Delaware
9 Most Comfortable Towns in Delaware for Seniors
Delaware is easily one of the top states for retirees looking to relocate. Consequently, many seniors are contemplating moving to the First State. Delaware’s tax benefits for this demographic are well-known, as the state does not tax Social Security benefits, nor does it have state or local sales tax, and property taxes are lower than the rest of the nation. Those looking to relocate to the state want to find welcoming communities and towns that are the most comfortable for seniors. The nine towns listed here all offer senior citizens a relaxing yet fulfilling lifestyle with amenities and benefits that cannot be found just anywhere.
Newark
Although well-known as a college town and home to the University of Delaware, Newark is attractive for seniors because of the many amenities it offers them. The town’s population is 30,655 (per the US Census Bureau). Roughly 13 percent of the population is aged 60 and over. Many seniors find the lower median age in Newark of 22.6, appealing as it gives the town a youthful vibe and ensures intellectual stimulation. Homes are fairly affordable in Newark, with values averaging $365,500.
Newark has much outdoor space for seniors to make use of, including White Clay Creek State Park, with its many hiking trails, picnic areas, and a clamshell stage for summer concerts. Additionally, the Newark Reservoir has a 1.8-mile paved trail around it and is a favorite of seniors who enjoy walking.
Seniors aged 60 and up in Newark can take classes at the University of Delaware for free. Additional senior amenities in Newark include the Newark Senior Center, which offers activities, events, and lunch Monday through Friday; and the Newark Free Library, which has a variety of programs and clubs available.
Seniors will also appreciate that Christiana Care, a highly-ranked hospital with advanced technology, has locations in Newark and nearby Wilmington. Reduced price senior transportation is available through SCAT, the Senior Citizens Affordable Taxi, of DART First State.
Lewes
One reason that the quiet beach town of Lewes is enticing to seniors is that more than 50 percent of its 3,339 full-time residents are over the age of 65. Home values are a bit higher in Lewes, averaging $600,000. Property taxes in Delaware are at one of the lowest rates in the nation, however. Many seniors feel that the pros outweigh the cons when it comes to life in Lewes.
The northernmost beach in Delaware, Lewes is on the Delaware Bay and is home to Cape Henlopen State Park, with its many hiking and biking trails. Seniors who live in Lewes will appreciate the picturesque views of sunrises and sunsets, as well as the serenity, sights, and sounds of the ocean, which can provide mental stimulation and foster emotional well-being.
Lewes Senior Activity Center offers recreational, cultural, educational, and health-related programs to those aged 50 and up. Because Lewes is quickly becoming known as “the” town in Delaware for seniors, many senior independent and assisted living communities are springing up across the region. They include The Lodge at Historic Lewes and The Moorings at Lewes.
Lewes is right down the road from Beebe Healthcare System, with locations across Sussex County. For seniors in Lewes who need transportation assistance, the Lewes Senior Activity Center can arrange shared-ride transportation to and from medical appointments, errands, and to visit the Center.
Middletown
The burgeoning town of Middletown, with a population of 23,572, sits halfway between the larger cities of Dover and Wilmington, and is popular with a wide variety of age ranges because of its ideal location. About 18 percent of residents are over the age of 65. Home prices in the Middletown area average $550,000, but amenities trump the higher home prices for many seniors who call Middletown home.
Middletown’s Main Street and downtown area is a quintessential small-town delight, with restaurants like Sully’s Irish Pub, and shops such as F&L Boutique, as well as the historic Everett Theatre, lining its streets. Outdoor enthusiasts can enjoy the town’s Charles E. Price Memorial Park, and golfers can look forward to playing 18 holes at Back Creek Golf Club.
Seniors can enjoy reduced-price DART bus fares around town as well as to Dover and Wilmington. The MOT Jean Birch Senior Center (which stands for Middletown-Odessa-Townsend) offers classes, activities, and trips for adults age 50 and up.
