Delaware
Delaware’s fastest: The 30 greatest high school distance runners in First State history
How we ranked the greatest track & field athletes in Delaware history
Delaware Online/The News Journal ranked the best sprinters and field event athletes and distance runners.
At one point, when I was researching 1970s Newark harriers John Greenplate and Jim Bray, I unearthed a quote in The Morning News that has been rattling around in my head ever since.
“When a runner feels he’s getting tired his mind tells him to stop running before his body does. A disciplined runner will tell himself I’m going to keep running, running, running,” Newark coach Ray Ciesinski said in 1972. “John Greenplate, the greatest runner I ever had, proved this fact over and over again. He punished himself severely in practice. Ran 100 miles a week preparing himself for a 2-mile race. The only guy who could beat him had to practice running 110 miles a week.”
Ciesinski’s praise of Greenplate functioned as a reminder of what makes the runners on the list that follows exceptional: their extraordinary commitment and toughness. In a sport often prescribed as punishment both traits are prerequisites to greatness. Talent plays a role, but no one on this list, which marks the 30 greatest high school distance runners in Delaware history, set themselves apart on talent alone.
Some athletes were rewarded with a spot on the list for rare feats and record times. Others for sustained periods of success. Many for both. Some will disagree with the contents and the order of the list and that’s ok. Lists of this nature are written to be disagreed with. I hope you’ll see the project as an attempt, in some way, to tell the story of the sport of running in Delaware through its greatest figures.
30. Stephen Garrett, Tatnall, 2015
⌚ 3rd all-time 3,200 meters (9:04.48), 4th cross country 5k (15:09.2), 17th 1,600 meters (4:15.87)
🏆 Co-cross country state MVP in 2014
🥇 Won 3,200 meters at 2013 and 2014 Meet of Champions
Perhaps no one in Delaware history started their high school running career with higher expectations than Garrett. As an eighth grader competing on the high school team, Garrett had already placed 10th at the state cross country meet and fifth in the 1,600 outdoors in a blazing 4:23.79, a time eclipsed to this day by only 78 runners.
One of five runners to be awarded first team all-state in cross country four times, Garrett delivered on that promise. He contributed to six team championships, including four in cross country.
29. Jarod Wilson, Newark, 2015
⌚ 4th all-time 800 meters (1:52.04), 9th 1,600 meters (4:13.93)
🏆 2015 indoor track and field state MVP
Wilson was one of the most versatile runners in Delaware history, a two-time first team All-State cross country runner who once clocked a hand-timed 22.4 200-meter sprint from a standing start. He had one of Delaware’s most memorable individual performances at the 2015 New Castle County track and field championships.
Wilson anchored Newark’s 4×800 relay in 1:49.7, the fastest recorded 800-meter relay split on Delaware’s all time performance list. He placed second in the fastest 1,600 race in Delaware history with a school-record time and at that point the fifth-fastest time ever. Later that day, he split 48.3 as the anchor leg of Newark’s winning 4×400 relay.
28. Mike Kowal, Salesianum, 2005
🏆 2005 outdoor track and field state MVP
🥇 2004 DI cross country champion, 2 Meet of Champions wins
Kowal anchored the fastest 4×800 relay in Delaware history, Salesianum’s fifth-place national finish in 2005 (7:43.80). At the state meet that year, Kowal won the 800, placed second in the 400 and anchored the winning 4×400 relay. He was only the third male distance runner to earn spring MVP honors. Salesianum won eight team state championships in Kowal’s career.
27. Anthony Stewart, Delcastle, 1990
🏆 Cross country, indoor and outdoor track and field state MVP in 1989-1990 academic year
⌚ 16th all-time 1,600 meters (4:15.00)
In 1990, Stewart became the first Delaware runner to sweep the state MVP awards across the three running seasons. He was one of several standout Delcastle distance runners in his era. A state committee in 1990 labeled Stewart’s 1989 cross country state meet win over teammate Cornelius Jones the race of the decade.
26. Tom Gottemoller, Salesianum, 1972
⌚ T-11th all-time 1,600 meters (4:14.33*), 13th 800 meters (1:53.84*)
🥇 Won 880 yards and mile at the 1972 Meet of Champions
Gottemoller originally aspired to be a football player before becoming part of an early 1970s group that reset expectations for Delaware distance running. Gottemoller set the state record in the 880 yards (1:54.4) at the Delaware Valley Meet of Champions in Philadelphia in his final high school race. Weeks earlier, he was out-leaned by Newark’s Jim Bray for the New Castle County Championship and state record in the mile.
