Delaware
NCCo Council set to vote Tuesday on amended data center rules
Why Should Delaware Care?
Residents have voiced concerns about energy and environmental impacts of a massive data center project planned for Delaware City. But business leaders and unions feel new regulations would risk stifling what could become a major new industry in the state.
Earlier this month, several New Castle County councilmembers denounced an ordinance to regulate the data-center industry because it would have retroactively imposed new rules on a controversial plan to build a massive facility near Delaware City.
On Friday, the sponsor of the proposal, Councilman Dave Carter, eliminated the retroactivity clause from the proposal in an effort to win over his skeptical colleagues. Two have since signaled that they may now support the new rules.
Still, it remains unclear whether Carter’s ordinance has enough yes votes to become law. The New Castle County Council is scheduled to vote on the measure during its regular meeting on Tuesday.
The sweeping legislation includes new rules that would require data centers to have buffer zones around them, and to use energy-efficient backup generators, among other regulations.
Get Involved: The New Castle County Council will meet on Tuesday, Nov. 18 at 6:30 p.m. at the Louis L. Redding City/County Building, 800 N. French Street in Wilmington. Residents can attend and comment in-person or online.
The public reaction to Carter’s ordinance has similarly been split.
When proposed last summer, the 6-million-square-foot, Delaware City data center plan sparked a wave of opposition. Many residents feared it would harm the environment and place too much energy demand on an already stressed electricity grid.
During a county planning meeting last month, those opponents called Carter’s proposed regulations common-sense guardrails for a booming industry that is spreading in Delaware
But, last month, the developer of the data center – Starwood Digital Ventures – won the endorsement from a critical voting block when it signed an agreement to use union labor in the project’s construction.
Such then, members of building trades unions have come out in full force to oppose the Carter’s regulations, which they say could stop the industry from coming to Delaware entirely.
The differing perspectives led to a tense County Council meeting earlier this month, which included council members jeering and reprimanding one another in front of a packed crowd of people.
By the end of the meeting, it was clear Carter didn’t have enough support for his ordinance.
County Councilman Penrose Hollins, who had expressed concerns during that meeting, now tells Spotlight Delaware that “once the retroactivity is moved out, I’m going to support it.”
Councilwoman Valerie George similarly said, “If it doesn’t have any retroactivity, absolutely I would consider voting for it.”
Asked to clarify what she meant by “consider voting for it,” George said she had not yet seen Carter’s amended ordinance, and she wanted to check if there were any other retroactivity clauses before committing to vote for it.
The remaining members of the New Castle County Council did not respond to requests for comment on Friday.
What do the regulations say?
Under Carter’s proposed regulations, a data center in New Castle County could be located 500 feet from residences if a developer can prove that there are sufficient noise mitigation measures at the facility. If not, the buffer expands to 1,000 feet. .
Data center developers would also need energy efficiency certifications for generators used for emergency power supply. Additionally, the proposed rules would ban cooling processes that use large amounts of water, among other regulations.

Delaware Building Trades Vice President James Ascione told Spotlight Delaware he thinks the regulations are “really heavy handed,” and could discourage developers from building data centers in Delaware.
“We don’t want to say we welcome business, then when business comes here, we reactively regulate them,” Ascione said.
Environmentalists counter that any buildout of data centers in Delaware must be done sustainably in conjunction with energy conservation.
“This ordinance isn’t about stopping data centers, it’s about common sense,” Sierra Club Delaware Chapter President Dustyn Thompson said during the council meeting earlier this month. “We can have economic development, we can have jobs, and we can protect the people.”
The Sierra Club recently purchased $3,000 worth of Facebook advertisements encouraging residents to support Carter’s regulations. Thompson said the Sierra Club ads were funded by donations.
Starwood has also posted Facebook ads about what it says are the benefits that its plan — dubbed Project Washington — would bring to the state.
“Tired of tax increases? Support Project Washington!” one of the advertisements said, referencing recent property tax spikes that occurred in several school districts across New Castle County.
While Carter’s amended ordinance would not apply to the Delaware City data center, there is still a way the council could impose these rules on the project.

Starwood wants to build the data center across two properties. One is zoned for industrial use. One is not. The company has filed a rezoning request for the latter property.
When County Council decides whether to approve that request, it can require Starwood to follow the same regulations set forth in the ordinance as a condition for that approval, Carter said.
But, he clarified, if Starwood decided to build a smaller data center only on the property zoned for industrial use, it would not need to follow these regulations.
Asked last month if his company might move forward on only the industrial property, Starwood CEO Anthony Balestrieri said, “We haven’t considered that.”
