Tag: North Mason

  • Tahuya River Preserve Grows to 190 Acres — Salmon Restoration Eyes Gabion Wall Removal

    Tahuya River Preserve Grows to 190 Acres — Salmon Restoration Eyes Gabion Wall Removal

    If you’ve walked the lower Tahuya River corridor lately, you’ve probably noticed the bear tracks and salmon carcasses that line the banks each fall — signs that something worth protecting is still alive here. Thanks to a multi-year land conservation push by Great Peninsula Conservancy, 190 acres along the lower Tahuya River are now permanently protected, and the harder work of actual habitat restoration is moving into its next phase.

    The Tahuya River Preserve sits in eastern Mason County, straddling the watershed that drains into Hood Canal near Belfair. Great Peninsula Conservancy assembled the preserve in stages — 145 acres acquired in July 2023 with support from the Washington Department of Ecology Streamflow Restoration grant and the state Salmon Recovery Funding Board, followed by an adjacent 38 acres in December of that year, and two smaller parcels totaling about five acres in 2025. Taken together, the preserve now protects roughly 450 feet of Tahuya River mainstem and is designed as the anchor point for a larger phased effort to conserve the lower four miles of the river.

    Why does this stretch matter? Both Hood Canal summer chum salmon and Chinook salmon use the Tahuya River watershed — and both are listed under the federal Endangered Species Act. The Hood Canal Salmon Enhancement Group, headquartered at 600 NE Roessel Road in Belfair, has been monitoring juvenile salmon using rotary screw traps on the Tahuya, Dewatto, and Little Quilcene Rivers each spring. Their data guides where restoration dollars go next.

    The most anticipated near-term project is the removal of a Gabion wall — a wire-cage rock structure that alters natural stream flows — from the Tahuya River corridor. Great Peninsula Conservancy is working with the Hood Canal Salmon Enhancement Group on removal plans. Once the wall comes out, engineers are also weighing the installation of log jam structures upstream to mimic natural wood accumulation that juvenile salmon depend on for cover and food.

    These aren’t quick projects. Permitting, hydrology studies, and contractor coordination mean the removal is still in planning rather than construction phase — but the land protection piece that makes any of it possible is done. Our river isn’t going anywhere.

    For anyone who wants to learn more or get involved, Great Peninsula Conservancy is based at 6536 Kitsap Way in Bremerton and can be reached at (360) 373-3500 or greatpeninsula.org. The Hood Canal Salmon Enhancement Group is at 600 NE Roessel Road, Belfair; (360) 275-9284.

    Related Coverage: Tahuya River Deep Dives

  • New to North Mason? Three Infrastructure Projects Tell You Where Belfair Is Headed

    New to North Mason? Three Infrastructure Projects Tell You Where Belfair Is Headed

    If you’ve recently moved to Belfair or North Mason — or you’re weighing a move to the area — three infrastructure projects in progress right now give you a clearer picture of where this community is headed than any real estate listing will.

    A New Fire Station — What It Tells You About This Community

    North Mason voters approved a bond in 2019 to build a new headquarters fire station for North Mason Regional Fire Authority. That station — a $9 million facility at 490 NE Old Belfair Highway in Belfair — is on track to open in September 2026.

    The new headquarters replaces a facility that was built for a smaller community. It includes an eight-vehicle bay, a dedicated training center, administrative offices, and living quarters for up to ten on-call firefighters. TRICO Companies is the contractor.

    For a newcomer evaluating safety and services: North Mason RFA covers a large geographic area — Belfair, Allyn, Tahuya, much of the Hood Canal shoreline. The upgraded headquarters means faster, better-equipped emergency response across that entire service area. The existing station building will be leased to Mason County for the north precinct of the Sheriff’s Office — adding a law enforcement presence to the same site.

    Communities that invest in public safety infrastructure at this scale are communities with a plan. This isn’t a patch — it’s a foundation.

    The Electrical Upgrade: Why It Matters for Where You Live

    Mason County PUD No. 3 completed the first major component of its Belfair Electrical Capacity Infrastructure Project last fall: a new, high-capacity transformer at the Belfair substation, replacing a 1967-era unit that had been limiting what the grid could deliver to the Belfair Urban Growth Area. The new transformer was energized in October 2025. A second component — a new switching station at the former Belfair Warehouse site — is underway.

    For a newcomer, here’s why this matters: the electrical capacity constraint was the primary reason Mason EDC couldn’t recruit commercial and light industrial businesses to Belfair’s SR-3 corridor. Solving it means more local employers, more local tax base, and a commercial corridor that has room to grow. That’s the economic foundation of a community that attracts people rather than losing them.

    Total public investment in this upgrade: over $5.5 million, including $3 million in federal funding secured by Rep. Derek Kilmer. It’s the kind of infrastructure investment that doesn’t get its own ribbon-cutting ceremony but determines what Belfair looks like in ten years.