Christiana Care’s medical offices are located throughout Middletown, and its hospitals are conveniently just a few miles away in Newark and Wilmington. As the town has grown, its living options for seniors have grown accordingly and now include more than 25 communities, such as Holly Square and Meadowcrest at Middletown.
Milford
Imagine a small, vibrant, yet relaxed town that is still close to the beach area, and you will have conjured up a good image of Milford. With a population of 11,714, 24 percent of whom are over the age of 65, Milford offers many enticements for seniors to live there. One of them is that home values average a reasonable $399,000.
The beach is less than an hour’s drive from Milford, which appeals to many who live there, including seniors. Milford’s location along the Mispillion River is also attractive, as is its mile-long boardwalk, the Mispillion Riverwalk, which is the largest municipal park in Delaware.
Artistic seniors may wish to join the Mispillion Art League in downtown Milford. Others have joined Downtown Milford, Inc., a nonprofit organization that promotes and beautifies the town. Milford has been designated a Tree City by the National Arbor Day Foundation. Another volunteer group called Milford in Bloom maintains plants and landscaping across the town.
Bayhealth Hospital, Sussex Campus is conveniently located in Milford and is a fit for most seniors’ medical needs. The Milford Senior Center offers activities, meals, and more to those 50 and older. Senior living facilities, such as the assisted living Milford Place and Silver Lakes Estates independent apartments, can also be found in town.
Dover
The capital of Delaware and the second-largest city in the state, the historic town of Dover has a population of 38,879, with 17 percent over the age of 65. Median home values are a reasonable $365,700. The town is not just for history-loving seniors, as a multitude of amenities exist in Dover for those aged 50 and up.
In the center of historic Dover is The Dover Green, a National Historic Park. In cooperation with First State Heritage Park, guided tours of the historic area of the city are offered Wednesdays through Saturdays. On this tour, you will see the John Bell House, a home from the 1700s with early Chesapeake architecture, as well as Delaware Legislative Hall and the Old State House, which are still used today.
Senior NASCAR fans will appreciate the proximity of Dover Motor Speedway. For gambling enthusiasts, Dover is also home to Bally’s Dover Casino Resort, the largest casino in Delaware, which includes a hotel, restaurants, bars, and live entertainment areas.
The Modern Maturity Center, Dover’s senior center, hosts activities, parties, farmers’ markets, and more for those age 50 and up. Dover is also home to Bayhealth Hospital, Kent Campus, as well as PAM Health Rehabilitation Hospital of Dover. Senior living apartments like The Grande Dover and communities such as Harmony at Kent are additional residential options for seniors who relocate to Dover.
New Castle
The small, colonial town of New Castle is a favorite among seniors who live in Delaware for many reasons. Its small population of 5,523, 17.6 percent of whom are over the age of 65, is one of them. Home prices in New Castle average just $323,000. New Castle is also 10 minutes south of the larger city of Wilmington and its amenities.
New Castle is a historic town with intriguing destinations such as the New Castle Court House Museum, built in 1732 and available to tour. Some seniors may choose to become involved in the Old New Castle Outdoor Rec Coalition, an organization created by those living in Old New Castle to promote educational, recreational, and community-building opportunities throughout town.
Being on the Delaware River, New Castle even has its own beach, Deemers Beach. This area on Route 9 just south of the old town of New Castle is great for swimmers, kayakers, paddleboarders, and fishermen. Seniors who frequent the beach warn that you must watch out for jellyfish, however, as their stings can be quite painful.
The New Castle Senior Center provides activities, a daily lunch, transportation, and resources for those age 50 and over in the area. New Castle is just 10 minutes from Christiana Care’s hospital facilities in Wilmington and Newark. Senior living options ranging from independent living at Spencer Apartments to assisted living at The Lorelton in nearby Wilmington are available for those needing them.
Delaware City
Despite the “city” in its name, Delaware City is a small hamlet with a population of 1,932, 12.8 percent of whom are over age 65. Home values in Delaware City are affordable, averaging $285,000. Delaware City offers many benefits to senior citizens who live there, making the area more attractive for seniors who are looking to relocate to the Delaware town.