25. Julie Williams, Tatnall, 2013
⌚ 4th all-time 1,600 meters (4:49.69), 6th 3,200 meters (10:37.64)
⌚ Member of Tatnall’s state record 4×800-meter, distance medley and 4×1,600-meter relay teams
Williams is one of only four girls inside the current top 10 in two individual distance events on Delaware’s all time performance list. She was a critical member of nationally-ranked Tatnall squads in the early 2010s. Williams earned All-American honors her senior year, placing fifth in the mile at the national high school championship meet.
24. Michael Keehan, Salesianum, 2019
⌚ 4th all-time 3,200 meters (9:05.06), 5th cross country 5k (15:15.9), 7th 1,600 meters (4:13.78)
🥇 2 individual cross country state titles, 3 individual outdoor track titles
Keehan posted the fastest times across 1,600, 3,200 and 5,000 meters of a procession of strong Sals front runners that have led the school to 12 of the last 15 Division I cross country titles. In 2023 as a Penn Quaker, he became the third Delawarean to break four minutes in the mile.
23. Meredith Lambert, Tatnall, 2002
🏆 2-time cross country state MVP
🥇 2000 DII cross country state champion, 3 individual outdoor track titles, 2 Meet of Champions wins
A soccer player through her junior year, Lambert joined Tatnall’s track and field team as a senior and won Division II state titles in the 800, 1,600 and 3,200. Her 10:50.26 3,200 personal best at the Twilight Relays was a state record.
22. Lance White, Cape Henlopen, 1978
🥇 2 individual cross country state titles, 4 individual outdoor track titles
Known for thrilling come-from-behind victories, White was the best distance runner of the late 1970s. He set multiple cross country course records, won three consecutive Henlopen Conference cross country championships and ran the state’s fastest metric mile (1,500 meters) when that was briefly the event of choice at the state meet.
One of White’s “finest performances,” as described by Morning News writer Jack Ireland, was his two mile win at the Civic Center in Philadelphia over a field of the area’s best runners. White uncorked a kick from about 300 yards out and finished in 9:29.5. Run on a 160-yard track, it remained Delaware’s top indoor time when converted to 3,200 meters until 2011.
“Lance has the utmost confidence in his kick,” Cape Henlopen coach Dave Frederick said after the race. “If you haven’t taken it out of him with about 300 yards to go, I haven’t seen anyone able to beat him.”
21. Jeff Brokaw, Tower Hill, 1968
🥇 3-time Group II cross country champion, 6 individual outdoor track state titles
Brokaw was one of Delaware’s first exceptional distance runners. He won the mile at the state meet four times, a feat no boy has replicated. He battled injuries his senior year, but rebounded in time to lower the state record. His time of 4:19.9 remained the state’s best for three years.
20. Brynn Crandell, Indian River, 2024
🏆 3-time cross country state MVP
⌚ 5th all-time cross country 5k (17:28), 11th 3,200 meters (10:46.04)
Crandell, the highest active runner on this list, this fall became just the fifth girl to have the best cross country state meet time in either division for three consecutive years. She plans to continue her running career next year at the University of Delaware.
19. Kevin Murray, Charter of Wilmington, 2016
⌚ 2nd all-time cross country 5k (15:06.8), 7th 3,200 meters (9:07.01), 14th 1,600 meters (4:14.80)
⌚ Course records at Bellevue, White Clay, Winterthur, Killens Pond
🏆 Cross country state MVP in 2015
Murray holds cross country course records at Bellevue, White Clay, Winterthur and Killens Pond, all set in a historic 2015 senior season. Murray won the county and state meets that year and lifted Charter to its first Division I cross country championship. His 15:06.8 at the Southeast Regionals was, at the time, a Delaware record.
18. Sam Parsons, Tatnall, 2012
⌚ State record for 3,200 meters (9:00.61), 5th all-time 1,600 meters (4:12.67)
🏆 Cross country state MVP in 2011
🥇 Swept the distance events and anchored Tatnall’s winning 4×800-meter relay in Division II at the 2012 state meet
Parsons helped usher in one of the fastest eras in Delaware high school distance running. When he ran 9:00.61 in the 3,200 in Arcadia, California in his senior track season in 2012 it was about 12 seconds faster than any Delaware high schooler had run. Six runners have since run under 9:10, but Parsons’ time remains the state record.
In 2022, running as a professional for Adidas and Tinman Elite, Parsons returned to the Tatnall track and staged the Delaware Mile Challenge, a quest to break four minutes in the mile for the first time on Delaware soil and a celebration of the distance event. Parsons won in 3:58.17.
