Delaware
Café owner in Rehoboth Beach, Delaware shares thoughts about what the Biden’s mean to the communi
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Delaware
Delaware lawmakers pass same-sex marriage bill after initial failure in the House
Amendment passes after first vote fails
The legislation needed 28 of the 41 House members to vote yes, including one Republican. However, only 24 members voted in favor of the bill in the first House vote last month, with one Democrat voting no and one not voting. Most House Republicans did not vote. Bill sponsor state Rep. Claire Snyder-Hall, D-Rehoboth Beach, initially voted yes and then changed her vote to ‘no’ so it could be reconsidered.
When the bill was brought up again on June 30, 28 state representatives voted yes and 12 voted no.
State Rep. Madinah Wilson-Anton, D-Newark, said she did not vote the first time the bill was considered in the House because of concerns that not everyone’s marriages are recognized in Delaware. The lawmaker unsuccessfully pushed legislation last year aimed at recognizing first-cousin marriages on behalf of a constituent.
Wilson-Anton publicly apologized to people she said had reached out to her with hurt feelings over not voting and pledged to vote yes if it was brought up again. However, she has also called out the “racist and Islamophobic hate” directed toward her by people online.
“It’s been stormy, it’s been lonely and it’s been difficult, and I do it anyway, because it’s the right thing to do,” she said. “I think we really need to do a lot of self-reflection over this break before we come back next year and have honest discussions about how productive it is to snipe at each other over social media instead of taking issues directly to each other and our constituents in a more productive way.”
State Rep. Josué Ortega, D-West Wilmington, changed his vote from no to yes, saying that while his Catholic faith will always guide him, he needed to represent the wants of his constituents.
Most Republicans voted no, noting that gay marriage is already legal in Delaware. But Snyder-Hall said those protections can be removed with a simple majority vote in a way that adding it into the state’s constitution cannot.
“There’s a movement going to try to claw back protections that have been established in law for the LGBTQ+ community, and also racial equality,” she said. “Our constitution reflects our values and in Delaware we want to make sure that everybody knows that.”
Hockessin state Rep. Mike Smith was the lone Republican who voted to approve the measure. He said many of his constituents were on both sides of the issue.
“I did hear from a lot of members of my district [that] life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness directly affects them in this issue,” he said. “So you’ll be getting my support today.”
Constitutional amendments require a two-thirds vote in each chamber in consecutive legislative sessions. The legislation just completed its first leg. The second leg would have to be approved by the end of June 2028.
Delaware
Delaware County commissioners criticize Marion County prosecutor
MUNCIE, IN — The Delaware County commissioners on Monday, July 6, approved a measure expressing a lack of confidence in Marion County’s prosecutor, Ryan Mears.
The resolution, read aloud at Monday’s meeting by commissioner Stephen Brand, also had the approval of Delaware County’s prosecutor and sheriff, Eric Hoffman and Tony Skinner, respectively.
The measure noted statistics reflecting “multiple years of elevated violent crime” in Marion County and Indianapolis, creating concerns for officials and citizens statewide about the “policies and practices” of Mears, a Democrat who has been been Marion County prosecutor since 2019.
It also said authorities in Hoosier counties near Marion County have “documented increasing criminal activity involving individuals traveling from Marion County into neighboring jurisdictions, creating significant public safety challenges and financial burdens for local taxpayers.”
Brand said Delaware County has experienced “firsthand the consequences of these policies, including major violent felony prosecutions involving multiple defendants who traveled from Marion County to commit serious crimes within Delaware County.”
Five Indianapolis residents face charges stemming from the December slaying of 48-year-old Michael D. Greer of Shelbyville.
Greer’s body was found in a burning car along Delaware County Road 500 South west of Indiana 3.
Brand said the cases “require substantial expenditures of local taxpayer dollars for law enforcement investigations, incarceration costs, court operations, public defense services, jury trials, victim services and prosecution resources.”
“Delaware County taxpayers should not be forced to bear increasing financial burdens associated with a criminal justice system in another jurisdiction that fails to adequately deter, prosecute and incapacitate repeat violent offenders,” the county commissioner said.