Delaware City offers city property tax and water bill discounts to qualified senior property owners. The Community Center in town provides programs, art classes, trips, and lunch outings for senior citizens. Delaware City keeps its senior residents safe through a program called “Just Checking,” in which seniors can sign up for regular check-ins by city officials. The city’s Code Red program also notifies residents of town-wide notifications and emergencies by phone or text.
Several parks exist in Delaware City for outdoor enjoyment, including the waterfront Battery Park, and Dragon Run Park with its hiking and biking trails, streams, and forests. A Nature Center exists inside Dragon Run Park, providing educational programs on the flora and fauna of the area. Christiana Care’s hospital facilities in Wilmington and Newark are just a 15 to 30-minute ride away.
Smyrna
The peaceful suburban town of Smyrna, a former farming town, has a population of 13,870, 13 percent of whom are over age 65. Home values average $440,000. Smyrna’s small-town atmosphere and proximity to larger-town amenities in Middletown and Dover make it an attractive option for many seniors.
Six outdoor recreation areas exist in Smyrna, including George C. Wright Jr. Municipal Park, with ball fields, a skateboard park, picnic tables, and barbecue grills. Those looking for hiking and biking opportunities should try Big Oak Park, with its 1.2-mile easy hiking loop. The picturesque area features a wooded section and a boardwalk over a marsh area.
Many seniors who live in Smyrna appreciate that it is just 10 minutes to the nearest small beach, Fraland Beach, along the Delaware River. The more popular Rehoboth Beach is about an hour’s drive away. The state capital of Dover, with its many amenities, is just 20 minutes away.
The Mamie A. Warren Senior Center in Smyrna serves lunch Monday through Friday and offers activities, health screenings, and events for those ages 50 and up. Sunnyside Apartments provides independent living for Smyrna seniors. Those in Smyrna needing a more supportive living environment may find it at Pinnacle Rehabilitation and Health Center.
Clayton
Clayton’s crime rate is 65 percent lower than the national average, according to data from the FBI. With a low population of 3,978, 12 percent of whom are over the age of 65, and fairly reasonable average home values of $460,500, many seniors are choosing to relocate to the small town of Clayton, just two miles by one-and-a-half miles in area.
Clayton’s Lillian Smith Senior Center provides lunch Monday through Friday and social and recreational programs for those age 50 and up. They also offer referrals and resources to help seniors live independently longer.
The Blackbird State Forest and the Blackiston Wildlife Area are both just minutes from Clayton, for those interested in outdoor activities. The Blackbird State Forest offers ten tracts for nature walks, biking, jogging, and horseback riding. Blackiston Wildlife Area covers over 2,200 acres and provides opportunities for hunting.
Bayhealth Hospital in Dover is only a 20-minute drive away. Senior living facilities, ranging from independent living at Westminster Village to assisted living at Dover Place, are also available in nearby Dover for those who need supportive living services.
Find Your New Comfortable Home in Delaware
Senior citizens who are looking to spend their golden years in a more comfortable environment should check out these towns in the First State. Small towns such as Milford, Clayton, and Lewes offer top-notch healthcare, ample recreational opportunities, and amenities for seniors that cannot be found in just any old town in Delaware. Relocating to one of these nine comfortable towns in Delaware will ensure that your retirement years will be spent in contentment and satisfaction.
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
What are journalists missing from the state of Delaware? What would you most like WHYY News to cover? Let us know.
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.”
Delaware
Delaware education outlines boosts, program cuts – in a $2.5B budget
Delaware educator creates an escape for fellow public school teachers
A Colonial educator was inspired by the loss of a fellow teacher to create the “Zen Den,” a place for all Gunning Bedford educators to decompress.
Delaware’s Department of Education unveiled its first “strategic plan” in a decade on March 3, as lawmakers sifted through its roughly $2.5 billion proposed budget.