17. Melissa Grubb, Concord, 1983
🥇 6 individual outdoor track titles, 6 Meet of Champions wins
⌚ 20th all-time 800 meters (2:14.80), 30th all-time 1,600 meters (5:01.50)
One of several stars in a golden age of track and field at Concord, Grubb lost only one individual race in three years of competition: the 800 at the New Castle County Championships in 1982. The following week at the state meet she responded by winning the 800 in a state record time.
16. Denise Marini, Padua, 1980
🥇 5 individual outdoor track state titles, 7 Meet of Champions wins
⌚ 13th all-time 3200 meters (10:49.38*), 22nd 1600 meters (4:59.67*)
Marini ran 10:04.7 to win the 3,000 at the 1980 Catholic Conference meet at Baynard Stadium, a mark that stood as the state record when converted to 3,200 for 39 years. She was the best in the state over 800 meters all four years of her high school career.
“I never really dreamed of winning four straight years,” Marini told The Morning News in 1980. “My whole life though is dedicated to running and I just eat, sleep and drink track.”
15. Jim Bray, Newark, 1972
⌚ T-11th all-time 1,600 meters (4:14.33*)
🥇 1972 DI mile champion
On May 22, 1972, The Morning News wrote that the “high school trackmen” had shown a “total lack of regard for records in the New Castle County Championship Meet at Alexis I. du Pont Saturday.”
The most enduring of the performances that day was Bray’s 4:15.7 mile state record. Bray trailed Salesianum’s Tom Gottemoller for the first three-fourths of the race, The Morning News noted, but the Yellowjacket nipped Gottemoller at the line by six inches. He took more than four seconds off the state record held at the time by Tower Hill’s Jeff Brokaw.
When Delaware started contesting the 1,600 in place of the mile in 1982, Bray’s performance converted to 4:14.33 was considered the fastest. It remained the state’s best time until 2006, 34 years from that day at A.I. du Pont.
14. John Greenplate, Newark, 1972
🥇 2 individual cross country state titles, 3 individual outdoor track titles
⌚ 19th all-time 3,200 meters (9:18.66*)
Perhaps no distance runner commanded more respect than the 5-foot-11, 136-pound Greenplate. He logged 12-15 miles a day, six days a week, The Morning News wrote in June 1972. In three years of racing, he set records on almost all of the cross country courses of the day — Rockford Park, Dickinson, William Penn and Polly Drummond Hill — and lost only once in the two mile. He graduated as the state record holder in the event indoors and outdoors.
Greenplate led Newark to its second cross country state championship in 1971, finishing 1-2 with teammate Jim Bray.
13. Dom Della Pelle, Salesianum, 2007
⌚ 4th all-time 1,600 meters (4:12.36), 23rd 3,200 meters (9:20.00)
⌚ Member of Salesianum’s state record 4×800-meter relay team
🥇 2005 DI cross country state champion, 7 individual outdoor track titles
Della Pelle was the second boy in Delaware history to be named first team All-State in cross country four times and the first since 1970. He set state records in the 1,600 and 3,200, but watched Tatnall’s Brian Sklodowski break them in head-to-head races weeks later.
In 2006, he joined Salesianum’s Charlie Dielmann as the only runners to ever sweep the Division I 800, 1,600 and 3,200 at the state meet.
12. Keelin Hays, Tatnall, 2019
🥇 4 individual cross country titles, 9 individual outdoor track titles
⌚ 19th all-time 800 meters (2:14.89), 13th 1,600 meters (4:55.89), 12th 3,200 meters (10:47.21)
Hays went nine for nine in Division II in the 800, 1,600 and 3,200 her first three seasons, a feat no one else has replicated. She is one of three runners to have won four cross country state titles.
Perhaps the signature race from Hays’ career came in the 2016 outdoor season when, as a freshman, she out-leaned Padua’s Lydia Olivere to win the 1,600 at the New Castle County Championships by .03 seconds. Also in the discussion is the 1,600 at the indoor state meet the following year where Hays beat Olivere by the same margin.
11. Anna Brousell, Brandywine, 2006
⌚ 17th all-time 1,600 meters (4:57.19), 22nd 3,200 meters (10:57.91)
🏆 3-time cross country state MVP
🥇 3 individual cross country state titles, 7 individual outdoor track titles and 2 Meet of Champions wins
Brousell, the first girl to win three Division I cross country state championships, graduated with course records at Bellevue, Brandywine Creek, Killens Pond and White Clay. She won the 1,600 in Division I at the state meet four times. The Delaware Track and Field Hall of Fame inducted Brousell in 2014.