Read more from Spotlight Delaware
Delaware
Thomas Jefferson University to run Delaware’s first medical school
Thomas Jefferson University is opening a regional campus of its Sidney Kimmel Medical College in Delaware, an effort that will result in the state’s first medical school.
Jefferson beat out three other bidders to establish the four-year program in partnership with the state. The other bidders were the Philadelphia College of Osteopathic Medicine, the consulting firm PriceWaterhouseCoopers and Ponce Health Sciences University in Puerto Rico, Spotlight Delaware reported.
MORE: SEPTA reopens underground concourse connecting Walnut-Locust and City Hall stations
The inaugural class of 40 medical students will begin instruction in July 2028. Initially, the campus will be based at the University of Delaware in Newark, with Jefferson faculty providing instruction. A permanent home for the campus is still being finalized, the Inquirer reported.
The medical students will receive 18 months of preclinical training on campus before receiving clinical training from healthcare providers in Delaware’s southern counties, where the state’s physician shortage is most deeply felt. That shortage is compounded by an aging population, Delaware officials said.
“Jefferson is committed to being part of the solution to Delaware’s physician shortage,” Jefferson CEO Dr. Joseph Cacchione said in a statement. “We are proud to help build a future where every Delawarean has access to the care they deserve. Jefferson is all in.”
The school’s creation is being supported by $157.4 million from the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services.
Delaware is one of three states without a Doctor of Medicine or Doctor of Osteopathic Medicine program. Since the late 1960s, Jefferson and the Philadelphia College of Osteopathic Medicine have reserved seats for Delaware students.
“Sidney Kimmel Medical College has trained generations of physicians for more than 200 years, more than any other medical college in the country,” Said Ibrahim, dean of Sidney Kimmel Medical College, said in a statement. “It is a privilege to bring our mission to Delaware’s patients and communities.”
Jefferson has announced several expansions recently. The university is establishing a full-time doctor of nursing practice-nurse anesthesia program and several online graduate programs at the Lehigh Valley Health Network Center for Healthcare Education in Lehigh County. It also is opening a satellite respiratory therapy lab at Lehigh Valley Hospital-Cedar Crest in Allentown.
Delaware
Delaware is getting its first medical school, with classes set to start in 2028
Delaware officials said medical students will start their classroom instruction at UD and then do their clinical training at offices and health care systems in Kent and Sussex counties, where the shortage of doctors is most acute.
However, ChristianaCare, which has its own partnership with Jefferson, is not participating. The state’s largest health care system was part of Philadelphia College of Osteopathic Medicine’s unsuccessful bid to operate the school. In a joint statement from ChristianaCare and PCOM, the two organizations expressed disappointment with not being part of the consortium of higher education institutions and healthcare organizations.
“The path forward raises genuine questions about whether the school’s goals can be fully realized without ChristianaCare’s meaningful participation in its clinical training mission,” it said. “The success of any four-year medical program depends not just on an academic institution, but on a true and committed partnership with its clinical partners — one built on shared mission, mutual investment and trust developed over time.”
Students in the first class can get their tuition subsidized, covering all of their education costs, in exchange for an agreement to work in rural Delaware for five years.
Running the medical school is expected to cost Jefferson $78 million over the next five years. The money is from a federal rural health grant through the Rural Health Transformation Program, which congressional Republicans created in the so-called “One Big, Beautiful Bill Act.”
The program will give $50 billion to every state over five years, though exactly the total each will eventually receive is unclear. Half of the money is to be distributed equally to states and the other half is awarded by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services based on a variety of factors.
The state applied for $1 billion late last year to improve health care in Kent and Sussex counties. The Trump administration has so far allocated Delaware $157 million. Delaware is expected to receive at least $500 million over the life of the fund.
Delaware
Crash closes U.S. 42 in both directions in Delaware County
Delaware Ohio Housing Growth
A look at the rapid expansion of housing developments in Delaware, Ohio.
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Every few weeks Delaware city approves a new housing development. The city has more than 4,000 housing units in its development pipeline, contributing to the rapid growth in one of the fastest-growing counties in Ohio.
A crash shut down U.S. 42 in Delaware County in both directions June 2.
As of 7 a.m., U.S. 42 was closed from U.S. 23 to Jegs Place near the Delaware Municipal Airport.
It was not immediately clear whether anyone was injured in the crash or when the roadway would open.
This is a developing story and will be updated
Public Safety and Breaking News Reporter Bailey Gallion can be reached at bagallion@dispatch.com.
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