Delaware
Delaware school health centers face cuts despite rise of mental health issues
The funding situation for student-based wellness centers is dire, said Marihelen Barrett, executive director of the alliance.
“The high schools have been level-funded for years,” she said. “And so that’s actually eaten into the buying power with inflation. They’re really tight on funding.”
There are more than 50 school-based health centers operated by many of the state’s health systems, according to the alliance. High schools automatically get state-funded wellness centers under current law. Some of those also support the middle schools in their districts.
While two elementary schools, Baltz and Frederick Douglass elementary schools, got $340,000 in the fiscal year 2020 state budget, advocates said more recent elementary school centers have received no legislative financial support or operational dollars.
Along with stagnant state funding of high school clinics, dozens of state lawmakers representing New Castle County say they have heard from school nurses over the past several months that the ChristianaCare Health System cut services at several New Castle County schools without first notifying the Division of Public Health and the school districts.
ChristianaCare operates school-based health clinics in 19 high schools and seven elementary schools in New Castle County and the city of Wilmington. There’s seven school districts in the county. The state Department of Education website shows there’s 31 high-needs schools in Delaware, 28 of them in New Castle County.
A spokesperson for ChristianaCare said some of the high school wellness centers only have medical providers on-site three days a week for the 2023-2024 school year. The nonprofit health system said it made the staffing changes based on previous enrollment and utilization numbers.
In a statement, the spokesperson said medical providers are onsite at the elementary schools every day of the week. While behavioral health therapists are also onsite everyday at each wellness clinic it operates, community health workers and nutritionists have to rotate among schools. It noted medical assistants and school district coordinators are also on its teams.
A June 2023 letter to ChristianaCare’s Erin Booker and signed by more than two dozen lawmakers said that school nurses had expressed concern that the lack of these critical services will have a drastic impact on families and students. The letter obtained by WHYY News was signed by several lawmakers of both political parties and copied to the secretary of the Delaware Department of Education and New Castle County’s seven school districts, including Christina, Red Clay, Colonial and Brandywine.
However a spokesperson for the Division of Public Health disputes that ChristianaCare’s staffing changes have affected services.
“We [the Department of Health and Social Services/Division of Public Health] do not mandate the staffing,” Media Relations Coordinator Laura Matusheski said. “They are required to deliver the services and have been doing so with zero impact on the students.”
Barrett said she continues to hear about the service cuts in high school school-based health centers operated by ChristianaCare. She said these kinds of cuts mean the centers don’t function effectively for students. Her group is asking lawmakers to add $1.5 million, a 20% increase for high school centers.
“One of the most important services that the school-based health centers provide is mental health support and help with trauma and on focus on trauma-informed care,” she said. “The other major focus is on health equity, trying to make sure that underserved kids that are experiencing social determinants of health concerns, such as food insecurity and homelessness, make sure that those needs are met. So it’s more than medical care, it’s more than just coming to get your earache taken care of. And that’s why it’s so important that it be a multidisciplinary service.”
Delaware
State Police Arrest Dover Man for Assault and Aggravated Menacing in Dover – Delaware State Police – State of Delaware
Date Posted: Saturday, April 18th, 2026
The Delaware State Police have arrested 45-year-old Joseph Chapler, from Dover, Delaware, following an assault and aggravated menacing incident that occurred Thursday night in Dover.
On April 16, 2026, at approximately 10:20 p.m., troopers responded to the parking lot of Microtel, located at 1703 East Lebanon Road in Dover for a report of an assault and aggravated menacing. When troopers arrived, they learned that a man and woman were walking on a path behind the Microtel when they were approached by an unknown male suspect. The suspect threatened the victims, pointed a gun at them, and sprayed the female victim with pepper spray before running away. The victims ran to safety and called 9-1-1. The female victim was treated by EMS but refused medical attention.
Through investigative means, detectives identified Joseph Chapler as the suspect and obtained a warrant for his arrest.
