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Aging infrastructure, fluctuating temps taking toll on Dover’s water mains

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DOVER — Water mains within the city of Dover seemed to be spewing water like geysers between Dec. 1 and Jan. 16.

Jason Lyon, assistant director of Public Works for the city of Dover, said there were 11 water main breaks that occurred within the city’s water system over that six-week span, which was atypical.

Mr. Lyon addressed the Utility Committee at the Council Committee of the Whole at City Hall last week to inform its members what Public Works believed has been taking place among Dover’s aging water main infrastructure recently.

“During a six-week stretch, we had 11 water main breaks in the city of Dover, and they came in all sizes, shapes and colors throughout the entire city,” Mr. Lyon said. “The goal is to (find out) how these water main breaks occur and what could have been the cause of these water main breaks, although it’s very difficult to pinpoint the exact reason.

“Water main breaks are kind of spread out over town. There’s not a significant area that’s seeing this more than others and it just goes to show you that the water main breaks in general are very unpredictable. They can happen anywhere to any sort of material.”

The first of the water main breaks occurred on Dec. 6, 2019, at 310 Walker Road.

“On December 5th there was a high-speed (police) chase with a vehicle down Walker Road and the driver tried to make a turn on Lakewood Place and took out a fire hydrant,” said Mr. Lyon. “On the face of that it looks fine because we had to replace a fire hydrant, but there are long-lasting effects from that because that fire hydrant is obviously connected to the water main system and when that stress of the fire hydrant is pushed over, it does stress to the pipe.

“When that stress hits the water main, it just makes everything loosen up. That was the reason for the first two water main breaks.”

Mr. Lyon attributed the next nine water main breaks to fluctuating temperatures and the age of Dover’s water mains and the materials they are made of.

Pipe dimensions, pressure capacity and stiffness are all affected by temperature changes. Pipes also expand with increasing temperatures and contract with decreasing temperatures, which weakens them. Freezing and thawing soils can cause shift and that’s why an increase in water main breaks usually occur at the beginning and end of the winter season.

Mr. Lyon noted that 47 percent of the city’s water mains are more than 50 years old.

The average age of the water mains that broke during the six-week span was 56 years old, including an 80-year-old water main that broke at 445 E. Loockerman St. on Dec. 22. They were all constructed of cast iron pipe, which is more susceptible to external pressures such as extreme temperature changes.

“We attribute these to temperature, age and the type of material that the water main is made of,” Mr. Lyon said. “The remaining nine (water main breaks) we believe are due to temperature fluctuation. We’ve had very up and down temperatures and, historically, once we get to a cold temperature, it stays that way and the soils don’t expand or contract. It just kind of stays in the same composition, and the pipes like that.

“But when it goes up and down and you get some cold snaps and a little bit warmer days, that’s when you have this kind of contraction that occurs.”

The water main breaks can occur at any time, as a 52-year-old one burst at 691 N. DuPont Highway on Christmas Day.

The recent spree of water main breaks could just be an anomaly, considering the national average is for 14 breaks for 100 miles of water main per year. The city of Dover’s average over the past decade has been 7.1 breaks for 100 miles of water main per year, however, that number is trending towards having 13 breaks this year.

Mr. Lyon said a typical in-house repair cost for a broken water main for the city of Dover is $3,500 (less street repair) and added that the city usually receives contractor assistance for main breaks in areas such as highways that require additional equipment (i.e. trench box, maintenance of traffic) and those cost around $12,000 (less street repair).

The city of Dover has replaced 0.39 miles of water mains per year over the past five years.

City Manager Donna Mitchell said those numbers will need to increase in the coming years.

“We do have a water/wastewater rate increase (coming up),” Mrs. Mitchell said. “I’m working on those numbers to bring back in the February (City Council meeting), so you will see what those look like, but we are projecting a rate increase to help us try to catch up on some of this. We haven’t had water/wastewater rate increases for about 10 years.”


Pensioners appeal to Delaware budget-writing lawmakers for raise

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DOVER — Dozens of retirees flocked to Legislative Hall Tuesday to urge lawmakers to raise benefits for pensioners.

All sorts of special interest groups are expected to appear before the legislature’s budget-writing body over the next month as different populations try to get their hands on state funding. Gov. John Carney’s budget proposal, unveiled last week, totals $4.63 billion in recurring operating expenses, up about $180 million from the current fiscal year.

Tuesday marked the first day of budget hearings, although the spending plan itself won’t be finished until June. These meetings are a chance for the 12 members of the Joint Finance Committee to hear from agency heads and members of the public, allowing them to formulate a vision for potential changes when the committee convenes again in May to make some alterations.

The first day featured a financial overview and presentations by the Office of Management and Budget and Department of Human Resources. While those two agencies may not seem especially controversial and are probably little-known to most citizens of the state, they handle issues around key subjects like pay, health care and employee relations.

Although state employees received pay bumps of either $1,000 or 2 percent in each of the past two years and the governor’s recommendations include another $1,000 raise, pensioners have seen comparatively little. Retirees received a $400 bonus in 2018, the same year active workers got not just the raise but also a $500 bonus.

“All of us in the retired education department are being eaten alive with the cost of living,” Delaware Retired School Personnel Association President Ted George told JFC.

The last permanent increase came five years ago, he said, causing an “erosion” of benefits for more than 13,000 retired educators. Since retiring almost 19 years ago, Mr. George said, his pension’s purchasing power has gone down by 28 percent.

Inflation and higher medical costs have hit many retired Delawareans hard, speakers said. According to Mr. George, there are about 1,200 pensioners below the poverty line, an increase of 100 in just a few years.

The Delaware Retired School Personnel Association is seeking a mechanism for providing pension increases every other year for state troopers, judges and most executive branch workers. The group hopes to see 3 percent of gross payroll, estimated to equal about $61 million, placed in the fund for retirees.

That funding, the association estimated, would lead to increases of 3.2 percent for individuals who retired before 2000 and 1.6 percent for others.

Backers described the proposal as fair to both pensioners and the state, offering some certainty to both sides, but that’s just one of the many directions the committee is being pulled in.

“It’s tough,” JFC co-chair Sen. Harris McDowell, D-Wilmington, said after the meeting. “There’s a couple different philosophies at work. It’s tough. But there are a lot of them and covering them in a meaningful way is a lot of money.

“So, we’re trying to see if there’s a way we can go and be meaningful. I don’t want to do what we’ve done before and say, OK, we’ve got $500” for a one-time payment.

According to the Delaware Retired School Personnel Association, almost 27,700 retired individuals were in the general state employee pension plan, with an average payout of about $21,800, as of two years ago. The makeup of the judicial and state police pension plans is much more limited, for obvious reasons, and the average pension amount is several times higher.

Joseph Malloy, chairman of the Pension Advisory Council, said pensioners have seen just two permanent increases since 2007 and pointed to language included in last year’s grant-in-aid bill, which provides funds for many nonprofits.

“It is the intent of the General Assembly to include a post retirement increase for beneficiaries of the State Employee’s Pension Plan, the Judicial Pension Plan, and the New State Police Pension Plan effective July 1, 2020 (Fiscal Year 2021 Budget),” states a portion of that legislation.

“Options for consideration shall include, but not be limited to, a post retirement increase that addresses the erosion of pension benefits, due to inflation and other factors, for the longest serving retirees. The further intent is to establish post retirement increase policy that is financially sustainable in future fiscal years.”

Mr. Malloy is seeking a 3 percent increase.

Retirees sounded a similar note last year, although they were unsuccessful in getting more money in their monthly sum or in raising the $7,000 death benefit.

A bipartisan bill that would have mandated the payout to retirees keep up with increases in the national consumer price index average annually never made it out of the Senate Finance Committee last year. Seven of the 12 members of JFC are signed onto that bill as sponsors.

Letter to the Editor: Focus on person, not weapon

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It seems as though some are too quick to pull the proverbial trigger to reduce violence and gun-related crimes without having an entirely clear view of the situation. We must look deeper into the cause, not the action, to take appropriate steps to deter violence. A person who wants to harm another and or harm themselves should be the focus of preventive action.

Ruth Briggs King

Our children have been desensitized to violence through various media, such as movies, games, books, and other entertainment. Too often, they are exposed at an early age to situations they are not prepared to understand.

We should be working to focus on the major red flags that often wave before violent action occurs. Evidence reveals the underlying issues that might be the precursor to prevent mass incidents. The Secret Service released a report in November that revealed shooters showed warning signs and that the actions were not a “sudden, impulsive act” and that the majority of incidents were preventable.

I recently attended a forum on gun violence that was held in New Castle County. There, we heard from experts who explained the mind set behind those responsible for mass shootings (four or more killed), many of which were through an act of domestic violence.

In 2020, let’s focus on the person, not the weapon, and let’s train professionals to notice warning behaviors, train threat assessment teams, review what contributes to the spread of a certain behavior (i.e., “social contagion”), and work to prevent suicide.