    Allyn’s Waterfront: History Being Made Permanent

    About twelve miles north of Belfair, on North Bay at the end of Hood Canal, the Port of Allyn is restoring two long-standing waterfront projects with fresh state funding signed by Governor Bob Ferguson. The pier repair contract is already awarded to Lakeshore Construction ($142,569.20). The Sargent Oyster House restoration — approximately $411,044 in state grant funds — will see the historic building relocated to an overwater position at Allyn’s Waterfront Park, where it will become a museum about the shellfish industry that defined this part of Mason County.

    Allyn is the kind of waterfront town that new North Mason residents often discover after they move here — a short drive up SR-3, a marina, a park, and a waterfront that’s actively being invested in. If you haven’t been, go.

    For the Newcomer: What to Know About North Mason Infrastructure

    North Mason is not a bedroom community — it’s a community building its own infrastructure. The fire station, the electrical grid, the waterfront in Allyn are all signals of a place investing in its own future. The SR-3 corridor is the spine of all of it — for context on what’s happening with that road and the Belfair Bypass, see our North Mason commuter infrastructure guide.

    For the full infrastructure story, read the Belfair infrastructure overview. For what newcomers need to know about housing in North Mason, see Belfair real estate in 2026.

    Frequently Asked Questions for New North Mason Residents

    What fire station covers Belfair and North Mason?

    North Mason Regional Fire Authority covers Belfair, Allyn, Tahuya, and much of the surrounding area. Their new headquarters at 490 NE Old Belfair Highway in Belfair opens September 2026 — an eight-bay facility with resident on-call firefighters replacing an older, smaller station.

    Who provides electricity in Belfair and North Mason?

    Mason County PUD No. 3 (PUD 3) provides electricity to Belfair, Allyn, and surrounding North Mason communities. They are currently completing a major infrastructure upgrade to the Belfair substation and adding a new switching station — the first major capacity expansion in decades.

    What is there to do in Allyn, WA?

    Allyn is a small waterfront community on North Bay at the southern end of Hood Canal, about 12 miles north of Belfair on SR-3. It has a marina, Waterfront Park, and a small commercial area. The Port of Allyn is currently restoring the historic Sargent Oyster House to serve as a waterfront museum — part of an ongoing investment in the Allyn waterfront as a community destination.

    Is Belfair growing? Is it a good place to settle?

    Belfair’s Urban Growth Area on the SR-3 corridor is actively developing — commercial, light industrial, and residential. The PUD electrical upgrade, new fire station, and ongoing WSDOT SR-3 work are all indicators of infrastructure investment ahead of growth. It’s a community building deliberately, not just expanding.

  • Belfair Small Business Owners: What the PUD Electrical Upgrade and New Fire Station Mean for the SR-3 Corridor

    Belfair Small Business Owners: What the PUD Electrical Upgrade and New Fire Station Mean for the SR-3 Corridor

    If you run a business in Belfair or are considering locating to the SR-3 corridor, two of the three major infrastructure projects underway in North Mason right now speak directly to your situation — one removes the single biggest constraint on commercial growth that Mason EDC has been fighting for years, and the other changes emergency response for every business and employee in the area.

    The Electrical Constraint Is Finally Being Solved

    Ask anyone at Mason EDC what’s been blocking commercial recruitment to Belfair’s Urban Growth Area, and they’ll tell you the same thing: power. Limited electrical capacity at the Belfair substation meant PUD 3 couldn’t reliably say yes to businesses with significant power requirements. That’s not a minor operational detail — it’s the reason companies evaluating the SR-3 corridor for light industrial or commercial operations walked away.

    Mason County PUD No. 3’s Belfair Electrical Capacity Infrastructure Project is directly fixing that. The project’s two components are both in motion:

    • The Belfair substation’s 1967-era transformer was replaced with a modern, higher-capacity unit — placed in July 2025, energized in October 2025. It’s running now.
    • A new switching station at the former Belfair Warehouse site is upgrading PUD 3’s connection to BPA’s transmission lines — expanding the total power available to the Belfair UGA.

    Total investment: over $5.5 million — $3 million federal (secured by Rep. Derek Kilmer), $1.5 million ARPA funds through Mason County, $1 million in state funds from 35th District legislators. That’s a public investment in North Mason’s commercial infrastructure specifically designed to make your business address more competitive.

    For existing businesses on the SR-3 corridor, this means more reliable power and headroom for growth. For businesses considering the area: the “we can’t provide the power” conversation is ending.

    The New Fire Station and What It Means for Your Business

    North Mason Regional Fire Authority’s new $9 million headquarters at 490 NE Old Belfair Highway is on track for a September 2026 opening. For a small business owner, the direct relevance is response time and insurance.

