New to North Mason? The Leading Levy Result Tells You How This Community Works

If you’ve moved to Belfair, Allyn, Tahuya, or anywhere in North Mason recently — or you’re thinking about it — the school levy result you’ll see in the headlines this week is one of the more revealing data points about the place you’ve landed in.

The North Mason School District levy is leading 53.50% yes (2,130 to 1,851) in early returns from the April 28 election. Certification by the Mason County Canvassing Board is set for May 8, 2026. That sentence on its own probably doesn’t tell you much. The story behind it tells you a lot about how this community works.

Why this vote took three tries

Most school levies in Washington pass the first time. North Mason’s didn’t. The February 2025 measure failed. The November 2025 attempt failed too. By the time the April 28, 2026 measure came up, the district had already cut about $4.5 million from its budget, plus another $1.3 million in pre-vote 2026 reductions, plus two administrative positions.

The community had been signaling something specific across two votes: not “we don’t believe in our schools” but “we don’t trust the ask.” When the district came back at $1.01 per $1,000 of assessed value (down from the $1.28 rate on the failed measures), with a smaller administrative footprint and more visible internal cuts, the math changed for enough voters to flip the result.

If you’re new here, that is the texture worth understanding. North Mason is not a community that automatically supports tax increases — but it will support its schools when it believes the district has done its own homework first.

What a “levy” actually is in Washington

In Washington, the state pays for “basic education.” Levies pay for everything else schools actually do — nurses, counselors, safety officers, athletics, music, AP courses, custodians, after-school programs, curriculum materials. So when a Washington school district loses a levy, it is not losing a wishlist; it is losing the staff and programs that make a school feel like a school.

North Mason has been operating without levy funding through 2026. That is unusual in the Puget Sound region. Other districts you may have driven through on the way here — Central Kitsap, North Kitsap, Bremerton, Olympia — have not been navigating this. North Mason has, for more than a year. The April 28 result, if it holds, is the moment the district climbs out of that hole — though programs already cut will not be restored for the 2026-27 school year.

Where this matters for newcomers

Three places. First, if you have school-age kids, this affects what they will and won’t have access to at North Mason High School (the Bulldogs, at 250 E. Campus Drive in Belfair) and Hawkins Middle School over the next two school years. Second, if you bought a home in the district, the school-funding posture affects the resale signal of your house — the value of stable, supported schools is real even for buyers without kids. Third, even if you have no school-age kids, this is one of the more transparent windows you’ll get into how this community deliberates.

How to read what just happened

The Belfair / North Mason area is small enough that the levy conversation happened in real life — at the Belfair IGA, at the Mary E. Theler Community Center, at Hood Canal property owner meetings, at the schools themselves. There were no slick mailers driving the result. People talked, the district adjusted, voters reconsidered.

That is unusual. In bigger districts, levy outcomes are shaped by media spend and political infrastructure. In North Mason, the outcome looks more like a community working something out at human scale — the same way water-quality decisions, road-funding decisions, and waterfront development decisions tend to play out here.

Welcome to a place that does its civic life this way. It can feel slow if you’re coming from somewhere bigger. It is also one of the things that makes this corner of Hood Canal what it is.

What’s next

The Mason County Canvassing Board reviews challenged ballots on May 7 at 2:00 PM and certifies the election on May 8 at 2:00 PM. The certified result will appear at results.vote.wa.gov. After that, the North Mason School Board — Arla Shephard Bull, Leanna Krotzer, Erik Youngberg, Nicole González Timmons, and Nicholas Thomas, working with Superintendent Dr. Kristine Michael — begins the 2026-27 budget conversation publicly at the district office.

If you’re new and want a way to plug in to your community, that meeting cycle is one of the better entry points.

Frequently Asked Questions

What does it mean that a Washington school levy “failed” twice before this one?

It means North Mason has been operating without levy funding since the second 2025 defeat — running on basic-education state dollars only, which do not cover athletics, AP courses, music, school nurses, counselors, or safety staff. The April 2026 measure was the third attempt and is leading.

Why was North Mason’s third levy attempt different from the first two?

The district lowered the rate from $1.28 to $1.01 per $1,000 of assessed value, eliminated two administrative positions, and made $1.3 million in additional pre-vote cuts. The community read that as the district doing its own work before asking again, and a meaningful share of 2025 no-voters appear to have switched to yes.

Is North Mason a good school district for someone moving here?

It’s a small, community-rooted district that has been visibly tested and is now stabilizing. The Bulldogs run a full slate of athletics. AP coursework continues. Class sizes are smaller than larger Puget Sound districts. The honest read is that the next two years are about returning to a healthy operating posture, not about expansion.

Where can I find official information about North Mason schools as a newcomer?

The district website is northmasonschools.org. The district office is at 250 E. Campus Drive in Belfair, (360) 277-2300. Board meeting schedules and public comment information are posted on the site.

How does North Mason compare to Central Kitsap or North Kitsap districts?

It’s substantially smaller and more rural. Central Kitsap and North Kitsap have not faced repeated levy failures. North Mason offers a different feel — closer-to-home, smaller cohorts, more direct community involvement — but with thinner program redundancy than the larger Kitsap districts.

Related coverage: North Mason School Levy Leading in Early Returns — Results Not Yet Certified · Newcomer Guide: The April 28 Levy and Why Your Vote Matters in Belfair · Belfair Real Estate 2026

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