State Rep. Ruth Briggs King
R-Georgetown

Trump uses State of Union to campaign; Pelosi rips up speech

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U.S. President Donald Trump arrives to deliver the State of the Union to a joint session of the U.S. Congress on Capitol Hill on Tuesday in Washington.

WASHINGTON — Standing before a Congress and nation sharply divided by impeachment, President Donald Trump used his State of the Union address Tuesday to extol a “Great American Comeback” on his watch, just three years after he took office decrying a land of “American carnage” under his predecessor.

The partisan discord was apparent for all to see as the first president to campaign for reelection while facing impeachment vigorously made his case for another term: Republican legislators chanted “Four More Years.” House Speaker Nancy Pelosi ripped up her copy of Trump’s speech as he ended his address.

“America’s enemies are on the run, America’s fortunes are on the rise and America’s future is blazing bright,” Trump declared. “In just three short years, we have shattered the mentality of American decline and we have rejected the downsizing of America’s destiny. We are moving forward at a pace that was unimaginable just a short time ago, and we are never going back!”

Offering the nation’s economic success as the chief rationale for a second term, Trump’s speech resembled a lower-volume version of his campaign rallies, offering something for every section of his political base.

But while he tweets daily assailing his impeachment, Trump never mentioned the “i-word” in his 78-minute speech. He spoke from the House of Representatives, on the opposite side of the Capitol from where the Senate one day later was expected to acquit him largely along party lines.

Pelosi, a frequent thorn in Trump’s side, created a viral image with her seemingly sarcastic applause of the president a year ago. This time, she was even more explicit with her very public rebuke.

Trump appeared no more cordial. When he climbed to the House rostrum, he did not take her outstretched hand though it was not clear he had seen her gesture. Later, as Republicans often cheered, she remained in her seat, at times shaking her head at his remarks.

Trump, the former reality TV star added a showbiz flavor to the staid event: He had wife Melania present the Presidential Medal of Freedom, the nation’s highest civilian honor, to the divisive conservative radio host Rush Limbaugh, who recently announced he has advanced lung cancer.

He stunned a young student in the gallery with a scholarship. And he orchestrated the surprise tearful reunion of a solider from overseas with his family in the balcony.

Even for a Trump-era news cycle that seems permanently set to hyper-speed, the breakneck pace of events dominating the first week of February offered a singular backdrop for the president’s address.

Supreme Court Chief Justice John Roberts, who has presided in the Senate over only the third impeachment trial in the nation’s history, was on hand again Tuesday night — this time in his more customary seat in the audience. Trump stood before the very lawmakers who have voted to remove him from office — and those who are expected to acquit him when the Senate trial comes to a close.

The leading Senate Democrats hoping to unseat him in November were campaigning in New Hampshire.

In advance of his address, Trump tweeted that the chaos in Iowa’s Monday leadoff caucuses showed Democrats were incompetent and should not be trusted to run the government.

Among Trump’s guests in the chamber: Venezuelan opposition leader Juan Guaidó, who has been trying to win face time with Trump, his most important international ally.

The president offered Guaidó exactly the sort of endorsement he’s been looking for as he struggles to oust President Nicolás Maduro from power. Trump called Guaidó “the true and legitimate president of Venezuela.”

“Socialism destroys nations,” Trump declared.

The president entered the evening on a roll, with his impeachment acquittal imminent, his job approval numbers ticking upward and Wall Street looking strong. H e struck a largely optimistic tone Tuesday night, though even in past moments when Trump has struck a tone of bipartisanship and cooperation, he has consistently returned to harsher rhetoric within days.

In the closest historical comparison, Bill Clinton did not mention his recent impeachment when he delivered his State of the Union in 1999. In his address a year ago, Trump did remain on message, making no mention of how Pelosi had originally disinvited him from delivering the speech during the longest government shutdown in the nation’s history.

Trump spent much of the speech highlighting the economy’s strength, including low unemployment, stressing how it has helped blue-collar workers and the middle class, though the period of growth began under his predecessor, Barack Obama. And what Trump calls an unprecedented boom is, by many measures, not all that different from the solid economy he inherited from President Barack Obama. Economic growth was 2.3% in 2019, matching the average pace since the Great Recession ended a decade ago in the first year of Obama’s eight-year presidency

Trump stressed the new trade agreements he has negotiated, including his phase-one deal with China and the United States-Mexico-Canada agreement he signed last month.

While the White House said the president would have a message of unity, he also spent time on issues that have created great division and resonated with his political base. He attacked Democrats’ health care proposals for being too intrusive and again highlighted his signature issue — immigration — trumpeting the miles of border wall that have been constructed.

He also dedicated a section to “American values,” discussing efforts to protect “religious liberties” and limit access to abortion as he continues to court the evangelical and conservative Christian voters who form a crucial part of his base.

The Democrats were supplying plenty of counter-programming, focusing on health care — the issue key to their takeover of the House last year. Trump, for his part, vowed to not allow a “socialist takeover of our health care system” a swipe at the Medicare For All proposal endorsed by some of his Democratic challengers.

Many female Democrats were wearing white as tribute to the suffragettes, while a number in the party were wearing red, white and blue-striped lapel pins to highlight climate change, saying Trump has rolled back environmental safeguards and given free rein to polluters.

Several Democratic lawmakers, including California Rep. Maxine Waters and New York Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, announced in advance of the speech that they would be skipping it, with the high-profile New York freshman tweeting that she would “not use my presence at a state ceremony to normalize Trump’s lawless conduct & subversion of the Constitution.”

Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer delivered her party’s official response and drew a contrast between actions taken by Democrats and the president’s rhetoric.

“It doesn’t matter what the president says about the stock market,” Whitmer said. “What matters is that millions of people struggle to get by or don’t have enough money at the end of the month after paying for transportation, student loans, or prescription drugs.”

Commentary: Delaware farmers urged to enroll in safety net programs

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By Sean McKeon

The clock is ticking. March 16 is the last day to make what is likely one of the most important business decisions you will make for your farming operation this year.

Sean McKeon

If you have not already visited your local Farm Service Agency (FSA) county office to make your election for either the Agriculture Risk Coverage (ARC) or the Price Loss Coverage (PLC) program and to sign your annual enrollment contract, you should call and make your appointment now.

Many of you are gearing up to head to the field for spring planting, but I cannot stress enough the importance of not letting this deadline get lost in the hectic day-to-day obligations of farm life. If you fail to enroll for 2019 ARC or PLC, you will be ineligible to receive a payment for the 2019 crop year.

ARC and PLC provide financial protections to farmers from substantial drops in crop prices or revenues and are vital economic safety nets for most American farms. These programs cover 20 commodities produced in the U.S.

FSA anticipates more than 1.7 million producers will enroll in ARC or PLC — that’s a lot of producers to assist in a short period of time. As of Feb. 4, FSA records in Delaware show 1,404 farms out of an expected 3,661 farms have completed ARC or PLC enrollment for the 2019 crop year.

Want to maximize your time visiting with FSA? Inquire about deadlines and options for also enrolling in 2020 ARC or PLC and updating PLC payment yields. Our staff will help you make the most out of your visit or set you up with a future appointment to help check FSA programs off your lengthy “to do” list.

If you’re still unsure about the choice of ARC or PLC, we offer online decision tools to help you determine the best program election for your farming operation. To access these tools, visit www.fsa.usda.gov/arc-plc.

Call FSA today for an appointment. To locate your local FSA office, visit farmers.gov/service-center-locator.

We know that time is money, so make the time to avoid losing the money.

Sean McKeon is state executive director in Delaware of the USDA Farm Service Agency.

Japan quarantines cruise ship as toll of new virus grows

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TOKYO — Large white sheets covering them head-to-knee, people infected with a new virus were led by gloved and masked officials Wednesday off a Japanese cruise ship that’s being quarantined amid growing worry about the spread of an outbreak.

The quarantine of 3,711 people aboard the Diamond Princess is part of a global health emergency that seems to worsen by the day. The little-understood new coronavirus has killed 490 people in mainland China, officials said Wednesday. But it has also spread panic and discrimination around the world as the number of cases grow.

More than 1,800 people on another cruise ship were being screened in Hong Kong after three passengers on a previous voyage were diagnosed with the virus. Thousands of hospital workers in Hong Kong were striking to demand the border with mainland China be closed completely. And on the mainland, patients were being treated in newly built or converted hospitals while some at overcrowded facilities sat on the floor.

Tokyo Olympics organizers said they are increasingly worried about the disruption the virus is causing ahead of the games, which open in less than six months.

As examples of anti-Asian discrimination mount, U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres appealed for “international solidarity” and support for China and other countries hurt by the virus. He urged a stop to any stigmatization of innocent people.

In the port city of Yokohama, just outside Tokyo, health workers, some in protective white jumpsuits, transferred 10 patients from the Diamond Princess cruise ship to a Japanese coast guard boat next to it. The 10, covered in sheets to protect their identities from cameras, were taken to a dock and put on ambulances bound for hospitals for treatment in isolation.

Health Minister Katsunobu Kato said all the people on board will be quarantined on the ship for up to 14 days under Japanese law. The ship had 2,666 passengers and 1,045 crew members. Tests were pending on 273 people who had symptoms or had contact with a man who was diagnosed with the virus after leaving the ship in Hong Kong.