10. Julie Macedo, Charter of Wilmington, 2012
⌚ Fastest cross country 5k (16:53.0), 5th all-time 3,200 meters (10:34.80)
⌚ Course records at Bellevue, White Clay; 2nd all-time at Killens Pond, Brandywine Creek
🏆 Cross country state MVP in 2011
When she ran the fastest cross country 5k in the country in 2011, Macedo was shocked. The senior was training through the September race, the Six Flags Invitational in New Jersey, and yet she became the first and only Delaware girl to have run under 17 minutes.
Macedo backed up that performance in the championship season, running 16:55, the nation’s second-fastest time, at the Joe O’Neill Invitational, winning the Blue Hen Conference championship by 90 seconds and taking her third straight Division I state title.
Macedo’s duels with Tatnall’s Haley Pierce, also one of the nation’s top runners in 2011, are remembered as some of the finest in Delaware history. Most memorably, they ran each other to exhaustion on the hills of Winterthur at the county meet that year. Running side by side Macedo and Pierce collapsed to the ground in the final straight and Tatnall’s Reagan Anderson took the win. The following week at the state championship at Killens Pond, Pierce and Macedo won separate races in near identical times of 17:28.19 and 17:28.93.
9. Connor Nisbet, Wilmington Friends, 2018
⌚ 3rd all-time 1,600 meters (4:12.21), 4th 3,200 meters (9:00.75), fastest cross country 5k (15:00.1)
🏆 3-time cross country state MVP, indoor and outdoor track and field state MVP in 2018
A total of 1.22 seconds stood between Nisbet and three state records in one of the most impressive outdoor track and field seasons in state history. The spring before he completed a three-year unbeaten streak of cross country running in Delaware, Nisbet finished .14 seconds off the 3,200 state record and .5 seconds off the 1,600 state record at the 2018 New Castle County Championships. Weeks earlier, he came within a second of the state’s fastest time across 3,000 meters in a second-place finish at Penn Relays.
A former nationally-ranked tennis player, Nisbet almost became the first Delaware high schooler to break 15 minutes in a cross country 5k, finishing the DISC Championships at St. Andrews in 15:00.1 the following fall.
8. Vicki Huber, Concord, 1985
⌚ 7th all-time 800 meters (2:11.90), 5th 1,600 meters (4:50.23*)
🥇 4 individual outdoor track titles and 1 Meet of Champions win
No Delawarean has reached greater heights in their post-high school running career than Huber, who came in ninth on Delaware Online/The News Journal’s 2021 ranking of the 100 most accomplished Delaware athletes of all time. At Villanova, Huber won eight NCAA titles and was twice recognized as the NCAA’s top track and field performer. She made two Olympic teams, placing sixth in the 3,000 in 1988. Huber placed fourth in the 1992 World Cross Country Championships. The Collegiate Athlete Hall of Fame inducted Huber in 2022.
In high school, Huber’s running pursuits were limited to the track: she was also an All-State field hockey player. Huber set state records in the 800 and 1600, breaking marks set a year prior by her teammate Melissa Grubb. Her personal bests remained state records for more than two decades.
7. Kieran Tuntivate, Charter of Wilmington, 2015
⌚ State record for 1,600 meters (4:11.71), 5th all-time 3,200 meters (9:06.30)
🥇 Cross country state champion in 2014, 3 Meet of Champions wins
🏆 Co-cross country state MVP in 2014, outdoor track and field state MVP in 2015
The defining win of Tuntivate’s storied high school career came against one of the deepest 1,600 fields ever assembled in Delaware at the New Castle County Championships at Baynard Stadium in 2015. With a blistering 56-second final lap, Tuntivate prevailed over five of his contemporaries who also made this list. His time of 4:11.71 stands as the state record is distance running’s signature event.
Following his high school career, Tuntivate became the second Delawarean to break four minutes in the mile while competing for Harvard and the first to do so indoors. Now a professional runner competing with Nike’s Bowerman Track Club, only 162 people have run a track 10k faster than Tuntivate’s 27:17.14 personal best.
6. Bruce Harris, Dover, 1985
⌚ State record for 800 meters (1:49.50*)
🥇 3-time DI 800-meter champion, 2-time DI 1,600-meter champion
At the end of Bruce Harris’ stellar junior track season, News Journal scribe Chuck Durante wrote words that have remained prescient, “On June 4, he set a state record that only he may ever break.” Harris never had a chance to break the record. He was ruled ineligible to compete his senior season, leaving the track and field world with an abundance of wonder.
