County Review of Reed District's 2025-26 Mid-Year Budget Report
The official document
What the district published
This is the source material — exactly as released by RUSD. The plain English translation below is this site's version, written for community members who shouldn't need a budget degree to understand where their school dollars go.
Original PDF coming soon — check reedschools.org for the source document.
In plain English
What this document actually says
The Marin County Superintendent reviewed Reed Union School District's first interim budget report for 2025-26 and approved the district's "Positive" certification, meaning the district can meet its financial obligations. However, the report identifies concerns: the district is spending more than it takes in all three projected years, which will reduce reserves by 28% by June 2028. The ending fund balance would drop to $9.1 million (26% of expenditures) by 2028. The district's budget includes $2.67 million in parcel tax revenue (9% of total revenue) and assumes $300,000 in salary reductions starting in 2026-27. While the district meets state-required minimum reserves, it falls short of its own board policy requiring 27% reserves in the third year.
What this means for your family
The district is spending more than it earns, which could impact future programs and services. While schools are financially stable now, continued deficit spending may require budget cuts in coming years. The budget assumes salary reductions of $300,000 starting next year, which could affect staffing levels and class sizes if implemented.
Summaries are AI-assisted and based on the original district document shown above. Nothing has been editorialized — interpretations are clearly labeled. This site is maintained by Lina Godfrey's campaign as a community resource.