In Hong Kong, hospital workers were striking to demand the border with mainland China be shut completely to ward off the virus. Hospitals said they had to cut some services due to striking workers’ absences.

The territory’s beleaguered leader, Carrie Lam, criticized the strike and said the government was doing all it could to limit the flow of people across the border. Almost all land and sea links have been closed, but the striking workers want the border shut completely.

“Important services, critical operations have been affected,” Lam told reporters. “So I’m appealing to those who are taking part in this action: Let’s put the interests of the patients and the entire public health system above all other things.”

The latest mainland China figures showed an increase of 65 deaths from the previous day, all the new deaths from Wuhan. The number of new cases increased to 24,324, a rise of 3,887 from the previous day. Outside mainland China, at least 220 cases have been confirmed, including two fatalities, one in Hong Kong and another in the Philippines.

The infections on the cruise ship raised Japan’s total to 33 cases. South Korea and Thailand reported recent cases among people who had not been to China, raising concerns about how easily the virus might be spreading in other places.

To treat the thousands of patients in its hard-hit central region, China built a new hospital in a matter of days and converted a gymnasium, exhibition hall and cultural center.

Patients were being moved into a 1,000-bed hospital with prefabricated wards and isolation rooms in Wuhan. A 1,500-bed hospital also specially built for virus patients opens Thursday. The hospitals made from converted public spaces to treat patients with mild symptoms have a total of 3,400 beds, the simple cots placed in tight rows in cavernous rooms without any barriers between them.

One man, Fang Bin, said he saw wards so crowded during a visit to the city’s No. 5 Hospital on Saturday that some patients were forced to sit on the ground.

With the epicenter of the outbreak, Wuhan, cut off by rail, air and road to try to contain the virus, the United States and other countries were organizing more evacuation flights for their citizens still in the central Chinese city. Two of the latest planes returned to Russia and New Zealand on Wednesday, with the returnees quarantined for the maximum incubation period of the virus.

Dr. David Heymann, who led the World Health Organization’s response to the SARS outbreak, said it’s too early to tell when the new coronavirus will peak, but that it appears to still be on the increase.

WHO director-general Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus urged countries outside China to share more data on infections, saying detailed information has been provided in only 38% of cases. “Without better data, it’s very hard for us to assess how the outbreak is evolving or what impact it could have and to ensure we’re providing the most appropriate recommendations.”

Dover’s Citywide Black History Celebration focuses on Delaware’s history

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DOVER — The Citywide Black History Celebration returns to the Sankofa Cultural Arts Center at 39 S. West St. in Dover this weekend with the themed event “Delaware’s Minority Education before Integration.” Free tickets are still available and required for admission as seating as limited.

There will be three performance times: Friday at 7 p.m. (doors open at 6) and Saturday at noon (doors open at 11 a.m.) and again at 4 p.m. (doors open at 3).

This program is designed to acquaint the public with the Delaware high schools opened in the early 1950s to serve the African-American, Native American and Moor student populations, including the impact these schools had on the future of Delaware. The program will feature alumni from the William H. Henry High School telling their personal stories from that time.

The invocation and introductions will be by the Rev. Dr. John G. Moore Sr., and moderator Dr. Donna Blakey will conduct interviews of the William H. Henry High School alumni members

Live musical performances will take place throughout the program by the Sankofa African Drummers and Dancers and the Sankofa String Orchestra.

Tickets are available at the Biggs Museum of American Art, 406 Federal St., Dover or the Delaware State News, 110 Galaxy Drive, Dover.

Additionally, you can order them online at www.DelmarvaEvents.net. Ticket holders must be seated by 15 minutes before the performance start time.

The Biggs Museum of American Art is participating again this year with a new exhibit “Lessons: An Exhibition By Billy Colbert.”

The topic of African-education under segregation will be highlighted through multimedia installations of rare videos and photographs of the time alongside artifacts from segregated schools provided by African-American community members from Kent County.

Mr. Colbert, a fine arts professor from Delaware State University, will be collecting oral histories from the local community centering on their experiences with education under segregation in Delaware. He hopes to compile these interviews into a documentary of local history, which will be broadcast from the museum. See the interview schedule on the museum’s website at biggsmuseum.org or call 302-674-2111 Ext. 108 to make an appointment to share your story and help paint an accurate depiction of the time for future generations.

The exhibit will be open from Feb. 7 to March 29.

A special “Meet the Artist” reception, sponsored by Chesapeake Utilities, will highlight the exhibition. The reception is Wednesday, Feb. 19 at 5 p.m. (doors open at 4 p.m.) at the Biggs Museum of American Art, 406 Federal St., Dover. Admission is free for this reception as well as for the First Saturday celebrations where family-friendly hands-on art projects always reinforce exhibition themes in the drop-in community studio. The museum is open Tuesday – Saturday from 9 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. and Sundays from 1:30 to 4:30 p.m.

The Dover Public Library is also joining the celebration with a schedule of events focusing on music, history and visual arts.

Highlighted events include “From Africa to the Americas Via Music, Song, Dance and Stories” on Friday, Feb. 21 at 6:30 p.m. The program features Kamau Ngom, who will take guests on a journey from Africa to the Americas using music, song, dance, and stories as mediums, highlighting the similarities between traditional African culture and African-influenced culture in the Americas.

The library’s celebration of Black History continues into March with the program “The Woman’s Suffrage Movement – Below the Color Line” on Wednesday, March 11 at 6:30 p.m. The program focuses on the 19th Amendment, which was ratified giving women the right to vote, a struggle that almost predates the founding of the country.

This created many women heroes who sacrificed their time, money, and social status to win that right. Many courageous African-American women fought to assure that African American women also got the right to vote when white women got the right to vote.

This program is presented by historian Syl Woolford. Call the library at 302-736-7030 for more information and check their online event calendar for their full schedule for February and March at https://dover.lib.de.us/.

The Fourth Annual Citywide Black History Celebration is presented by the Delaware State News in partnership with: the Biggs Museum of American Art, Delaware State University, Dover Public Library, DonDel Production, the Inner City Cultural League and the Sankofa Cultural Arts Center. The event is sponsored in part by Chesapeake Utilities.

For more information, visit www.DelmarvaEvents.net or www.Facebook.com/DelawareStateNews/events.

Split Senate acquits Trump in impeachment

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WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump won impeachment acquittal Wednesday in the U.S. Senate, bringing to a close only the third presidential trial in American history with votes that split the country, tested civic norms and fed the tumultuous 2020 race for the White House.

A majority of senators expressed unease with Trump’s pressure campaign on Ukraine that resulted in the two articles of impeachment. But the final tallies — 52-48 favoring acquittal of abuse of power, 53-47 of obstruction of Congress’ investigation — fell far short. Two-thirds “guilty” votes would have been needed to reach the Constitution’s bar of high crimes and misdemeanors to convict and remove Trump from office.

The outcome Wednesday followed months of remarkable impeachment proceedings, from Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s House to Mitch McConnell’s Senate, reflecting the nation’s unrelenting partisan divide three years into the Trump presidency.

What started as Trump’s request for Ukraine to “do us a favor” spun into a far-reaching, 28,000-page report compiled by House investigators accusing an American president of engaging in shadow diplomacy that threatened U.S. foreign relations for personal, political gain as he pressured the ally to investigate Democratic rival Joe Biden ahead of the next election.

No president has ever been removed by the Senate.

A politically emboldened Trump has eagerly predicted vindication, deploying the verdict as a political anthem in his reelection bid. The president claims he did nothing wrong, decrying the “witch hunt” and “hoax” as extensions of special counsel Robert Mueller’s probe into Russian 2016 campaign interference by those out to get him from the start of his presidency.

The Wednesday afternoon vote was swift. With Chief Justice John Roberts presiding over the trial, senators sworn to do “impartial justice” stood at their desks for the roll call and stated their votes — “guilty” or “not guilty.”

On the first article of impeachment, Trump was charged with abuse of power. He was found not guilty. The second, obstruction of Congress, also produced a not guilty verdict.

Only one Republican, Mitt Romney of Utah, the party’s defeated 2012 presidential nominee, broke with the GOP.

Romney choked up as said drew on his faith and “oath before God” to announce he would vote guilty on the first charge, abuse of power. He would vote to acquit on the second.

Both Bill Clinton in 1999 and Andrew Johnson in 1868 drew cross-party support when they were left in office after an impeachment trial. President Richard Nixon resigned rather than face revolt from his own party.

Ahead of voting, some of the most closely watched senators took to the Senate floor to tell their constituents, and the nation, what they had decided. The Senate chaplain opened the trial with daily prayers for the senators, including one Wednesday seeking “integrity.”

Influential GOP Sen. Lamar Alexander of Tennessee, who is retiring, worried that a guilty verdict would “pour gasoline on the fire” of the nation’s culture wars over Trump. He said the House proved its case but it just didn’t rise to the level of impeachment.

“It would rip the country apart,” Alexander said before his vote.

