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‘Our Kids Deserve Better’: Reed Lays Out His Plan to Fix Okaloosa Schools

Key Notes

  • 🎓 Local roots & service – Reed grew up in Okaloosa County schools, served as a missile defense officer, worked in defense contracting/GS, and is now a tech exec in AI/quantum.
  • 🧠 Counseling & leadership background – He holds a counseling degree (Johnson University) and a leadership degree (UTEP), stressing listening, people skills, and team leadership.
  • 📵 Less screen time in elementary – Reed wants minimal to no screens in elementary, prioritizing reading, writing, arithmetic, and critical thinking before tech.
  • 💻 Tech later, not never – He says high school is the “prime time” for serious tech training, coding, and AI skills once foundations are strong.
  • 🧾 Taxpayer waste concerns – Reed criticizes spending millions on Longwood and Mary Esther before closing and bulldozing them, calling it poor long-term planning.
  • 🌞 Sunshine & transparency – He wants more decisions in the sunshine, easier access to contracts and financial data, and less reliance on FOIA requests.
  • 🌐 Better website & dashboards – Reed slams the current district website as “atrocious” and wants clear public dashboards showing where money goes.
  • 🏫 Site-based management push – He favors site-based management, giving principals more authority and reducing district micromanagement for “agile governance.”
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Candidate Profile on Okaloosa County School Board Candidate Mitch Reed

Okaloosa County School Board District 3 candidate Mitch Reed says the district needs to get “lean and mean” on administration, refocus on classroom fundamentals, and be far more transparent with taxpayers. In an interview with journalist Christopher Saul, Reed drew on his background as a Baker School graduate, former missile defense officer, counselor, and tech executive to argue for a shift in how the district is governed and how money is spent.

Reed, a self-described tech-focused executive in AI and quantum, takes a cautious stance on classroom technology. He wants little to no screen time in elementary schools, arguing that students must first master reading, writing, arithmetic, and critical thinking before diving into devices and coding. High school, he says, is the “prime time” to build advanced tech and workforce skills.

On governance, Reed favors a site-based management model that would give principals more authority and reduce top-heavy control from the district office. He sharply criticizes the lack of long-term planning that led to millions being spent on schools like Longwood and Mary Esther before their closure, calling it a waste of taxpayer money. He also blasts the district’s difficult-to-use website and reliance on FOIA requests to access contracts and financial details, pushing instead for easy-to-read public dashboards and clearer communication.

Reed insists he is not in favor of tax increases, saying the district must first tighten administrative staffing through a manpower study, use automation and AI to streamline office work, and better manage utilities and other costs. At the same time, he vows to press lawmakers in Tallahassee for higher statewide teacher pay so Okaloosa can compete with neighboring districts like Walton County. His top three priorities if elected: agile, decentralized governance; policies that protect students and staff (including stronger cybersecurity rules); and dramatically improved transparency and communication.

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Campaign poster for Bill Eddings: close-up portrait on a green background with large 'EDDINGS' text and 'BILL' above; includes 'School Board District 3' and 'Candidate Profile'.

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Christopher Saul
Christopher Saul is the publisher of Mid Bay News. He graduated from Southern Methodist University's School of Journalism with a Convergance Journalism Degree and a Master's Degree in Public Administration From Florida State.

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