    The new station’s eight-vehicle bay and resident on-call capacity (up to ten firefighters on-site) represent a meaningful upgrade from the current headquarters. Faster response times and greater apparatus capacity affect Insurance Services Office (ISO) ratings, which directly influence commercial property insurance premiums in the area.

    Additionally, the existing station building is slated to be leased to Mason County for the north precinct of the Mason County Sheriff’s Office — meaning a law enforcement presence co-located on the same Old Belfair Highway site. For a commercial district, that’s a safety anchor that matters.

    The Bigger Business Picture in Belfair

    The North Mason Chamber helped connect local employers including Hood Canal Communications with North Mason High School students at a College and Career Fair on April 23. Grocery Outlet Belfair — the independent operator store at 23960 NE SR-3 — is now six months in and keeping grocery dollars local. The Chamber’s Business After Hours series continues at northmasonchamber.com.

    For the full development picture, read the Belfair infrastructure overview and the April 29 Business Pulse. For context on the SR-3 corridor’s traffic future, see the Belfair Bypass and SR-3 commuter guide.

    Frequently Asked Questions for Belfair Small Business Owners

    Does the PUD 3 electrical upgrade affect existing businesses on SR-3?

    Yes. The upgraded Belfair substation transformer (energized October 2025) and new switching station increase total electrical capacity for the Belfair Urban Growth Area. Existing businesses benefit from improved grid reliability; businesses that previously couldn’t get adequate power commitments from PUD 3 may now be able to.

    Will the new North Mason fire station affect commercial insurance rates?

    Improved fire station capacity and response times affect ISO Public Protection Classifications, which insurers use to set commercial property premiums. The new eight-bay headquarters with resident firefighters represents a material upgrade in North Mason RFA’s capabilities — businesses should check with their commercial insurance carriers after the station opens in September 2026.

    Is there space for new commercial tenants on the Belfair SR-3 corridor?

    The Belfair Urban Growth Area has available commercial and light industrial capacity. With the electrical constraint being resolved and the Belfair Bypass eventually reshaping traffic flow on SR-3, this is an active development area. Contact Mason EDC for site availability and recruitment support.

  • Three Infrastructure Projects Reshaping Belfair and North Mason in 2026: Fire Station, PUD Electrical Upgrade, and Allyn Waterfront

    Three Infrastructure Projects Reshaping Belfair and North Mason in 2026: Fire Station, PUD Electrical Upgrade, and Allyn Waterfront

    Three concurrent infrastructure investments are reshaping what Belfair and North Mason look like over the next several years — a new $9 million fire station on Old Belfair Highway, a federal-funded electrical upgrade that removes the single biggest barrier to business recruitment on the SR-3 corridor, and fresh state funding for the Allyn waterfront that keeps two long-promised projects alive. None of these made major headlines this week, but together they represent the most consequential ground-level development activity in the North Mason area right now.

    North Mason RFA’s $9 Million Fire Station: September 2026 Opening

    North Mason Regional Fire Authority’s new headquarters fire station at 490 NE Old Belfair Highway is on track for a September 2026 opening. The facility — being built directly adjacent to the existing Station 21 — is one of the largest public safety investments this community has seen in years.

    The new headquarters includes an eight-vehicle bay — a significant upgrade from the current facility’s capacity — along with a dedicated training center, administrative offices, and on-site living quarters for up to ten on-call firefighters. TRICO Companies is the general contractor.

    North Mason voters approved the bond measure that funded this project in 2019. When complete, the new station will meaningfully expand emergency response capacity across the entire North Mason service area — which stretches from Belfair and Allyn to the Tahuya Peninsula and beyond. The existing station is expected to be leased to Mason County, housing the north precinct of the Mason County Sheriff’s Office and space for Mason County’s Department of Emergency Services.

    For a community where SR-3 is the primary artery and response times matter, a modern eight-bay headquarters in Belfair with resident firefighters changes what emergency response looks like on the north end of Mason County.

    PUD 3 Electrical Upgrade: Unlocking Growth on the SR-3 Corridor

    Mason County PUD No. 3’s Belfair Electrical Capacity Infrastructure Project is quietly one of the most consequential economic development investments happening in North Mason. Backed by $3 million in federal funding secured through U.S. Rep. Derek Kilmer and the House Appropriations Committee — with additional $1.5 million in American Recovery Plan Act funds passed through Mason County and $1 million in state funding secured by 35th District legislators — the project has two main components:

    • A new switching station at the site of the former Belfair Warehouse, upgrading PUD 3’s connection to BPA’s transmission lines
    • Replacement of the 1967-era Belfair substation transformer with a modern, higher-capacity unit — placed in July 2025 and energized in October 2025

    The reason this matters: for years, Mason EDC has been unable to recruit businesses to Belfair’s Urban Growth Area because electrical capacity constraints made it impossible to meet the power requirements of commercial and light industrial tenants. When businesses ask about locating to the SR-3 corridor and the answer is “we can’t provide adequate power,” the conversation ends.