Other Republicans siding with Trump said it was time to end what McConnell called the “circus” and move on. Trump ally GOP Sen. Lindsey Graham said it was a “sham” designed to destroy a presidency.

Most Democrats, though, echoed the House managers’ warnings that Trump, if left unchecked, would continue to abuse the power of his office for personal political gain and try to “cheat” again ahead of the the 2020 election.

During the nearly three-week trial, House Democrats prosecuting the case argued that Trump abused power like no other president in history when he pressured Ukraine to investigate Biden and his son, Hunter Biden, ahead of the 2020 election.

They detailed an extraordinary shadow diplomacy run by Trump lawyer Rudy Giuliani that set off alarms at the highest levels of government. After Trump’s July 25 phone call with Ukraine, Trump temporarily halted U.S. aid to the struggling ally battling hostile Russia at its border. The money was eventually released in September as Congress intervened.

When the House probed Trump’s actions, the president instructed White House aides to defy congressional subpoenas, leading to the obstruction charge.

One key Democrat, Alabama Sen. Doug Jones — perhaps the most endangered politically for reelection in a state where Trump is popular — announced he would vote to convict. “Senators are elected to make tough choices,” Jones said

Questions from the Ukraine matter continue to swirl. House Democrats may yet summon former national security adviser John Bolton to testify about revelations from his forthcoming book that offer a fresh account of Trump’s actions. Other eyewitnesses and documents are almost sure to surface.

In closing arguments for the trial the lead prosecutor, Rep. Adam Schiff, D-Calif., appealed to senators’ sense of decency, that “right matters” and “truth matters” and that Trump “is not who you are.’’

“The president’s basic lack of character, his willingness to cheat in the election – he’s not going to stop,” Schiff told The Associated Press on Wednesday, predicting more revelations would become public. “It’s not going to change, which means that we are going to have to remain eternally vigilant.”

Pelosi was initially reluctant to launch impeachment proceedings against Trump when she took control of the House after the 2018 election, dismissively telling more liberal voices that “he’s not worth it.’’

Trump and his GOP allies in Congress argue that Democrats have been trying to undercut him from the start.

But a whistleblower complaint of his conversation with Ukraine President Volodymyr Zelenskiy set off alarms. The call had been placed the day after Mueller announced the findings of his Russia probe.

When Trump told Pelosi in September that the call was perfect, she was stunned. “Perfectly wrong,” she said. Days later, the speaker announced the formal impeachment inquiry.

The result was the quickest, most partisan impeachment in U.S. history, with no Republicans joining the House Democrats to vote for the charges, though one GOP congressman left the party and voted for impeachment and two Democrats joined Republicans to oppose. The Republican Senate kept up the pace with the fastest trial ever, and the first with no witnesses or deliberations.

Trump’s legal team with star attorney Alan Dershowitz made the sweeping, if stunning, assertion that even if the president engaged in the quid pro quo as described, it is not impeachable, because politicians often view their own political interest with the national interest.

McConnell, who commands a 53-47 Republican majority, braced for dissent, refusing efforts to prolong the trial with more witnesses, arguing the House should have done a better job.

Some GOP senators distanced themselves from Trump’s defense, and other Republicans brushed back calls from conservatives to disclose the name of the anonymous whistleblower. The Associated Press typically does not reveal the identity of whistleblowers.

Trump’s approval rating, which has generally languished in the mid- to low-40s, hit a new high of 49% in the latest Gallup polling, which was conducted as the Senate trial was drawing to a close. The poll found that 51% of the public views the Republican Party favorably, the first time the GOP’s number has exceeded 50% since 2005.


Wesley College to receive $3 million in state funding

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DOVER — A state panel this week approved a request for $3 million from Wesley College, with conditions.

The funding is expected to help the college continue operations until it can come to an accord on a merger with another higher education institution, which could be announced in the coming weeks.

In November, the private school submitted a request for $3.2 million from the state’s Higher Education Economic Development Investment Fund. The group, which consists of the director of the Office of Management and Budget, the secretary of state, the co-chairs of the General Assembly’s Joint Legislative Committee on Capital Improvement and the controller general, previously awarded $2 million to the college in 2019.

Wesley also was given permission in the spring to move $1.375 million earmarked for it the prior year to renovate the former Dover library.

College officials were informed in the summer they would not receive any more funding without first submitting a long-term strategic plan to the state, which they have not done as yet.

“The decision to approve these additional funds proved difficult for the committee,” the five-member committee said in a statement. “However, the committee understands that should the college cease operations the economic impact to the state’s capital – the loss of over 200 jobs and vacancy of 19 buildings in downtown Dover – would be significant. In addition, hundreds of Delawareans would have their education disrupted without a clear path to continue their education.

“The state has entered into a Memorandum of Agreement with the college that includes a number of conditions agreed to by the college in order to be eligible to receive these additional funds. These conditions include drawing the funds on an as-needed basis, providing regular reports to the state and meeting certain milestones.”

In addition to the conditions mentioned in the statement, Wesley must agree not to request any further funding and to “provide the state with a “teach out” plan inclusive of a plan for graduating the approximately 200 spring 2020 graduates,” about half of whom are native to the First State, per the letter informing Wesley of the decision.

Should the school fail to come to terms on a merger, it will have to surrender possession of the old Dover Public Library to the state. The college purchased the South State Street property from the city in 2016 for $1.

Funding from the state will be provided monthly as needed to ensure Wesley can continue to make payroll and to leverage federal grants and similar resources, according to the letter approving the request.

Background

Both Dover City Council and Kent County Levy Court passed resolutions in January urging the state to financially support the college. Wesley President Bob Clark told Levy Court last month the discussion with another school is “moving from a letter of intent to a definitive agreement.”

As part of the state’s efforts to help the small private school, lawmakers in 2019 expanded a fund created the year before. The Higher Education Economic Development Investment Fund, which was initially intended primarily for the University of Delaware, Delaware State University and Delaware Technical Community College, received more money and new guidelines.

The addition, which opened the $20 million fund to “projects and efforts that will help create or retain a significant number of high quality, full-time jobs and/or continue to provide access to higher education opportunities for in-state residents,” was made with an eye on Wesley College.

In its Nov. 26 application, obtained through a Freedom of Information Act request, President Clark wrote the school has “made great progress in identifying a path forward for a potential merger by signing agreements with two financially strong institutions of higher learning.” A sentence following that line appears to name those institutions, but the information was redacted by the state.

A merger would prove especially beneficial in the fields of health care, education, science, technology, math and engineering, according to the application. The letter to state officials also notes the school has hired two consulting firms to help plot a course forward, including assistance in negotiations. The names of the firms are among the redacted items.

According to the letter, the companies were set to provide recommendations to the respective institutions’ leadership by the end of January.

While part of the request was blacked out, the letter does note the sum would be used to “maintain enrollment/retention initiatives and ensure we retain the proper bank account balance so that we can continue to access federal aid money from the Department of Education to allow Wesley College to continue providing Delawareans educational opportunities that improve their lives and enhance the opportunities that they will serve” and “provide a bridge that affords Wesley College the time to complete a definitive agreement with the partner that will provide the best long term solution.”

The private school has been placed on a list of colleges and universities maintained by the U.S. Department of Education to track institutions facing various issues, although Wesley is on the list specifically for finances. The designation means the Federal Student Aid office has greater oversight than with schools not included in the count.

According to Internal Revenue Service documents filed with GuideStar, which maintains a database of nonprofit tax forms, Wesley reported total revenue of about $48.3 million and expenses of $49 million for 2016, with approximately $25.3 million in net assets.

The prior year, its revenue came to nearly $50.8 million, while its costs were a little more than $51.2 million, according to the IRS forms. It had approximate revenue of $49.5 million in 2014, with expenses of about $49.2 million.

Information for more recent years was not available.

Because Wesley is a private college, its finances are not easily accessible, and several emails obtained through a Freedom of Information Act request contained thorough redactions of financial data and other information.

The situation facing the college, which was founded in 1873, is far from unique. Many small private schools around the nation are facing crunches as enrollment dwindles and their funds run dry. According to Moody’s Investors Service, about a quarter of private higher education institutions were in the red in fiscal year 2017.

Per Wesley’s website, its undergraduate enrollment was 1,228 in the fall of 2018, down 219 from the year before and 372 from five years prior. Of those 1,228 students, 1,125 were full-time.

Rumors about Wesley have swirled since at least early last year, as evidenced by two March emails from the college’s president. On March 14, in a message to faculty, President Clark shot down “uninformed & untrue” speculation about Wesley being bought out.

He sent another email to college personnel almost two weeks later reiterating “there is no plan, or talk of anyone buying Wesley out, nor are there plans to close.”

Although not mentioned by the president then, among the most persistent rumors is that Wesley is being bought out by or entering into some type of agreement with the University of Delaware. According to UD spokeswoman Andrea Boyle Tippett, there were conversations between the institution and Wesley early in 2019, but they had stopped by June.