That’s about one-third of the state’s draft spending plan, up nearly 4% from last year.
Lawmakers discussed those infusions – from reading support to early education and more – alongside some $22 million in various proposed program cuts, which could include lessened support for the Wilmington Learning Collaborative.
“It’s the first plan the Delaware Department of Education has had in at least a decade,” Secretary Cindy Marten said ahead of her remarks before the Joint Finance Committee. “There’s an opportunity here. This is not another initiative that we’re just going to layer on top of one more thing and one more thing. … We’re building on the capacity that’s already here.”
The department sculpted budget requests around five “building blocks” in this plan:
- Bright beginnings: Expanding early education, with aims to raise early care enrollment from 25% to 40% by September 2028.
- Safe supportive schools: Boosting teacher retention rates, with a goal to raise the three-year retention rate for all early career educators from 72% to 75% by June 2028, alongside reducing chronic absenteeism and more.
- Great teaching and learning: That’s boosting early literacy, improving student achievement, growing graduation rates and college/career readiness. A key benchmark here is boosting third-grade reading proficiency from 38% to 53% by 2028.
- Fair opportunities for every learner: DDOE leaders seek to implement a new public education funding model by August 2027, in step with the Public Education Funding Commission.
- Families and communities as partners: The department intends to launch a family and community portal that enhances transparency and connection to learning tools, support and updates.
For Delaware state test scores, average English proficiency rates across all tested third to eighth graders came in at 41% in 2025, while math reaching 34%. Pre-pandemic 2019 scores remain around 10 points higher in each bucket.
On the Nation’s Report Card, scores released in 2025 revealed eighth grade reading scores had hit a 27-year low.
“It’s been decades where we have let that fall,” said committee Vice Chair Rep. Kim Williams, as statistics joined the budget hearing backdrop. “It took us decades to get where we’re at today. It’s going to take us some time to pull ourselves out.”
Literacy and Delaware’s youngest learners
The plan should sound pretty familiar.
Delaware’s “literacy emergency” has been an ongoing call from the Meyer administration. For Marten, a fixture benchmark is that third grade reading proficiency growing from 38% to 53% by 2028.
Alongside some $97.4 million proposed for state personnel cost, the department may also see one-time infusions of $8 million to maintain support for the “Literacy Emergency Fund” and $3 million in direct-to-teacher grants to fuel literacy gains.
Meanwhile, the plan calls for all K-3 teachers to complete professional learning in the science of reading, as mandated by Senate Bill 4 back in 2022.
The secretary also called early childhood education a “first priority” after a year of plan crafting.
Roughly $8 million in one-time spending could fuel the “Delaware Early Childhood Care & Education Alliance” next fiscal year. That’s a pilot “hub” to support child care providers across the state, while also fueling an estimated 480 additional seats in the state’s Early Childhood Assistance Program, per DDOE, or state-sponsored pre-K.
By fall 2028, the department aims to grow birth-to-five enrollment overall from 25% to 40%. She hopes a hub like this can simplify and consolidate the process for providers and families alike.
DDOE’s Office of Child Care Licensing has also been working to digitize electronic record systems to elevate the office’s public database, while tracking compliance and investigating complaints across Delaware’s licensed providers. A combined $2.4 million has been pledged to make it happen, in the last two years, and the department is aiming for launch this summer.
More investment lined budget spreadsheets, and lawmaker questions, as Marten and her team echoed back to their strategic plan. The department pledged to have regular, public reporting on the goals outlined.
After all, there’s much more to come.
Foundational funding change still in the works
To get anywhere, Marten said Delaware needs funding reform.
A one-time infusion of about $2.8 million is proposed to help launch a new funding formula, including support for public communication. So far, that pales in comparison to investment eyed by the Public Education Funding Commission’s hybrid model.
That model will tweak the state’s current unit-count system, while also adding a “weighted” approach based on student needs, as should be proposed to the General Assembly later this spring.