On April 17th, Chapler was arrested and taken to Troop 3, where he was charged with the crimes listed below, arraigned by Justice of the Peace Court 2, and committed to the Sussex Correctional Institution on a $94,001 cash bond.

- Possession of a Firearm During the Commission of a Felony (Felony)
- Assault 2nd Degree (Felony) – 2 counts
- Aggravated Menacing (Felony) – 2 counts
- Terroristic Threatening – 2 counts
- Criminal Trespass 3rd Degree
If you or someone you know is a victim or witness of a crime or have lost a loved one to a sudden death and need assistance, the Delaware State Police Victim Services Unit / Delaware Victim Center is available to offer you support and resources 24 hours a day through a toll-free hotline at 1-800-VICTIM-1 (1-800-842-8461). You may also email the Victim Services Unit at DSP_VictimServicesMail@delaware.gov.
Disclaimer: Any individual charged in this release is presumed innocent until proven guilty in a court of law.
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Delaware
Local police departments earn state accreditation
The Delaware Police Officer Standards and Training Commission recently announced that the Dewey Beach Police Department and Rehoboth Beach Police Department have both earned state accreditation from the Delaware Police Accreditation Commission.
As part of the rigorous process, a team of DPAC assessors ensured all accreditation standards were met by completing comprehensive, on-site inspections of each agency, reviewing their policies and procedures for compliance, and conducting interviews with department members.
“This milestone represents a significant step forward for public safety in Delaware. The initial state accreditation of these police agencies reflects a strong commitment to professionalism, accountability and excellence in law enforcement. I commend each department for their dedication to serving their communities with integrity and for upholding the highest standards,” said Joshua Bushweller, Department of Safety and Homeland Security secretary and DPAC chair.
Delaware
DDA inducts three Delaware Century Farms – 47abc
Dover, Del. – Three farms, one from each of Delaware’s counties, were inducted into the Century Farm Program by the state Department of Agriculture on Thursday at the Delaware Agricultural Museum.
Each of the family farms has been owned and operated for at least a century. Each received a sign for their farms, an engraved plate and legislative tributes.
In addition to Secretary of Agriculture, Don Clifton, and Deputy Secretary Jimmy Kroon, state Senators David Wilson (R – District 18) and Kyra Hoffner (D – District 14) were also in attendance.
Wright Family Farms are located in Harrington in Kent County. In 1919, the farm was purchased by William Wright. Over a century later, William’s grandson, Ronald, is the owner and his great-grandson, Greg, said he hopes to continue the family legacy by buying the farm from his father.
Although the event celebrated each family for their hard work and resilience, it also highlighted the challenges farmers have to surmount to stay in business today, let alone for a hundred years.
“The price of equipment, the price of fertilizer, the price of seed, everything is just gone up,” Greg said. “So, you know, everything’s going up that we gotta purchase just to stay in business.”
Clifton, Kroon and Wilson also echoed difficulties in balancing the need to preserve agricultural land with the need to develop housing and sustainable energy projects like solar power.
“I know housing is very important, and we want people to always have good housing, but at some point, I think you’re going to saturate the area with more houses than you have food to feed these people,” Wilson said.
Kroon also said there are difficulties in keeping future generations motivated to stay in farming.
“When you think about it in the context of multi-generational farm families, there’s a real long-term challenge where a new generation may think twice about whether they want to keep farming if it’s always a struggle,” he said.
Clifton said farming has always been a challenging way of life, but it has been so since time immemorial.
“These families, their experience shows that they have an appreciation for the way of life and perseverance and that’s to be honored and emulated to the greatest extent possible,” he said.
Greg said he hopes to pass down the way of life so that his family legacy can live on for another hundred years, as well as for other families.
“A hundred years as the same family tilling the land, that’s, you know, that’s an honor right there,” Greg said. “And I hope that more farmers who are close to 100 years old will be doing the same thing. You know, keep it in the family.”
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