Also awarded money from the Higher Education Economic Development Investment Fund are the University of Delaware, Delaware State University, Delaware Technical Community College and the Delaware College of Art and Design. The first three each got $4.83 million, while the fine arts school received $500,000.

Kirk Douglas, longtime influential movie star, dies at 103

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LOS ANGELES — Kirk Douglas, the intense, muscular actor with the dimpled chin who starred in “Spartacus,” “Lust for Life” and dozens of other films, helped fatally weaken the blacklist against suspected Communists and reigned for decades as a Hollywood maverick and patriarch, died Wednesday, his family said. He was 103.

“It is with tremendous sadness that my brothers and I announce that Kirk Douglas left us today at the age of 103,” his son Michael said in a statement on his Instagram account. “To the world, he was a legend, an actor from the golden age of movies who lived well into his golden years, a humanitarian whose commitment to justice and the causes he believed in set a standard for all of us to aspire to.”

Kirk Douglas’ death was first reported by People magazine.

His granite-like strength and underlying vulnerability made the son of illiterate Russian immigrants one of the top stars of the 20th century. He appeared in more than 80 films, in roles ranging from Doc Holliday in “Gunfight at the O.K. Corral” to Vincent van Gogh in “Lust for Life.”

He worked with some of Hollywood’s greatest directors, from Vincente Minnelli and Billy Wilder to Stanley Kubrick and Elia Kazan. His career began at the peak of the studios’ power, more than 70 years ago, and ended in a more diverse, decentralized era that he helped bring about.

Always competitive, including with his own family, Douglas never received an Academy Award for an individual film, despite being nominated three times — for “Champion,” “The Bad and the Beautiful” and “Lust for Life.”

But in 1996, the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences awarded him an honorary Oscar. His other awards included a Presidential Medal of Freedom and a lifetime achievement award from the American Film Institute.

He was a category unto himself, a force for change and symbol of endurance.

In his latter years, he was a final link to a so-called “Golden Age,” a man nearly as old as the industry itself.

In his youth, he represented a new kind of performer, more independent and adventurous than Clark Gable, Spencer Tracy and other giants of the studio era of the 1930s and 1940s, and more willing to speak his mind.

Reaching stardom after World War II, he was as likely to play cads (the movie producer in “Bad and the Beautiful,” the journalist in “Ace in the Hole”) as he was suited to play heroes, as alert to the business as he was at home before the camera. He started his own production company in 1955, when many actors still depended on the studios, and directed some of his later films.

A born fighter, Douglas was especially proud of his role in the the downfall of Hollywood’s blacklist, which halted and ruined the careers of writers suspected of pro-Communist activity or sympathies. By the end of the ‘50s, the use of banned writers was widely known within the industry, but not to the general public.

Douglas, who years earlier had reluctantly signed a loyalty oath to get the starring role in “Lust for Life,” provided a crucial blow when he openly credited the former Communist and Oscar winner Dalton Trumbo for script work on “Spartacus,” the epic about a slave rebellion during ancient Rome that was released in 1960. (A few months earlier, Otto Preminger had announced Trumbo’s name would appear on the credits for “Exodus,” but “Spartacus” came out first.)

“Everybody advised me not to do it because you won’t be able to work in this town again and all of that. But I was young enough to say to hell with it,” Douglas said about “Spartacus” in a 2011 interview with The Associated Press. “I think if I was much older, I would have been too conservative: ‘Why should I stick my neck out?’”

Douglas rarely played lightly. He was compulsive about preparing for roles and a supreme sufferer on camera, whether stabbed with scissors in “Ace in the Hole” or crucified in “Spartacus.”

Critic David Thomson dubbed Douglas “the manic-depressive among Hollywood stars, one minute bearing down on plot, dialogue and actresses with the gleeful appetite of a man just freed from Siberia, at other times writing not just in agony but mutilation and a convincingly horrible death.”

Douglas’ personal favorite was the 1962 Western “Lonely are the Brave,” which included a line of dialogue from a Trumbo script he called the most personal he ever spoke on screen: “I’m a loner clear down deep to my very guts.”

The most famous words in a Douglas movie were spoken about him, but not by him.

In “Spartacus,” Roman officials tell a gathering of slaves their lives will be spared if they identify their leader, Spartacus. As Douglas rises to give himself up, a growing chorus of slaves jump up and shout, “I’m Spartacus!”

Douglas stands silently, a tear rolling down his face.

As Michael Douglas once observed, few acts were so hard to follow. Kirk Douglas was an acrobat, a juggler, a self-taught man who learned French in his 30s and German in his 40s.

Life was just so many walls to crash through, like the stroke in his 70s that threatened — but only threatened — to end his career. He continued to act and write for years and was past 100 when he and his wife published “Kirk and Anne: Letters of Love, Laughter, and a Lifetime in Hollywood.”

He was born Issur Danielovitch to an impoverished Jewish family in Amsterdam, N.Y.. His name evolved over time. He called himself Isidore Demsky until he graduated from St. Lawrence University.

He took the name Kirk Douglas as he worked his way through the American Academy of Dramatic Arts, choosing “Douglas” because he wanted his last name still to begin with “D” and “Kirk” because he liked the hard, jagged sound of the “K.”

Douglas was a performer as early as kindergarten, when he recited a poem about the red robin of spring. He was a star in high school and in college he wrestled and built the physique that was showcased in many of his movies. He was determined, hitchhiking to St. Lawrence as a teen and convincing the dean to approve a student loan. And he was tough. One of his strongest childhood memories was of flinging a spoonful of hot tea into the face of his intimidating father.

“I have never done anying as brave in any movie,” he later wrote.

Beginning in 1941, Douglas won a series of small roles on Broadway, served briefly in the Navy and received a key Hollywood break when an old friend from New York, Lauren Bacall, recommended he play opposite Barbara Stanwyck in “The Strange Love of Martha Ivers.”

He gained further attention with the classic 1947 film noir “Out of the Past” and the Oscar-winning “A Letter to Three Wives.”

His real breakthrough came as an unscrupulous boxer in 1949’s “Champion,” a low-budget production he was advised to turn down.

“Before ‘Champion’ in 1949, I’d played an intellectual school teacher, a weak school teacher and an alcoholic,” Douglas once said in an interview with the AP. “After ‘Champion,’ I was a tough guy. I did things like playing van Gogh, but the image lingers.”

He had long desired creative control and “Champion” was followed by a run of hits that gave him the clout to form Bryna Productions in 1955, and a second company later.

Many of his movies, such as Kubrick’s “Paths of Glory,” “The Vikings,” “Spartacus,” “Lonely Are the Brave” and “Seven Days in May,” were produced by his companies.

His movie career faded during the 1960s and Douglas turned to other media.

In the 1970s and 1980s, he did several notable television films, including “Victory at Entebbe” and “Amos,” which dealt with abuse of the elderly.

In his 70s, he became an author, his books including the memoir “The Ragman’s Son,” the novels “Dance With the Devil” and “The Gift” and a brief work on the making of “Spartacus.”

“We are living in a town of make-believe,” he told The Associated Press in 2014. “I have done about 90 movies. That means that every time I was pretending to be someone else. There comes a time in your life when you say, well, `who am I?’” he said. “I have found writing books a good substitute to making pictures. When you write a book, you get to determine what part you are playing.”

Douglas also became one of Hollywood’s leading philanthropists. The Douglas Foundation, which he and Anne Douglas co-founded, has donated millions to a wide range of institutions, from the Children’s Hospital Los Angeles to the Motion Picture & Television Fund.

In 2015, the foundation endowed the Kirk Douglas Fellowship — a full-tuition, 2-year scholarship — at the American Film Institute.

As a young man, Douglas very much lived like a movie star, especially in the pre-#MeToo era. He was romantically linked with many of his female co-stars and dated Gene Tierney, Patricia Neal and Marlene Dietrich among others.

He would recall playing Ann Sothern’s husband in “A Letter to Three Wives” and how he and the actress “rehearsed the relationship offstage.”

He had been married to Diana Dill, but they divorced in 1951. Three years later, he married Anne Buydens, whom he met in Paris while he was filming “Act of Love” (and otherwise pursuing a young Italian actress) and she was doing publicity.

He would later owe his very life to Anne, with whom he remained for more than 60 years. In 1958, the film producer Michael Todd, then the husband of Elizabeth Taylor, offered the actor a ride on his private jet. Douglas’ wife insisted that he not go, worrying about a private plane, and he eventually gave in. The plane crashed, killing all on board.

Douglas had two children with each of his wives and all went into show business, against his advice.

Besides Michael, they are Joel and Peter, both producers, and Eric, an actor with several film credits who died of a drug overdose in 2004.

Later generations came to regard Kirk as Michael’s father. Michael Douglas not only thrived in Hollywood, but beat his dad to the Oscars with a project his father had first desired.

Kirk Douglas tried for years to make a film out of Ken Kesey’s cult novel “One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest.”

In the 1970s, he gave up and let Michael have a try. The younger Douglas produced a classic that starred Jack Nicholson (in the role Kirk Douglas wanted to play) and dominated the Oscars, winning for best picture, director, actor, actress and screenplay.