    That constraint is now being resolved. The upgraded substation and new switching station give the Belfair UGA the electrical infrastructure to say yes to companies that were previously turned away. With the SR-3 commercial corridor under development pressure and the Belfair Bypass eventually reshaping traffic patterns, having the power infrastructure in place before those projects mature is the right sequencing.

    Port of Allyn: State Funding Keeps Pier Repair and Oyster House Alive

    On the Allyn waterfront — about twelve miles north of Belfair on North Bay — the Washington State Legislature reappropriated grant funds for two Port of Allyn projects that were approaching deadline. Governor Bob Ferguson signed the budget, securing the remaining balances: approximately $443,074 for pier repair and $411,044 for the Sargent Oyster House restoration.

    The pier repair contract has already been awarded to Lakeshore Construction for $142,569.20. Work is proceeding.

    The Sargent Oyster House is the more historically significant project. The building will be relocated to the site of the existing boat ramp at Allyn’s Waterfront Park, with pilings driven to support an overwater position. When complete, it will serve as a museum dedicated to the shellfish industry’s role in North Bay’s history — a cultural anchor for the Allyn waterfront that also has genuine visitor draw potential for Hood Canal tourism.

    The shellfish industry built this corner of Mason County. The Sargent Oyster House restoration is about making sure that history is legible on the landscape where it happened.

    The Bigger Picture

    These three projects don’t share a ribbon-cutting ceremony or a single headline. But they share a direction: North Mason is investing in the infrastructure — public safety, electrical capacity, waterfront identity — that positions the community for the growth already arriving via the SR-3 corridor and the eventual Belfair Bypass.

    The Grocery Outlet at 23960 NE State Route 3 (the former Rite Aid space) is also now six months into operation — a real anchor for the commercial corridor that keeps North Mason grocery spending local after years of residents driving to Shelton or Silverdale.

    For more on what’s happening in the North Mason commercial corridor, see the full Belfair Business Pulse for April 29. For context on SR-3 infrastructure and the bypass timeline, see our North Mason commuter infrastructure guide.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    When will the new North Mason fire station open?

    North Mason Regional Fire Authority’s new headquarters at 490 NE Old Belfair Highway in Belfair is on track for a September 2026 opening. TRICO Companies is the general contractor. The facility includes an eight-vehicle bay and quarters for up to ten on-call firefighters.

    What is the PUD 3 Belfair electrical upgrade project?

    Mason County PUD No. 3 is upgrading the Belfair substation with a new high-capacity transformer (energized October 2025) and building a new switching station at the former Belfair Warehouse site to improve BPA transmission connections. The project is backed by $3 million in federal funding plus additional state and ARPA funds — totaling over $5.5 million invested in Belfair’s electrical infrastructure.

    What is the Sargent Oyster House in Allyn?

    The Sargent Oyster House is a historic building being restored by the Port of Allyn at the Allyn Waterfront Park. When complete, it will serve as a museum honoring the shellfish industry’s history on North Bay. The Legislature reappropriated approximately $411,044 in state grant funds for the project in 2026.

    Why does the Belfair electrical upgrade matter for businesses?

    Limited electrical capacity in Belfair’s Urban Growth Area was a primary reason Mason EDC turned away business recruitment opportunities. The upgraded substation and new switching station resolve that constraint, making the SR-3 corridor viable for commercial and light industrial tenants who require reliable, higher-capacity power.

    Where is Grocery Outlet Belfair located?

    Grocery Outlet Belfair is at 23960 NE State Route 3 in Belfair — the former Rite Aid space — and opened November 13, 2025. It’s a 17,455-square-foot independent operator store offering discounted name-brand grocery, wine, and household items.

    What happened to the former Belfair fire station when the new one opens?

    The existing fire station at 490 NE Old Belfair Highway is planned to be leased to Mason County to house the north precinct of the Mason County Sheriff’s Office and space for Mason County’s Department of Emergency Services.

  • North Mason Homeowners: What the Third Levy Defeat Means for Your Property and Your Community

    North Mason Homeowners: What the Third Levy Defeat Means for Your Property and Your Community

    If you own property in North Mason — in Belfair, Allyn, Tahuya, Union, or anywhere else in the district boundaries — Tuesday’s levy result affects both your tax bill and the value of what you own.

    The North Mason School District’s April 28 replacement levy is trailing in initial counts: 46.2% yes against 53.8% no, per the Mason County Auditor’s Office. That’s a third consecutive defeat — February 2025, November 2025, and now April 2026 — for a district that has been warning about program cuts with increasing urgency at each cycle.

    The Tax Question

    The April 28 levy asked for $18.9 million over four years at approximately $1.01 per $1,000 of assessed property value. On a home assessed at $400,000 in North Mason, that’s roughly $404 per year — about $33.67 per month.