But in the almost four decades since, no one in Delaware has run 800 meters faster than Harris. It is the longest standing Delaware state record in a distance event. At the time, Harris had surpassed any previous Delaware effort by nearly four seconds.
5. Reagan Anderson, Tatnall, 2013
⌚ State record for 800 meters (2:08.58), 2nd all-time 1,600 meters (4:42.95*), 7th cross country 5k (17:39.9)
⌚ Member of Tatnall’s state record 4×800-meter, distance medley and 4×1,600-meter relay teams
🥇 4-time winner of Meet of Champions 800
Simply put, Anderson owned the 800. At the Meet of Champions as a freshman, she bested KeAira Dickerson’s state record by .3 seconds. By the end of each of the next three years, she had cut seconds off of that time and stood atop the Meet of Champions podium. Five runners have entered the all-time top 10 for the 800 at various points in the last five years, but only one has come within two seconds of Anderson’s record.
4. Brian Sklodowski, Tatnall, 2007
⌚ 2nd all-time 1,600 meters (4:11.93), 13th 3,200 meters (9:16.80)
🏆 3-time cross country state MVP, 2-time outdoor track and field state MVP
🥇 First male to win 3 consecutive cross country state championships
Sklodowski graduated as the fastest boys distance runner in Delaware history, having set state records in the 1,600 and 3,200. He chased the times of legends in the sport — Jim Bray held the 1,600 record for 35 years and Eric Hamilton was the best at 3,200 for 24 years — but he also had to best his contemporary Dom Della Pelle.
In their junior season, Della Pelle broke Bray’s record at Penn Relays and entered Meet of Champions undefeated against Sklodowski. In that race, Sklodowski powered past Della Pelle with 75 meters to go and reset the record. It survived eight seasons.
The following year, Sklodowski beat Della Pelle to Hamilton’s 3200 record mid-season, but Della Pelle took it a week later. At Meet of Champions, Della Pelle fell off the pace early and Sklodowski won in another state record time. The Delaware Track and Field Hall of Fame inducted Sklodowski in 2023.
3. Juliet Bottorff, Tatnall, 2009
🏆 3-time cross country state MVP, 2009 indoor and outdoor track and field state MVP
⌚ 6th all-time 1,600 meters (4:51.03), 2nd all-time 3,200 meters (10:27.11)
🥇 3 individual cross country state titles, 5 individual outdoor track titles and 4 Meet of Champions wins
Bottorff left Tatnall as the standard bearer for Delaware distance running. The numbers were staggering. In 2009, she blew 22 seconds off Denise Marini’s 39-year-old state record in the 3200 and lowered Vicki Huber’s 25-year-old 1600 mark several seconds. Bottorff also ran on state record 4×800 and distance medley relay teams. In her senior year, she became the first girl and the second Delawarean ever to sweep the state MVP awards.
At Duke University, Bottorff won the 10k at the NCAA National Championships in 2011. She earned first-team All-American honors six times. The Delaware Track and Field Hall of Fame inducted Bottorff in 2022.
2. Lydia Olivere, Padua, 2018
🥇 Won 11 of 12 possible individual outdoor track titles in the 800, 1,600 and 3,200 meters
🏆 4-time cross country state MVP, 2018 indoor and outdoor track and field state MVP
⌚ 3rd all-time 1,600 meters (4:49.47), 3rd 3,200 meters (10:30.47), 2nd cross country 5k (17:02.0)
No one won more than Olivere. In her high school career, she lost just three cross country or track races in-state that were a mile or longer. Total, she won 30 state individual and relay titles, relinquishing only one individual outdoor distance event in her high school career, the 800 her freshman year. Olivere is the only Delaware high school runner to have won the state’s cross country MVP award four times.
At Villanova, Olivere set the school record in the steeplechase and competed in the 2021 U.S. Olympic Team Trials.
1. Haley Pierce, Tatnall, 2012
⌚ State records for 1,600 meters (4:41.19) and 3,200 meters (10:11.80)
⌚ Member of Tatnall’s state record 4×800-meter, distance medley and 4×1,600-meter relay teams
🥇 3 individual cross country state titles, 7 individual outdoor track titles and 5 Meet of Champions wins
Pierce reset the standards for Delaware high school distance running as she led the Hornets to national prominence. Tatnall placed as high as third at the national team cross country championships and set multiple national facility and meet records, including the DMR mark at the Penn Relays. Pierce also won the 3,000 at the Penn Relays in 2011 in the second-fastest time in the event’s history. She was known by her opponents and teammates as a gracious and selfless competitor, often eschewing attempts at personal glory for team success. Tatnall won 10 of a possible 12 team championships during Pierce’s career from 2008 to 2012. The duration and pinnacle of her success may never be matched.
