Board officers reported in June that the governor signed legislation allowing the district to place a supplemental levy on the August ballot and that a separate bill made changes to special-education funding.
A district staff member addressed the board during public comment in June, expressing concern about turnover in the assistant superintendent role and commending the board for engaging with difficult staffing and budget choices. The board acknowledged the comment and said it will follow hiring processes.
At a June Shoreline School District board meeting, Superintendent Reyes announced that Brookside, Echo Lake, Lake Forest Park and Meridian Park elementaries were named in the Washington State School Recognition Program for 2023–24 for growth or achievement in measures such as English language arts, math, attendance and English learner progress.
Board officers proposed a formal process for proclamations after requests to recognize Gun Violence Awareness Day and a Boarding School Recognition and Reconciliation Day. Directors urged a high threshold for proclamations, noting staff workloads, limited resources and the political nature of some requests.
The Shoreline School Board on May 6 voted unanimously to adopt Resolution 2025-8, authorizing Superintendent Reyes to implement a reduced educational program intended to help the district meet an estimated $6.5 million budget reduction target.
The board unanimously adopted revisions to Policy 9,250 to establish triggers, a feasibility review, public engagement steps, and superintendent-led procedures for naming and renaming district-managed facilities.
The Shoreline School Board unanimously approved its consent agenda (items 6A–6L) at its April 15 regular meeting and heard a legislative update about the state budget outlook.
At the April 15 Shoreline School Board meeting, staff member Sage Wiltsie asked the board to clarify oversight and scope for a contract clause she said allows up to $17,000 in additional pay to the superintendent for weekend, holiday or other work beyond regular duties.
The Shoreline School Board on April 1 heard a first reading of a draft reduced educational program from Superintendent Reyes and district finance staff, part of a plan the district says is designed to address a projected budget gap of about $6.5 million for the 2025–26 school year.
The board adopted Resolution 2025‑6 to declare a roughly 8,000‑square‑foot parcel adjacent to Highland Terrace Elementary surplus and approved sale to the City of Shoreline to allow construction of a roundabout; the sale requires a 45‑day notice period and proceeds will be deposited in the district capital projects fund.