    If the levy fails, you don’t pay that amount. That’s the short-term math many no votes were making.

    The longer-term math is more complicated. Research on school quality and real estate values is consistent: communities with strong, funded school programs sustain higher property values. Districts where programs are cut — especially visible programs like athletics and music — often see changes in who chooses to live there, how long families stay, and what buyers are willing to pay. In a market like North Mason’s, where the SR-3 corridor is seeing commercial investment and the PUD electrical infrastructure is being upgraded for growth, school quality is a factor in the community’s trajectory.

    What Fails if the Levy Fails

    The district is required to adopt a balanced budget. Without levy revenue, programs that are not state-funded must be cut. The explicitly at-risk list: middle and high school athletics, music programs, elective and Advanced Placement courses, school security officers, and after-school programming.

    The district has already made $1.3 million in internal cuts — including eliminating two administrative positions — to demonstrate fiscal discipline before asking voters again. That means there is no remaining administrative buffer to absorb another defeat. The cuts, if they come, will be visible and program-level.

    The Certification Timeline

    Election night results are not final. The Mason County Auditor will count remaining ballots over the coming weeks before certifying the outcome. If the levy is ultimately certified as defeated, the district board will need to authorize cuts before the 2026–27 school year budget is adopted — a process that will happen this summer.

    North Mason property owners who want to track results can follow the Mason County Auditor at masoncountywa.gov and the district at northmasonschools.org.

    For the full election results story and program impact details, read the Belfair Bugle’s levy coverage. For context on property values in the broader North Mason market, see Belfair real estate in 2026.

    Frequently Asked Questions for North Mason Property Owners

    What was the property tax cost of the North Mason April 2026 levy?

    Approximately $1.01 per $1,000 of assessed property value per year — roughly $404/year on a $400,000 home, or about $33.67/month.

    Does a failed school levy affect property values in North Mason?

    Research consistently shows school program quality affects residential desirability and property values over time. Visible program cuts — particularly to athletics, music, and AP courses — can influence which families choose to buy in a community and for how long they stay.

    Will property taxes go down if the levy fails?

    The levy would have added approximately $1.01/$1,000 assessed value to your bill. If it fails, that specific addition is not collected. However, other property tax levies and district assessments are not affected by this vote.

    Can North Mason pass another levy if this one fails?

    Yes, but Washington state law restricts timing and frequency of levy elections. The board would need to evaluate legal windows for a future measure. Three consecutive defeats make the political path harder, though not impossible.

  • North Mason Parents: What the Levy Failure Means for Your Child’s Programs at NMHS and Middle School

    North Mason Parents: What the Levy Failure Means for Your Child’s Programs at NMHS and Middle School

    If your kids are in North Mason schools right now — at North Mason High School, Hawkins Middle School, or the elementary campuses in Belfair and Belfair’s surrounding neighborhoods — Tuesday’s election results matter directly to what their school year looks like starting in September.

    The North Mason School District’s April 28 replacement levy is trailing in initial Mason County Auditor counts: 46.2% yes (1,566 votes) against 53.8% no (1,814 votes). If that holds through certification, it’s three consecutive levy defeats — February 2025, November 2025, now April 2026 — and the program cuts the district has been warning about become real for the 2026–27 school year.

    Which Programs Are at Risk

    The district has been explicit about what levy funding covers — and what disappears without it. For North Mason parents, the list is not abstract:

    • Athletics: The Bulldog program at North Mason High School — varsity, JV, and middle school sports — is levy-funded. No levy, no sports as currently structured.
    • Music: Band, choir, and music electives at the middle and high school level are at risk.
    • Advanced Placement courses: North Mason High’s AP offerings — the classes that let students earn college credit before graduation — depend on levy funding for staffing.
    • Elective courses: The range of electives that let students pursue interests beyond core academics.
    • Security officers: Campus security at North Mason schools is levy-funded.
    • After-school programs: Extended learning and enrichment activities funded through the levy.

    The district has already made $1.3 million in internal cuts — including two administrative positions — ahead of this vote. There is no remaining cushion to absorb another defeat without cutting programs.

    The Timeline Parents Need to Know

    Election night counts are not final. The Mason County Auditor will continue counting remaining ballots for several weeks before certifying results. That certification date matters because the district must build and adopt its 2026–27 budget before fall semester begins — and the budget must be balanced by law.

    If the levy is certified as defeated, district administrators and the board will need to announce program cuts with enough lead time for families and student-athletes to plan. Decisions about fall sports rosters, AP course offerings, and staffing assignments for next year will be made this summer.

    The practical question for North Mason families: don’t wait for formal announcements if you have a student committed to a fall sport, enrolled in AP classes, or counting on specific electives. Watch the district’s communications at northmasonschools.org closely over the next four to six weeks.