Asterisks denote converted times as they appear on the state’s all time performance list. Wins at state individual finals (contested from 1977 to 1983) are considered Meet of Champions wins for accounting purposes as both are combined Division I and Division II competitions. A Meet of Champions was not contested between 1983 and 2001. Listed times are outdoor performances unless otherwise noted.
Contact Brandon Holveck at bholveck@delawareonline.com. Follow him on X and Instagram @holveck_brandon. Follow him on TikTok @bholveck.
Delaware
Delaware Officials Highlight DTRN360, Innovative Behavioral Health Care Coordination Platform – State of Delaware News
DOVER – Leaders from the Delaware Department of Health and Social Services (DHSS), behavioral health providers, and health care partners gathered Thursday at Dover Behavioral Health System to highlight DTRN360, an innovative care coordination platform designed to strengthen collaboration across Delaware’s behavioral health system and improve care for individuals living with mental health conditions and substance use disorder.
Developed by DHSS’ Division of Substance Abuse and Mental Health (DSAMH), DTRN360 connects behavioral health providers across the state and gives them access to real-time information to better coordinate care as individuals move between crisis services, hospitals, outpatient treatment, and community-based supports.
The system is the first of its kind nationally and currently supports more than 14,000 client care journeys with nearly 600 registered staff users across Delaware’s behavioral health system. Participating organizations include DSAMH programs such as Mobile Crisis and PROMISE teams, as well as contracted providers including Dover Behavioral Health System, Rockford Center, Sun Behavioral Health, Recovery Innovation crisis stabilization centers, Northeast Treatment Centers, Conexio Care, Horizon House, and Resources for Human Development.
By bringing critical information together in one place, DTRN360 helps providers close long-standing gaps in behavioral health coordination, improving communication across organizations, strengthening care transitions, and ensuring individuals receive the right support at the right time.
“Delawareans living with mental health conditions, substance use disorder, and complex social needs depend on a system that is coordinated, responsive, and prepared to meet them where they are,” said DHSS Cabinet Secretary Christen Linke Young. “DTRN360 represents the kind of innovation that strengthens connections across our behavioral health system and equips providers with better tools and information to build a more responsive, connected system of care.”
DTRN360 was built by DSAMH with strategic design and implementation support from HEALTHe Insights. The platform incorporates technology from Bamboo Health and FindHelp to unify treatment referrals and connect individuals to community-based services that address social determinants of health.
The platform was developed through more than 200 stakeholder interviews with frontline clinicians, crisis responders, emergency department staff, justice partners, and community organizations across Delaware.
Today, DTRN360 integrates multiple data sources into a single workflow, including hospital admission and discharge alerts, crisis response information, prescription monitoring data, treatment referrals, and social services connections. Through integration with the Delaware Health Information Network (DHIN), providers can view a more comprehensive picture of an individual’s care history and coordinate next steps in real time.
Michelle Singletary-Twyman, RN, Director of Operations for DSAMH, said the platform represents a major step forward in addressing fragmentation that has historically existed across the behavioral health system.
“Fragmentation in behavioral health is more than inconvenient, it can be dangerous,” Singletary-Twyman said. “DTRN360 was designed to close those gaps by bringing critical information together in one place so providers can see the full picture of a person’s care journey and intervene earlier when support is needed.”
For providers delivering care on the front lines, access to better information helps improve coordination and discharge planning from the very beginning of treatment.
“One of the challenges in inpatient behavioral health is understanding the care someone may already be receiving when they arrive during a crisis,” said Lindsey Huttie, Dover Behavioral Health Director of Business Development. “DTRN360 gives us clearer insight into a person’s care across the system and helps us coordinate more effectively with community partners to support safer transitions and better outcomes.”
To help address behavioral health needs of Delawareans, DHSS has several ways for individuals or their family members to connect:
- Call the 24/7 Delaware Hope Line at 1-833-9-HOPEDE or 1-833-946-7333 – a single point of contact where callers can connect to a variety of resources and information, including support from clinicians and peer specialists plus crisis assistance.
- Stop by one of DHSS’ Bridge Clinics for an in-person assessment.
- Visit com to find out which treatment providers are located near you.
