before the election: “We would not be in a position to restore programs or positions already reduced.”
What passage does prevent is another round of cuts on top of what already happened. That matters because the 2026-27 budget conversation that starts at the district office at 250 E. Campus Drive will look very different with $18.9 million in incoming levy revenue on the horizon than it would with another defeat.
How North Mason High School students are most directly affected
The North Mason levy historically funds the things most parents associate with a real high school experience: athletics, music, Advanced Placement coursework, school nurses, counselors, safety officers, custodians, and after-school programs. State basic-education dollars do not pay for those — that’s what a levy is for, in every Washington district.
Bulldogs sports have continued through 2025-26, but families have noticed thinner schedules, more parent fundraising for travel and equipment, and tighter coaching budgets. AP course offerings narrowed. Music programs have run on reduced staffing. The full effect of the 2025 cuts has been distributed across the building in ways that compound over the year — and parents who have been paying attention can feel it.
If certification holds, the question for next school year is not “what gets restored” — it is “what does not get cut further.” That is a real win compared to the alternative, but it is a different conversation than the one many yes-voters thought they were having.
The middle school side
At Hawkins Middle School the impact tracks differently. Middle school athletics, after-school activities, and counselor staffing have all been pressured. Younger students who would normally be building toward high school programs are entering a system that has been quietly shrinking for two years.
Passage means that pressure doesn’t get worse. It does not mean middle school programs that were lost are coming back this fall.
What to do this week and this month
Three concrete things parents can do while certification finishes. First, watch the May 8 certification — if the lead holds, the long-term outlook for the district stabilizes. Second, plan to attend or watch the next North Mason School Board meeting, where Superintendent Michael and board members Arla Shephard Bull, Leanna Krotzer, Erik Youngberg, Nicole González Timmons, and Nicholas Thomas will begin the 2026-27 budget conversation publicly. Third, make peace with the timeline: any restoration of cut programs is a 2027-28 question at the earliest.
Frequently Asked Questions
If the levy passes, will my child’s programs be restored for fall 2026?
No. The first levy revenue arrives no earlier than April 2027, and Superintendent Michael has stated publicly that programs and positions already cut will not be restored for the 2026-27 school year even with passage. Restoration is a 2027-28 question at the earliest.
What North Mason programs were cut after the 2025 levy failures?
The district made roughly $4.5 million in cuts following the second 2025 defeat, and an additional $1.3 million in pre-vote reductions in 2026 along with the elimination of two administrative positions. Cuts have hit athletics, music, AP coursework, support staff, and after-school programming across both the high school and middle school.
When will I know whether the levy actually passed?
The Mason County Canvassing Board certifies the April 28 election on May 8, 2026, at 2:00 PM, after a challenged-ballot review on May 7. Until then, the 53.50% yes lead is preliminary. Track results at results.vote.wa.gov.
Where can North Mason parents weigh in on the 2026-27 budget?
The North Mason School Board meets at 250 E. Campus Drive in Belfair. Meeting schedules are posted on the district site, and public comment is part of every regular meeting. The first post-election meeting will be the most consequential one for parents to attend.
What does the levy actually cost a North Mason family that owns their home?
The April 2026 rate is $1.01 per $1,000 of assessed value — roughly $33 per month on a $400,000 home. That is down from the $1.28 rate on the two 2025 measures.
Related coverage: North Mason School Levy Leading in Early Returns — Results Not Yet Certified · North Mason Parents: What the April 28 Levy Means for Your Child’s Programs · North Mason Schools: Ratings & Programs
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