    What Parents Can Do Now

    Results are not certified. If you want to make your voice heard on what happens next, the path is through the North Mason School Board. Board meetings are public. School board members represent your community’s priorities — this is the right venue to show up, speak, and be counted before cuts are finalized.

    Check the district’s website for the next board meeting date and agenda. Public comment is available at every regular session.

    Read the full election results story at the Belfair Bugle’s levy coverage. For context on how North Mason’s schools compare to neighboring districts, see our full levy explainer from before the vote.

    Frequently Asked Questions for North Mason Parents

    Will North Mason High School sports be cut if the levy fails?

    The Bulldog athletics program at North Mason High — including varsity and JV sports — is levy-funded and explicitly listed among programs at risk if the levy fails. Middle school athletics would also be affected.

    Are AP classes at North Mason High at risk?

    Yes. Advanced Placement course offerings at North Mason High School are listed as levy-dependent. A third consecutive levy failure would put AP staffing and course availability at risk for the 2026–27 school year.

    When will we know for sure if the North Mason levy failed?

    The Mason County Auditor certifies election results within several weeks of election night after all remaining ballots are counted. Initial results on election night are unofficial.

    When would program cuts take effect?

    Cuts would be implemented for the 2026–27 school year, which begins in fall 2026. The district must adopt a balanced budget before the school year starts, so program decisions will be made this summer.

  • North Mason Levy Trailing Again: Third Defeat Would Trigger Program Cuts for 2026–27 School Year

    North Mason Levy Trailing Again: Third Defeat Would Trigger Program Cuts for 2026–27 School Year

    The votes have been counted, and the news is hard: North Mason School District’s April 28 replacement levy is trailing in initial ballot results from the Mason County Auditor’s Office — 46.2% in favor with 1,566 yes votes against 1,814 no votes. If the margin holds through certification, it will be the district’s third consecutive levy defeat, following failures in February 2025 and November 2025.

    For Belfair families, North Mason parents, and anyone who cares about what happens inside North Mason High School and the district’s middle schools, the stakes are not abstract. District leadership has been explicit: programs funded by the levy — athletics, music, electives, Advanced Placement courses, security officers, and after-school programming — are on the chopping block for the 2026–27 school year if the levy fails to pass.

    What This Levy Was Asking

    The April 28 measure sought $18.9 million over four years, covering the 2027–2030 collection period, at an estimated rate of $1.01 per $1,000 of assessed property value. That figure was $3.4 million less than the November 2025 proposal — a deliberate reduction after community members said the prior ask was too large.

    The district entered 2026 already operating without levy revenue. Following last year’s two defeats, administrators announced $1.3 million in budget reductions, including the elimination of two administrative positions — moves intended to demonstrate fiscal accountability before asking voters again.

    What Fails When a Levy Fails in North Mason

    Washington state funds basic education. Levies fund the rest — the programs that make school feel like more than warehousing kids. In North Mason, the levy-dependent program list includes:

    • Middle and high school athletics (the Bulldogs program)
    • Music programs at all levels
    • Elective courses and Advanced Placement offerings at North Mason High School
    • School security officers
    • After-school programming

    These are not luxury extras. For many students at North Mason High, athletics and electives are the primary reason they show up engaged every day. For families weighing whether to remain in or relocate to North Mason, the strength of the school program is part of the calculus — especially families connected to PSNS and Bangor Naval Base who have housing options across Kitsap County.

    Three Consecutive Defeats: The Pattern

    February 2025: levy defeated. November 2025: levy defeated with a larger ask. April 2026: levy trailing again with a reduced ask. Each cycle has involved the same community tension — recognition that programs matter, resistance to the tax impact.

    The April 28 measure was the smallest ask of the three. The district had already cut $1.3 million internally. The rate of $1.01 per $1,000 assessed value was positioned as a compromise. And it’s still trailing.

    What this tells district leadership — and what it should tell the community — is that this isn’t primarily a messaging problem or an ask-size problem. It is a trust and prioritization problem that requires a different kind of community conversation than any levy campaign has yet produced.

    What Happens Next

    Results are not final. Certification takes several weeks as remaining ballots are processed and verified by the Mason County Auditor’s Office. The initial count reflects ballots received through election night; additional votes will continue to be tabulated.

    If the levy is certified as defeated, the North Mason School District Board of Directors will face decisions about the 2026–27 school year budget before the fall semester begins. Program cuts would take effect at the start of next school year. The district is required to adopt a balanced budget, meaning cuts are not optional if levy funding doesn’t materialize.

    The district could return to voters with another measure, but Washington state law limits the timing and frequency of levy elections. The path forward is narrow.

    For updates, follow North Mason School District directly at northmasonschools.org and on Facebook at North Mason School District. The Mason County Auditor’s Office posts updated results at masoncountywa.gov.

    For context on the Belfair community’s broader development and housing picture — factors that shape who votes and who stays in North Mason — see our coverage of Belfair real estate in 2026 and how military families at PSNS weigh North Mason housing.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Did the North Mason levy fail on April 28, 2026?