“My father has played up his disappointment with that pretty good,’’ Michael Douglas later told Vanity Fair. “I have to remind him, I shared part of my producing back-end (credit) with him, so he ended up making more money off that movie than he had in any other picture.”

“And I would gladly give back every cent, if I could have played that role,” the elder Douglas said.

Kirk Douglas’ film credits in the ‘70s and ‘80s included Brian De Palma’s “The Fury” and a comedy, “Tough Guys,” that co-starred Burt Lancaster, his longtime friend who previously appeared with Douglas in “Seven Days in May,” “Gunfight at the O.K. Corral” and other movies.

A stroke in 1996 seemed to end his film career, but Douglas returned three years later with “Diamonds,” which he made after struggling to overcome speech problems.

“I thought I would never make another movie unless silent movies came back,” he joked.

In 2003, Douglas teamed with son Michael; Cameron Douglas, Michael’s 24-year-old son; and ex-wife Diana Douglas, Michael’s mother, for “It Runs in the Family,” a comic drama about three generations of a family, with a few digs worked in about the elder Douglas’ parenting.

In March 2009, he appeared in a one-man show, “Before I Forget,” recounting his life and famous friends. The four-night show in the Kirk Douglas Theatre in Culver City was sold out.

“I’ve often said I’m a failure, because I didn’t achieve what I set out to do,” Douglas told the AP in 2009. “My goal in life was to be a star on the New York stage. The first time I was asked by Hal Wallis to come to Hollywood, I turned him down. ‘Hollywood? That trash? I’m an actor on the Broadway stage!’”

Handgun, drugs located during traffic stop

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MILTON — A 26-year-old Ellendale man was arrested after a handgun and drugs were found during a traffic stop Tuesday, Delaware State Police spokeswoman Master Cpl. Melissa Jaffe said.

According to authorities, Charles H. Randall was driving a black 2002 GMC Envoy at approximately 2:10 p.m. when a computer inquiry revealed that the vehicle’s registration was suspended. The vehicle was stopped at a traffic light at Fisher Road and Lewes-Georgetown Highway at the time, police said. An odor of marijuana was detected upon contact with Mr. Randall, police said.

Charles H. Randall

Police said a vehicle search located a loaded H&R Revolver 32 caliber handgun, 11 rounds of 32 caliber bullets, approximately 11.66 grams of crack/powder cocaine, approximately 36.19 grams of marijuana, assorted narcotic pills, drug paraphernalia and over $90 in possible drug proceeds.

Police charged Mr. Randall with possession of a firearm during the commission of a felony, with intent to deliver a controlled substance in a Tier 2 quantity, with intent to deliver a controlled substance, drug paraphernalia, controlled or counterfeit substance (two counts), along with carrying a concealed deadly weapon, failure to have required insurance, fictitious or cancelled registration card and operation of an unregistered motor vehicle.

Mr. Randall was arraigned before Justice of the Peace Court and committed to Sussex Correctional Institution in Georgetown on $101,003 secured bond.

Pennsylvania man sought in Georgetown shooting

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GEORGETOWN — A 33-year-old Pennsylvania man is wanted in connection with a shooting in the 100 block of Garden Circle on Saturday, authorities said.

Alvaro E. Marroquinn, of North Versailles, currently has active warrants out of Delaware State Police Troop 3, spokeswoman Master Cpl. Melissa Jaffe said.

Alvaro E. Marroquinn

Police said EMS were dispatched to the scene at approximately 3:56 a.m. for an unknown medical emergency. Upon arrival, EMS located a 39-year-old female in an orange Toyota Tacoma suffering from what appeared to be a gunshot wound, police said. The victim was transported by EMS to the Sussex Bayhealth Hospital and later transferred to the Christiana Hospital in serious condition.
Pending charges include first-degree assault and possession of a firearm during the commission of a felony.

Police asked anyone with information regarding Mr. Marroquinn’s whereabouts to contact Troop 4, Detective Wideman at 856-5850. Information may also be provided by calling Delaware crime stoppers at 1-800-TIP-3333 or online at delaware.crimestoppersweb.com.

Blue Hens add four offensive lineman on signing day

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NEWARK — The Delaware football team targeted a very specific need with its four remaining scholarships on Wednesday.

Coach Danny Rocco announced the signing of four offensive linemen on the second national signing day for high school recruits.

The four signees join the 11 recruits that the Blue Hens signed in December. It also includes graduate transfer Ben Trent of Virgina.
OL-Ben Trent (6-5, 305), Forest, Va.: Graduate transfer from Virginia, who played in 13 games over four seasons, primarily on special teams. … Coming out of high school, Trent was an all-district and all-conference honoree, who tallied 28 pancake blocks during his senior season.

OL-Lance Schwartz (6-3, 285), Glen Mills, Pa.: Played football and lacrosse at Garnett Valley. … On the gridiron, he earned first-team All-Delco, All-Central and All-Southeastern PA as a senior.

OL-Brock Gingrich (6-3, 285), Denver, Pa.: Gingrich earned first-team Penn Live All-Star accolades after helping lead Cocalico to the District 3 Class 5A Championship game. … He also earned first-team PA Writers Class 5A All-State honors during his final season.

OL-Braden Clark (6-4, 295), Hampstead, Md.: Comes from a family that includes two uncles that played at Northwestern and Notre Dame … Clark is a late riser who earned first-team MIAA All-Conference and first-team All-County accolades as a senior.

DSU signs two football stars from in-state

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DOVER — Rod Milstead didn’t have to go too far to find a couple of his latest Delaware State football recruits.

The 11-player recruiting class that Milstead announced on Wednesday included a pair of in-state standouts.

Hodgson’s Amir Mitchell-Marville, the state Lineman of the Year, and Howard defensive linemen Jermaine Lugo both signed with the Hornets on Wednesday, the second national signing day for high school seniors.

DSU’s class of 11 players included two junior-college transfers.

Mitchell-Marville recorded 27 tackles for loss, including 15 sacks, to help lead Hodgson to the DIAA Division I state title with a 12-0 record. A two-time first-team All-Stater, he recorded 11 sacks among his 30 backfield tackles as a junior in 2018.

The 5-foot-11, 220-pound Mitchell-Marville is expected to play linebacker for the Hornets.

Lugo (6-foot-2, 225 pounds) helped lead Howard to a 12-1 record and the DIAA Division II state championship. A first-team All-State offensive lineman and second-team defensive lineman, he’s expected to play defense at DelState.

Also joining the Hornets is Hodgson All-State linebacker Eric Shimko, who signed with DSU during the December signing period. Eric’s brother, linebacker Brandon Shimko, competed as a freshman for the Hornets this past season.

“Delaware State is totally committed to offering opportunities to top players in the state and giving them a chance to showcase their talents here at home,” said Milstead, who is starting his third season as DSU’s head coach.

“We believe there’s plenty of high quality talent in the state who can fulfill their academic and football dreams right here at DSU.”
The list of future Hornets signing scholarship offers on Wednesday includes five offensive linemen, three wide receivers, two defensive linemen, a running back, linebacker and long snapper.

“I believe we addressed one of our major needs by adding depth to our offensive line,” said Milstead. “We had some success running the ball last year, and I believe the players we’ve added this off-season will more than adequately fill the holes we have up front.

“I’m extremely pleased with the quality of players who have committed to be a part of our program,” added Milstead. “The young men we have signed for next season are good athletes with the potential contribute right away. I’m equally impressed with the character and academic credentials of these young men. Each should be a good fit for the team and the university.”

Delaware Sens. Carper and Coons vote to convict Trump

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DOVER — Unsurprisingly, Delaware’s senators, both Democrats, voted to convict President Donald Trump Wednesday.

Tom Carper and Chris Coons voted to remove the president from office on separate counts of abuse of power and obstruction of justice, although the Senate acquitted him.

Sen. Tom Carper. Special to the Delaware State News/Gary Emeigh

Speaking on the floor, Sen. Carper appealed to history, giving an overview of the drafting of the U.S. Constitution and the challenges the United States has faced over the 232-plus years since the document was signed.

“A vote to acquit is the realization of our Founders’ worst fears — leaving a president with the impulses of a king unchecked by the other co-equal branches of government and undeterred by the prospect of impeachment,” Sen. Carper said. “Donald Trump violated his oath. He broke the law.

“He attempted to cheat in the 2020 election, and, when he got caught, left little doubt that he will cheat again. That is not the conduct we expect of our president. That is the conduct of someone who believes that he is above the law. Donald Trump is our president, not our king.

“Colleagues, if our destiny is to remain the most enduring democracy in the history of the world, we must not leave this matter to chance. We must choose to preserve and protect our Constitution. And to do so, we must convict Donald Trump on both articles of impeachment and remove him from office.”

The Senate trial was hardly fair, Sen. Carper said, referencing the Senate’s vote against calling witnesses. Just two of the 53 Republicans in the chamber supported hearing from witnesses.

History will judge harshly those who sought to “prevent the truth from coming to light,” he said.

Sen. Chris Coons. Delaware State News file photo

To Sen. Coons, the trial demonstrated “the Senate has failed an historic test of our ability to put country over party.”