One commission work group projected a baseline infusion of roughly $70 million just to “hold harmless.” That’s allowing Delaware to launch a new formula, without taking existing funds away from school districts.
“That doesn’t bring us near adequacy,” said Commission Chair Sen. Laura Sturgeon, back in January. One independent research report recommended an infusion from $600 million to $1 billion in total.
While that infusion remains “the gold standard,” Sturgeon said, members think they can meaningfully implement the formula with less. She said a figure closer to $200 million has been in discussion, though nothing is final.
This reform will also likely be implemented in phases, if it clears the chambers above this JFC hearing room.
The next commission meeting is at 4 p.m. on March 16, online.
What didn’t make the cut?
The Wilmington Learning Collaborative was only listed on Meyer’s proposed DDOE spending plan as an $8 million cut.
The collaborative launched in 2022 under then-Gov. John Carney with aims to correct fractured education inside the state’s largest city, combating issues like low achievement, absenteeism and teacher retention. It fused across three school districts touching Wilmington – Red Clay, Brandywine and Christina – and pushed in programming and staff positions in about nine of their city schools.
DDOE initially described the reduction as “carryover” funds, aligned with recommendations from the governor. However, collaborative leadership said it likely wouldn’t shake out that way.
“We’re projecting a little less than $2 million carryover,” Laura Burgos said, moments after her presentation to the committee. That meets an allocation of $2 million eyed for next fiscal year, according to her presentation, compared to $10 million allocations in previous funding cycles.
“That’s still a significant reduction in total,” she continued. “But we’ll have a better idea as we reconcile the budget and see how far we go with our advancement of the STEM learning labs and better understand the number of students being served over the summer months.”
Burgos highlighted these projects and more in her presentation, while she expects more specifics on the funding cut impact to come in its council meeting, March 4.
In his questioning, Sen. Darius Brown pressed that the cut could end up being more than $6 million. In response, chair Sen. Trey Paradee said his committee could have more “conversations as a group” on those cuts, before final markup.
In Red Clay Consolidated School District alone, the collaborative fuels about a dozen teachers and five paraprofessionals, as the school board discussed in its February meeting. Burgos roughly estimated that investment at about $1 million in Red Clay.
Total impact is unclear, as local districts must consider covering positions in local budgets. The same is echoed in cuts to certain block grants.
The administration proposed cuts to a $2 million grant for substitute teachers and another $2.3 million for athletic trainers. Some districts will be able to pick up the cost locally, lawmakers noted, though the department was unable to speak to overall estimates Tuesday.
Sturgeon hopes coming reform will allow districts more flexibility for such coverage.
“What we’re moving toward is a system where all those positions will be able to be grouped together and then funded based on the priorities of the individual district,” she said.
Major redistricting effort signals further delay
The Redding Consortium – a coalition charged with improving education in and around Wilmington, as well as redistricting schools in the same boundaries – caught renewed attention in late 2025, as it voted to center planning on a consolidated district in northern New Castle County.
That’s a pending plan to convert Brandywine, Christina, Colonial and Red Clay into one school district, which would serve students from Newark to Wilmington and the suburbs north and west.
But that wasn’t the sole focus on March 3.
“Redistricting planning” has reflected about 1% of the group’s allocations in the past five years. Supports in student health centers, at $27.6 million, have made up 54% of that budgeting, while full-day pre-K support has seen about $14.8 million in the Wilmington area.
The consortium’s request this year remained consistent, as Majority Whip Sen. Elizabeth “Tizzy” Lockman said, at about $10.2 million.
But her colleagues should not expect a redistricting plan this session.
“Having reviewed the project scope, AIR’s best estimate for us is that putting together a thoughtful plan, with robust public input, will take the remainder of the calendar year,” the consortium co-chair said. “Again, we’re committed to delivering a robust proposal – but are very aware that students are in schools of concern every day and eager to see them better served.”
Olivia Montes covers state government and community impact for Delaware Online/The News Journal. If you have a tip or a story idea, reach out to her at omontes@delawareonline.com.
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