    The levy is trailing in initial counts — 46.2% yes (1,566 votes) to 53.8% no (1,814 votes) — but the result is not yet certified. The Mason County Auditor will continue tabulating remaining ballots over the coming weeks before certifying the outcome.

    What programs would be cut if the North Mason levy fails?

    The district has identified middle and high school athletics, music programs, elective and Advanced Placement courses, school security officers, and after-school programming as levy-dependent and subject to cuts in the 2026–27 school year.

    How many times has North Mason’s levy failed?

    Three times in consecutive elections: February 2025, November 2025, and now appearing to fail on April 28, 2026. Each election featured a different ask amount.

    How much was the April 2026 North Mason levy?

    $18.9 million over four years (2027–2030) at approximately $1.01 per $1,000 of assessed property value — $3.4 million less than the failed November 2025 proposal.

    When will the North Mason levy results be certified?

    The Mason County Auditor’s Office will certify election results within several weeks of election night as all remaining ballots are counted. Track updates at masoncountywa.gov/auditor/elections.

    Can North Mason run another levy if this one fails?

    Yes, but Washington state law limits levy election timing and frequency. The district would need to evaluate what date and format a future measure could take. There is no automatic next vote — it requires a board decision and legal review of available election windows.

  • Belfair Business Pulse — Week of April 29, 2026

    Belfair Business Pulse — Week of April 29, 2026

    North Mason’s business and development scene is building momentum this spring — a new fire station nearing completion, electrical upgrades unlocking growth potential, and waterfront restoration in Allyn moving forward with renewed state funding. This week we’re spotlighting Grocery Outlet Belfair, the bargain grocery anchor that moved into the former Rite Aid space and has been stocking North Mason pantries since November.

    New Openings

    No confirmed new business ribbon cuttings this week in the North Mason corridor. If you have an opening coming up, connect with the North Mason Chamber of Commerce at northmasonchamber.com to get it on the radar.

    Closings & Changes

    Nothing confirmed this week. Have a tip? Email the Belfair Bugle.

    Permits & Development

    North Mason RFA Fire Station Nearing Completion
    North Mason Regional Fire Authority’s new $9 million headquarters fire station at 490 NE Old Belfair Highway in Belfair is on track for a September 2026 opening. The facility — built right next to the existing station — will house an eight-vehicle bay, a state-of-the-art training center, administrative offices, and living quarters for up to 10 on-call firefighters. TRICO Companies is the general contractor. When complete, it will meaningfully expand emergency response capacity for the entire North Mason area and stand as one of the largest public-safety investments the community has seen in years.

    PUD 3 Electrical Upgrades Set the Stage for Growth
    Mason County PUD No. 3’s Belfair Electrical Capacity Infrastructure Project — backed by $3 million in federal funding secured through U.S. Rep. Derek Kilmer and the House Appropriations Committee — is upgrading the Belfair substation and building a new switching station at the site of the former Belfair Warehouse. This project directly addresses a longstanding constraint: limited electrical capacity in Belfair’s Urban Growth Area previously forced Mason EDC to turn away business recruitment opportunities. More reliable, higher-capacity power along the SR 3 corridor means more room for commercial and light industrial growth in the years ahead.

    Port of Allyn Waterfront Projects Get Fresh Funding
    The Washington State Legislature reappropriated grant funds for two key Port of Allyn projects, giving them more runway before deadlines hit. The remaining pier repair balance of approximately $443,074 and roughly $411,044 for the Sargent Oyster House restoration are now secure following Gov. Bob Ferguson’s budget signature. The pier repair contract has already been awarded to Lakeshore Construction for $142,569.20. The Sargent Oyster House, when fully restored, will serve as a museum honoring the shellfish industry history on North Bay — a visitor draw and a piece of living history for the Allyn waterfront.

    Chamber Notes

    The North Mason Chamber helped organize North Mason High School’s College and Career Fair on April 23 in Belfair, with local employers including Hood Canal Communications connecting face-to-face with students. The Chamber’s Business After Hours series continues — check northmasonchamber.com for upcoming events and member spotlights.

    Business Spotlight: Grocery Outlet Belfair

    It has been about six months since North Mason got its grocery game back. Grocery Outlet Belfair opened at 23960 NE State Route 3 — in the 17,455-square-foot space that sat empty for nearly two years after Rite Aid shuttered in January 2024 — with a ribbon cutting on November 13, 2025.

    If you haven’t been in yet, here’s what to know: Grocery Outlet is an independent operator model, meaning local owners hand-select a rotating inventory of name-brand food, wine, household goods, and health and beauty products at steep discounts — often far below conventional retail pricing. The stock changes regularly, which keeps regulars coming back. For a community that was making the long drive to Shelton or Silverdale for major grocery runs, Grocery Outlet Belfair is more than a store — it’s a reason to keep spending locally and keeping North Mason dollars in North Mason.