- Visit com, DHSS’ one-stop website where Delawareans can search for treatment services and resources in Delaware or nearby states.
- Call 988 if the individual is in crisis and needs immediate support.
- Call 911 if someone has overdosed and needs emergency medical attention.
- Learn where to find Narcan training, get the medication through the mail, and download the OpiRescueDE App
Delaware
Delaware’s largest data center proposal charges forward despite hurdles
Is a data center coming to Delaware City?
A large data center project is in the approval process in New Castle County. County Council is deciding how to regulate them.
Delaware’s largest data center proposal remains on the table despite state hurdles.
The data center would be 11 two-story data center buildings surrounded by electrical fields on two large land parcels north of Delaware City accessible by Hamburg Road, Governor Lea Road and River Road. It would be 6 million square feet of data center running 24 hours a day, seven days week. One land parcel needs to be rezoned, needing more approvals and a County Council vote.
One of its largest hurdles was the Delaware Department of Natural Resources and Environmental Control’s February ruling that the project cannot go forward because of the state’s Coastal Zone Act. The decades-old law prevents most large industrial projects from becoming a reality along shorelines on the Atlantic Ocean and Delaware River and Bay, Indian River Bay and more. The developer, Starwood Digital Ventures, has appealed that decision.
On March 4, the project was presented to the state’s Preliminary Land Use Service board, which coordinates state, county and local plans. They were originally slated to present to the New Castle County Board of Adjustment on March 5, but asked for a “continuance” and got it, according to New Castle County Land Use General Manager Dave Culver. The meeting is moved to a later date, and the county will get notes about the rezoning and plan in general after the state planning board meeting.
Now, the project’s developers are promoting their projects to New Castle County residents, political campaign style. Residents may have seen text messages and social media posts promoting Project Washington’s potential economic viability recently as the developers continue to trudge through the state and county processes to get the massive data center approved and moving.
“Let’s get Project Washington the green light to bring 3,500 construction and skilled trade jobs over the next ten years! Project Washington is fully consistent with the County’s Comprehensive Plan; we cannot afford to slow down job creation,” one automated text to New Castle County Council member David Carter said.
While meetings at all levels are looking at this project’s viability and potential regulations, Starwood Digital Ventures is confident in the project.
What is a data center and why could one come to Delaware?
Data centers house computer systems, servers and more to store, process and distribute information. Project Washington will be a larger-than-average data center campus serving many customers, and would comfortably be the largest data center in Delaware.
Delaware does not have the large data center campuses other states in the region have. Specifically, Virginia has become a hotbed for new facilities in the past few years since use of artificial intelligence began to skyrocket. Loudon County in Northern Virginia has become the data center capital of the U.S., and a report from the Northern Virginia Technology Council in 2024 said they can contribute billions to economic output and to tax revenue.
“Data centers are the major drivers of investment in Virginia,” the 2024 report reads. “This investment comes in the form of building and operating the data centers themselves, plus investments in Virginia made by businesses that supply and support data centers in the state, such as energy and utility providers and manufacturers.”
The report said data centers were responsible for more than 26,000 operational and construction jobs and over $16 billion in overall economic output.
Starwood thinks something like that will happen in Delaware. Jim Lamb, who is handling media relations for the project, said the project will generate about $76 million in annual revenue for the county once completed. He said $60 million of which will go toward public education and $15 million for the county’s general fund.
“If this was fully operational today, this project would be accounting for nearly 20% of the entire general operating fund for the county,” he said.
He said this will create 3,500 construction jobs and 700 permanent jobs, and that the project has the support of local trade unions. The permanent jobs will service and upgrade the systems continually. The estimated economic output is “almost $10 billion,” Lamb said.
“It’s unique in terms of the level of support,” he said. “There’s never been a project like this in Delaware that has had every union and trade in support.”
The project will have a “closed-loop” water cooling system as well. Data centers nationwide have been scrutinized for their water usage, but a closed-loop system recirculates water. Lamb said the data center, once up and running, will use 12.7 million gallons of water annually. He said this water system makes the project “state of the art.”
This, and the open space that will be built into the project and its location in a relatively unpopulated area of New Castle County, according to Lamb.
“We are in the perfect location for a data center campus,” he said “And if you look at other examples, you’ll see that this is really a unique opportunity for the county and the state.”
DNREC to data center: Drop dead
Delaware’s environmental agency put the brakes on this project in February by saying it violates Delaware’s Coastal Zone Act.