While he expressed a hope the president would act as Presidents Richard Nixon and Bill Clinton did in trying to bring people together, Sen. Coons said “some might suggest it would be hopelessly naive to expect of President Trump that he would apologize or strive to heal our country or do the important work of safeguarding our next election.”

Both senators noted the president’s defense team did not seek to rebut the accusations. Instead, Sen. Carper said, members relied on “distractions, conspiracy theories and unfounded smears” and “a far-fetched legal theory that presidents cannot be impeached for soliciting foreign interference in our elections if they believe their own re-election is in the national interest.”

Both senators have long championed bipartisanship but on Wednesday lamented the divide in Congress.

“I recognize that many of my colleagues have made up their minds. No matter what decision you have reached, I think it is a sad day for our country,” Sen. Coons told the Senate. “I myself have never been on a crusade to impeach Donald Trump as has been alleged against all Democrats. I’ve sought ways to work across the aisle with his administration.

“But in the years that have followed his election, I have increasingly become convinced that our President is not just unconventional. He is not just testing the boundaries of our norms and traditions. He is at times unmoored.

“Throughout this trial, I have heard from Delawareans who are frustrated that the Senate refused to hear from witnesses or subpoena documents needed to uncover all of the facts about the President’s misconduct. I have heard from Delawareans who fear our President believes he’s above the law, and that he acts as if he is the law. I have also heard from Delawareans who just want us to find a way to work together.”

Sen. Coons also shared fears about the security of the upcoming election, noting Russia interfered with the 2016 contest.

“So, to my colleagues: Do you doubt that President Trump did what he is accused of? Do you doubt he would do it again?” he said. “Do you think for even one moment he would refuse the help of foreign agents to smear any one of us if he thought it was in his best political interests?

“And I have to ask what becomes of our democracy when elections become a no-holds-barred blood-sport, when our foreign adversaries become our allies, and when Americans of the opposing party become our enemies?”

Sen. Carper closed by referencing a famous story about Benjamin Franklin and the Constitutional Convention.

“Today, I pose the same questions to our colleagues. What do we have? A monarchy or a republic?” he asked. “I leave you with my answer. We have a Republic, and I intend to keep it.”


Local roundup: Messick’s pin lifts Bucs by Riders 35-29

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Trent Grant of Milford keeping pressure on CR’s 126-pounder Eli Stark Wednesday night. Grant won by pin in the first period. Special to the Delaware State News/Gary Emeigh

Corey Messick’s pin in the night’s final match gave Milford High a dramatic 35-29 victory over Caesar Rodney in a Henlopen North wrestling showdown on Wednesday evening.

In the match-ending 113-pound bout, Messick pinned the Riders’ Cameron Cataldi in 2:41 to break a 29-29 tie and keep the Buccaneers (6-0 North, 20-0 overall) undefeated.

CR got a 16-3 major decision from Antonio Darby at 106 to pull even with Milford with one match remaining.

The Bucs won four straight matches in one stretch to build a 29-19 advantage. Trenton Grant (126 pounds) and Bevensky Augustin (195) also had pins for Milford.

CR’s Dawson Mitchell trying to take down Aaron Brisco in the 132-pound match. Mitchell won by decision 7-5.

Jackson Dean (152) and Dane Wilson (160) posted back-to-back pins for the Riders.

The Bucs go to Smyrna on Friday for a 6:30 p.m. match that will decide the North championship.

Sussex Central 51, Dover 12: Tarryl Sturgis (152) and Jaden Savage (160) picked up back-to-back pins to pace the Golden Knights to the Henlopen North victory.

Qualeak Bumbrey (220) registered a pin for the Senators.

Cape Henlopen 69, Polytech 9: The Vikings won seven matches by fall in the North victory.

Jackson Handlin (195) had a 53-second pin for Cape’s quickest fall of the night.

Also winning by pin for Cape were Holt Baker (106), Joshua Wright (113), Charles Fritchman (126), Michael Frederick (145), John Bender (160), and Cameron Smith (220).

Michael Rodriquez (120) had a pin for the Panthers.

Indian River 64, Wilm. Charter 8: The Indians won 12 individual bouts before posting the victory.

Ian Shaubach (120), Chris Saylor (126), River Vickers (145) and Ramond Turner (285) all had pins for IR.

Boys’ basketball

Salisbury Christian, Md. 67, St. Thomas More 21: The Ravens dropped to 1-14 with the loss on Wednesday.

Girls’ basketball

Delmarva Christian 71, Gunston, Md. 15: Grace Fetterman netted 25 points with Sierra Troyer adding 15 in the Royals’ victory.

College basketball

MEN, Wesley 83, Neumann 62: Five players scored in double figures as the Wolverines (7-1 AEC, 13-8 overall) rolled to the Atlantic East Conference victory.

Brian Cameron (18), Michael McCants (14), Terrence Braxton (13), Mychal Stefanides (12) and Greg Bloodsworth (11) all led Wesley. Cameron and Braxton added 10 rebounds apiece.

The Wolverines, who led 41-30 at halftime, had 19 assists on their 32 made field goals.

WOMEN, Neumann 55, Wesley 39: The Wolverines couldn’t hang onto a two-point halftime lead as they were out-scored, 34-16, in the second half of Wednesday’s AEC loss.

Angelique Gathers had a team-high nine points for Wesley (0-8 AEC, 5-14 overall) while Shervohnia Tolson pulled down 15 rebounds.

Cameron wins national award: Wesley College’s Brian Cameron was named the Division III National Player of the Week by the U.S. Basketball Writers Association.

Cameron helped the Wolverines to two more league victories this past week with a pair of 30-plus scoring performances. For the week, he totaled 68 points on 21-for-38 shooting (55 percent), 17 rebounds, nine assists, and four steals.

The senior guard currently sits third in the country in points per game and total points with 29.2 and 583, respectively.

College bowling

DSU No. 18 in national poll: The Delaware State women’s bowling team dropped to No. 18 in the latest National Tenpin Coaches Association Top 25 poll. The Hornets had been No. 14 in the rankings.

The Hornets (7-4 MEAC, 42-30 overall) are third among Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference teams in the poll. Defending MEAC champ Maryland-Eastern Shore is sixth while North Carolina A&T is tied for the eighth spot.

McKendree (Ill.) is the nation’s No. 1 team.

The NTCA poll is among the factors to determine post-season championship selections and seedings. The MEAC tournament champion receives an automatic bid to the NCAA tournament. Teams can also receive at-large national tournament bids, based on their ranking, record and strength of schedule.

Commentary: Manufactured home owners have their rights

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By Madinah Wilson-Anton

When I was a legislative aide, I remember receiving phone calls one morning because members of the community had gotten notice that their water would be cut off, even though they had paid their bills. It turned out hundreds of families had gotten this notice — because the landowner of Glasgow Court hadn’t paid the water bill. The residents of Glasgow Court own their homes, but they live on leased land. Like thousands of other Delawareans, that can leave them completely at the whims of absentee or abusive landlords.

This has been a constant struggle for the residents of Glasgow Court. There was the water bill payment. There was the time the landlord’s husband moved a portion of the homes in the neighborhood, breaking several in the process and causing many to go without heat in the winter. Now, they are faced with the possibility that the land their homes sit on will be sold out from under them.

There are some legislative protections that could help. In 2008, a bill was passed giving residents right of first offer when their community is sold. Residents now have a chance to raise the money to match the initial purchase and buy the community themselves. In 2013, the legislature passed a rent justification bill that limited unreasonable rent increases and implemented an arbitration process for these increases. These are necessary protections that many states do not have.

But these protections only offer so much. Often, the legal rights afforded to manufactured housing residents are complicated and hard to navigate. There is also the fear of retaliation. Even given the protections in place, most residents are working-class people with limited time and access to legal help. Most of these rights are only available to communities with homeowners’ associations, and of 183 communities in Delaware only 42 have an HOA.

To overcome these obstacles, we need the active participation of residents, activists, candidates and politicians for all homeowners living on leased land to fully realize the rights they deserve.

That’s why I’m thankful for organizations like the Delaware Manufactured Home Owners’ Association (DMHOA) who are doing amazing advocacy work every day. DMHOA’s mission is “to educate and inform our members, our public servants, and the general public, and to work for legislative and legal remedies to protect and strengthen the rights of everyone who lives in manufactured housing on leased land in Delaware.”

It’s a completely volunteer-led effort and their work benefits thousands of Delawareans across the state. Their “Know Your Rights” training sessions are an inspiring example of community members helping community members.

I had the pleasure of attending one of these sessions. My husband and I drove down to Millsboro to sit in on the training a few weeks back so we could learn how we could become better advocates for our neighbors. The session was not only incredibly informative but empowering. DMHOA’s members are well-informed, confident and truly committed to building power within the communities they serve up and down the state.

We’re excited to be co-hosting a similar “Know Your Rights” session on Saturday, Feb. 15, from 3 to 6 p.m. at the Tarbiyah School in Newark. If you live on leased land, please join us to learn more about your rights and how you can begin to organize your community. This event is free and Spanish-language interpretation will be available. For questions please call (302) 533-8357 or email info@madinahfordelaware.com.