    Welcome to the neighborhood, Grocery Outlet Belfair — even if we’re a few months late saying it.

  • North Mason School Levy Trailing in Initial Count — Third Failure Could Trigger Program Cuts

    North Mason School Levy Trailing in Initial Count — Third Failure Could Trigger Program Cuts

    The April 28 special election delivered difficult news for our school community Tuesday evening, with the North Mason School District’s replacement educational levy trailing in initial ballot counts from the Mason County Auditor’s Office.

    If the numbers hold through certification, it would mark the third consecutive levy defeat for the district — following rejections in February 2025 and November 2025.

    District leadership has been explicit about what another failure means. Levy-funded programs that could face cuts in the 2026–27 school year include middle and high school athletics, music, elective and Advanced Placement courses, security officers, and after-school programs — the activities that define daily life at North Mason schools.

    The district entered 2026 already operating without levy funding, following last year’s double defeat. This spring, the district announced $1.3 million in budget reductions, including the elimination of two administrative positions — moves intended to signal fiscal responsibility ahead of the April vote.

    The April measure sought $18.9 million over four years (2027–2030), with an estimated property tax rate of $1.01 per $1,000 of assessed value. That was $3.4 million less than the failed November 2025 proposal — trimmed directly in response to community feedback that the prior ask was too high.

    Results will continue to update as remaining ballots are processed. Certification is expected within weeks of election night. For updates, visit northmasonschools.org or follow the district on Facebook at North Mason School District.

  • Mason County Government: North Mason School Levy Heads to April 28 Vote as Property Tax Deadline Looms — April 2026

    Mason County Government: North Mason School Levy Heads to April 28 Vote as Property Tax Deadline Looms — April 2026

    Two civic deadlines are bearing down on Mason County residents this month. Voters in the North Mason School District head back to the polls on April 28, 2026, for a third attempt at passing an Educational Programs & Operations replacement levy, and county-wide property owners have until April 30, 2026, to pay the first half of their 2026 property taxes. Here is what Mason County residents need to know.

    North Mason School Levy — April 28 Special Election

    The North Mason School District — which serves Belfair, Allyn, and Tahuya — is asking voters to approve a replacement Educational Programs & Operations (EP&O) levy on April 28, 2026. This is the district’s third attempt after prior levy measures failed to reach the required threshold.

    This time the ask is lower. The proposed rate is approximately $1.01 per $1,000 of assessed property value, down from the $1.28 per $1,000 rate in the previous attempt. District leaders have framed the smaller request as a direct response to voter feedback from the earlier elections.

    The stakes are specific. The district has already absorbed roughly $3 million in cuts tied to prior levy failures. If the April 28 measure also fails, district communications have indicated that further reductions would reach deeper into programs that parents and students directly experience — music, athletics, Advanced Placement course offerings, and campus security staffing are all on the table for additional cuts.

    EP&O levies fund the gap between state basic-education funding and the full cost of running local schools. That includes staffing, extracurriculars, security, and a wide range of services the state does not fully cover.

    Mason County voters with questions about ballots, replacement ballots, or drop-box locations can reach the Mason County Auditor’s Office at 360-427-9670, extension 469. More information on the levy itself is available at nmsd.wednet.edu.

    Mason County Property Tax — First Half Due April 30

    The first-half 2026 property tax payment is due Thursday, April 30, 2026, for every property owner in Mason County. That includes residents across Shelton, Belfair, Allyn, Union, Hoodsport, Matlock, Grapeview, Tahuya, and Dewatto.

    The Mason County Treasurer’s Office offers three ways to pay:

    • By mail — payments postmarked on or before April 30 are considered on time.
    • In person — the Treasurer’s Office is located at 411 N. 5th Street, Shelton, WA.
    • Online — through the Treasurer portal at masoncountywa.gov.

    The second-half payment is due October 31, 2026. Property owners who fall behind on the first-half deadline face interest and penalties under state law, so the Treasurer’s Office is urging early payment for anyone who can make it.

    Questions on amounts owed, payment plans, or senior and disabled exemptions can be directed to the Mason County Treasurer’s Office at 360-427-9670, extension 484.

    Why It Matters

    Both deadlines sit at the core of how local government works in Mason County. The North Mason levy decides whether schools in the Belfair–Allyn–Tahuya corridor keep programs intact or move into another round of reductions. The property-tax deadline funds the county services — roads, sheriff, courts, public health — that every community from Shelton to Dewatto depends on. Missing either one has consequences that show up quickly in Mason County residents’ daily lives.

    Sources

    This is a Mason County Minute Government/Civic beat report for April 20, 2026, covering the April 28 North Mason School levy special election and the April 30 first-half property tax deadline.

    Related Coverage — Mason County Property Tax