For Project Washington, the pitfalls were the more than 500 backup diesel fuel tanks and generators, which would store 2.5 million gallons of fuel, the report reads. The most backup generators on any project in Delaware’s coastal zone is eight, the report says.
“Indeed, a proposal to operate more than 500 backup generators at a single location with more than 2.5 million gallons of stored diesel fuel appears to be entirely unprecedented, and would have been inconceivable just a few years ago,” the report says. “The large tank farm that is incorporated into this proposal will pose exactly the types of risks that justify the categorical exclusion of such a tank farm from the Coastal Zone as a prohibited use.”
The tanks are for power emergencies, and would only run 37 to 45 minutes per month just to test if they are operational, Lamb said.
The appeal from Starwood’s attorneys said the original DNREC decision “solely focuses on alleged environmental risk and worst-case emissions, and does not fairly weigh or explain these countervailing factors in light of regulating criteria.”
The official appeal mentions countervailing factors including avoiding wetlands, no direct surface water discharges, and projected economic benefits.
The appeal will be heard on March 24, and if needed, March 25, in Dover.
New Castle County Council member wants rules for data centers
David Carter has been leading the charge toward data center regulation for months, and he’s not stopping now.
The council member who represents Middletown and Townsend in New Castle County Council is drafting legislation that would require closed-loop cooling systems and clarifies noise levels that data centers can produce. It also restricts data centers into land parcels zoned “heavy industry,” “industry” and “extractive use.” This came from months of compromises within New Castle County Council over how to regulate data centers in the future.
He said Project Washington’s situation in Delaware is much different from others in states like Virginia. New Castle County does not have a Business Tangible Personal Property tax on “computer structural equipment” or have a project’s sales tax, making the project’s tax revenue potentially smaller, more like $2 million to $5 million.
“I think this is a real bad deal for Delaware,” Carter said. “It ain’t adding up to be positive.”
This project could add demand to an already expensive power grid in Delaware. The state produced the second-least amount of electricity in the country in November 2025 according to Choose Energy, a website with electricity rates and data.
In his official podcast in December 2025, Gov. Matt Meyer said he supports having data centers as long as they don’t come at the expense of residents. A proposed “large load tariff” from Delmarva Power and Light would require high energy users like data centers to pay a larger share of the transmission and infrastructure costs associated with their substantial electricity needs.
To Carter, comparing Project Washington to other data centers in the region is more than comparing apples and oranges.
“It’s comparing apples to elephants,” he said.
Shane Brennan covers Wilmington and other Delaware issues. Reach out with ideas, tips or feedback at slbrennan@delawareonline.com.
Delaware
Some Delaware lawmakers question Education Department program cuts
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The Delaware Department of Education has requested $2.4 billion in taxpayer funding for fiscal year 2027, a nearly 4% increase over last year. But members of the state budget writing committee expressed frustration about students’ poor academic outcomes and questioned some of the cuts Gov. Matt Meyer has recommended.
Delaware public and charter schools serve 142,495 students. Nearly 60% of that population are low-income, students with disabilities or are multilingual learners.
National test scores from 2024 show that overall student academic performance remained below prepandemic levels and the national average. Eighth-grade reading scores in the First State hit a 27-year low, leading Meyer to declare a “literacy emergency” last year.
Education Secretary Cindy Marten presented the Joint Finance Committee with a strategic plan to improve student success — the first time the department has produced such a plan in more than a decade, she said. It lays out priorities, including expanding early education, improving test scores and implementing a new hybrid school-funding formula to direct more dollars to low-income and multilingual learners.
“Everything in this proposal reflects our guiding promise,” she said. “Start with students, build for impact. Outcomes matter.”
The Education Department’s budget cuts spending for several programs. That includes slashing 80% of the Wilmington Learning Collaborative’s funding. The WLC, which was receiving $10 million a year, aims to support city students across the Christina, Brandywine and Red Clay school districts. Its budget request currently stands at $2 million, with the organization projecting that it will have an additional $1.6 million in fiscal 2026 carryover dollars.
Wilmington Mayor John Carney said he wants to review the group’s proposed fiscal 2027 budget, but with the Redding Consortium moving forward to redraw school district boundaries in northern New Castle County, the learning collaborative was more important than ever. Redding members voted in December to combine the area’s school districts into one.
“If Wilmington families are going to have a strong say, as they should, then the Wilmington Learning Collaborative needs to be part of it,” he said. “Particularly now, if we’re talking about going to essentially a county-wide school district, obviously the percentage of families that are from the city of Wilmington is lower, and so I just want to make sure that their voices are heard.”
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