While I was working in the legislature, I witnessed the utter disregard some landowners have for the families who live in their communities. I was appalled and frustrated. I hope through collaborating with groups like DMHOA we can work to address injustices in our communities before they happen.

An organized community is unstoppable. As Cesar Chavez said, “Once social change begins, it cannot be reversed. You cannot uneducate the person who has learned to read. You cannot humiliate the person who feels pride. You cannot oppress the people who are not afraid anymore.”

Madinah Wilson-Anton is a resident of Newark.

Speak Out: State of the Union

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Standing before a Congress and nation sharply divided by impeachment, President Donald Trump used his State of the Union address Tuesday to extol a “Great American Comeback” on his watch, just three years after he took office decrying a land of “American carnage” under his predecessor.

The partisan discord was apparent for all to see as the first president to campaign for reelection while facing impeachment vigorously made his case for another term: Republican legislators chanted “Four More Years.” House Speaker Nancy Pelosi ripped up her copy of Trump’s speech as he ended his address.

•Trump used it to detail the amazing accomplishments of his administration in the past three years. Nancy just proved why America is fed up with her. — Doug Poore

•Too bad most of those accomplishments were made up and already proven to be lies or misleading. Why can’t this man just tell the truth? He even lies about things that don’t matter. Come on people, you can look this stuff up yourself. — Melvin Barnhart

•Nancy Pelosi and the Democrats disgraced themselves in every way possible. She tore up a speech meant for the American people and she must be censured. — Dave McGuigan

• We are ready for them to be on “The Jerry Springer Show”. — Bob Morbauch

•She disrespected everyone there. She’s a embarrassment to the Democrats. — Stephen Terrance Herd

• I thought perhaps, in an effort to show what her side has accomplished the past year, Pelosi symbolically ripped apart a copy of the Constitution. — Matt Bucher

• Trump has this Delaware resident’s vote. Let’s continue to clean out the swamp, and keep America great! Trump is the best president America has ever had. Real patriot! He made promises, and kept them. That’s what I’m talking about! — Eric Ray Graham

• Classless democrats are doomed. — Mark A Courtney

• Both sides need to grow up and act like adults. — Theresa Taylor

• Trump delivered such an amazing State of the Union! Pelosi broke the law when she ripped up that document because it wasn’t a copy of the speech it was an official document signed by our great president! She should get in trouble for that but she won’t because she is part of a crooked party! Trump will get re-elected in 2020!! He has my vote for sure! — Abby Fink

• It was a copy provided to her. Therefore her property. — Eddie Curley

• The people that are hating on Nancy because she ripped up a speech, are the same people who are supporting a person who sexually assaults someone, mocks the disabled, pays off porn stars, insults a Gold Star family, doesn’t believe in science or weather, calls Nazis fine people, and creates a fake university. We are doomed! — Merv Sparks

• Both are like spoiled children. Guess it’s true you get old and become a kid again. — Henry Quackenbush

DNREC accepting written comment on proposed Mountaire decree

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DOVER – Delaware’s Department of Natural Resources and Environmental Control is accepting until March 2 written comment on the proposed consent decree with Mountaire Farms of Delaware, Inc., to resolve spray irrigation/land application permit violations cited by DNREC in a Nov. 2, 2017 notice of violation.

On Feb. 1, DNREC published a notice of lodging of the agreement and proposed consent decree in the Delaware Register of Regulations, soliciting public written comments.

Because the notice of lodging of the agreement is outside of DNREC’s standard public notice, there will be no public hearing held regarding this matter.

The Dec. 13, 2019 agreement follows DNREC’s initial June 2018 action against Mountaire for alleged violations via the filing of a complaint in Delaware Superior Court against Mountaire. The 2018 complaint was stayed by Delaware Superior Court pending resolution of a parallel action in federal court.

Mountaire faces several lawsuits filed in 2018 representing hundreds of area residents over suspected groundwater contamination that includes high nitrate levels.

To formalize ongoing and required corrective actions resulting from the September 2017 wastewater treatment plan failure, DNREC and Mountaire have finalized an agreement based on the consent decree proposed in June 2018.

The agreement may be viewed on the DNREC website at http://www.dnrec.delaware.gov/Info/Documents/agreement-and-proposed-consent-decree-dnrec-and-mountaire-20191213.pdf.

It may also be viewed at the Clerk’s Office, United States District Court for the District of Delaware, 844 North King St, Unit 18, Wilmington, DE.

Portions of the notice of lodging state:

“The agreement resolves claims alleging violations of the Clean Water Act, the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act, and state law as described in the agreement. In the agreement, (Mountaire) commits to: pay a civil penalty; construct a major upgrade to its wastewater treatment plant (WWTP) at its Millsboro, Delaware facility; take and maintain various interim measures at its WWTP until such time as the upgrade is completed and operational in order to mitigate potential nitrate loading at its permitted spray irrigation fields; relocate its water supply wells at the facility to enable MFODI to extract and treat nitrate in groundwater as part of its WWTP operations and to maintain a measure of hydraulic control; and provide options for an alternative water supply to nearby residents.”

Individuals may submit written comments via email to DNRECHearingComments@delaware.gov, or via the United States Postal Service to Lisa Vest, Office of the Secretary, 89 Kings Highway, Dover, DE 19901. Written comments will be accepted until the close of business on Monday, March 2..

Lidl grocery store holds grand opening in Dover

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Jennifer Matthews, left, and Kim Sticker arrived at 5:30 a.m. Wednesday morning for the grand opening of Dover’s new Lidl grocery store. (Special to the Delaware State News/Ariane Mueller)

DOVER — The first anxious shopper arrived around 4:30 a.m. and started the waiting line.

She entered the new Lidl supermarket three hours later, receiving a $100 gift card and flower bouquet for being No. 1.

Many more planned to walk through the automatic doors in the next 14 hours Wednesday, navigating crowded aisles while analyzing prices and filling their carts.

The first 100 visitors received gift cards ranging from $5 to $100, greeted by smiling and helpful store associates while festive music added to the atmosphere.

Lidl brand ambassadors greet arriving guests Wednesday. (Special to the Delaware State News/Ariane Mueller)

More than 3,500 products were available, from fresh produce and baked breads, meats, milk and juices, chocolate bars, jeans, light bulbs and power strips, national and private store brands.

The discount grocery store at 150 N. Dupont Highway near Kings Highway is open from 8 a.m. to 10 p.m. seven days a week.

Smyrna resident Sharon Pryor sifted through a bin full of paintbrushes intently, while another shopper marveled at the large-size drill bits able to bore through concrete.

“I didn’t know there would be this much available,” Ms. Pryor said.

Ms. Pryor won’t pledge loyalty to any one grocery store — she’ll hunt for cost saving deals wherever they are — but Lidl’s now on her shopping list.

A grand opening and ribbon cutting ceremony was held at the new Lidl grocery store in Dover, the second in the state, on Wednesday morning. From left, Sheila Furman (Lidl, Store Associate), Fred A. Neil (City of Dover Council Member), William F. Hare (City of Dover, Council President), Robin R. Christiansen (City of Dover, Mayor), Shawn M Garvin (DNREC, Secretary), Mules Sword (Lidl, Real Estate Manager), Patrick Garfield (Lidl, Store Manager), Ryan Garcia (Lidl, Store Manager) and Marisol Ryes (Lidl, Store Associate).   

“The most important things to me are a good selection and low prices and I like what I see so far,” she said. “It’s in a good area that I often travel through. So it’s an easy stop for me.”

A beaming Susan Ellis (holding her phone and working the Lidl app) made out even before entering the store. The north Dover resident has traveled regularly to Lidl’s Middletown store to the north, and figures she saved 30 minutes or so travel time staying more local.

“I love it — the prices are good, the people the workers are helpful, it’s just a friendly place,” she said.

Dover resident Cletis Betts said he and wife Judy visited “just to see what’s in the store. Living on a fixed income means we go for the bargains and cheaper prices …

“Wherever we can find them,” his wife said, finishing his sentence.

Peter Keough is greeted by Lidl store ambassadors as he enters the store Wednesday.

Sandra Johnson described the inside of the store as “beautiful” and said she and spouse Joseph were on a scouting trip to evaluate prices, selection and quality.

“We haven’t seen the whole store yet but the pricing seems good so far,” Joseph Johnson said.

The 50 full and part-time store associates trained for a month prior to the opening and store manager Ryan Garcia said “they’ve done a great job handling the rush and the hype so far. They’re executing the plan extremely well and I kind of feel like (Super Bowl-winning coach) Andy Reid right now thanks to their excellence during this huge turnout event.”

The Dover location is the company’s 92nd since arriving in the United States in June 2017.

Zipporah Littleton explores shopping opportunities at the new Lidl grocery store in Dover.

More than 85 stores are located throughout nine East Coast states. Headquartered in Germany, Lidl has more than 11,000 stores in 32 countries.

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