In reading the measure, Brand said citizens of Delaware County “expect prosecutors throughout the state to uphold the rule of law, protect public safety and seek justice on behalf of crime victims.”
The measure said the Delaware County commissioners, Hoffman and Skinner believe the “policies and practices of Marion County Prosecutor Ryan Mears have contributed to circumstances that negatively impact public safety and pose unnecessary costs on Delaware County taxpayers.”
The resolution won the approval of all three commissioners, Brand, Shannon Henry and Sherrry Riggin. Henry said he decided to support the measure because it had the support of Hoffman and Skinner.
The no-confidence resolution will be sent to Indiana Gov. Mike Braun, the Indiana General Assembly, the Indiana Prosecuting Attorneys Council and Hoosier congressional representatives.
Democrat Mears is campaigning for re-election in the Nov. 3 election. His local critics — the commissioners, Hoffman and Skinner — are Republicans.
In early June, U.S. Sen. Jim Banks, an Indiana Republican, criticized Mears on the floor of the U.S. Senate, calling him soft on crime.
The Indiana Fraternal Order of Police also issued a vote of no cofidence against Mears at its annual convention in June.
Efforts to contact Mears for comment on Monday were unsuccessful. Calls to his office were sent to a voice mailbox that was already full.
Douglas Walker is a news reporter at The Star Press. Contact him at 765-213-5851 or at dwalker@muncie.gannett.com.
Delaware
What Delaware’s New Probate Threshold Means for Your Estate Plan
What Delaware’s New Probate Threshold Means for Your Estate Plan
On June 10, 2026, Governor Matt Meyer signed House Bill 333 into law, raising Delaware’s small estate probate threshold from $30,000 to $50,000. The change took effect immediately. Under the new law, an estate valued at $30,000 or less still applies if the decedent died before June 10, 2026. For anyone who dies on or after that date, the threshold is now $50,000.
In practical terms, this means that when a person passes away owning $50,000 or less in assets held solely in their own name, their family may be able to use Delaware’s simplified small estate process instead of opening a formal probate administration through the Register of Wills. The prior $30,000 limit had not been updated since 2005, so this adjustment brings Delaware’s threshold in line with neighboring states like Pennsylvania and Maryland, and is intended to ease the burden on families settling modest estates.
So what does this mean for your estate plan? For most people, not much.
It is a welcome update, and will help some Delaware families, particularly those with smaller estates who might otherwise have faced the time and expense of a formal probate proceeding for what amounts to a car and a bank account. If that describes your situation, this change is good news.
But for the majority of Delaware, the probate threshold remains far below what most people accumulate over a lifetime of homeownership and savings. A $50,000 limit still captures most estates well within the reach of formal probate. Owning a home, and/or holding savings with any meaningful balance, is often enough on its own to exceed the new threshold. The estate planning strategies that made sense before HB 333 still make sense today.
A well-structured plan continues to do its job. A properly funded trust, whether revocable or irrevocable, keeps assets titled outside your individual name and outside the probate process altogether, regardless of what the statutory threshold happens to be. Trusts remain one of the most effective tools available for avoiding probate, maintaining privacy, and controlling how and when your assets pass to the people you love.
Alongside a trust, a current Power of Attorney and Advance Health Care Directive are just as essential. These documents have nothing to do with the probate threshold at all. They govern what happens while you are alive, giving someone you trust the legal authority to manage your finances or make health care decisions on your behalf if you become unable to do so yourself. Without them, your family may find themselves in court seeking guardianship at the exact moment they can least afford the delay.
HB 333 is a sensible, incremental update to a number that had been frozen for two decades. It deserves recognition as good public policy. But it is not a substitute for a thoughtful estate plan, and it does not change the guidance we have long given our clients: build a plan around a Trust, keep your Powers of Attorney and Advance Health Care Directives current, and revisit that plan regularly as your life and assets change.
If you have questions about how this update applies to your specific situation, or if it has been a while since your documents were reviewed, we would welcome the opportunity to talk with you.
Procino-Wells & Woodland, LLC is Delaware’s trusted resource for estate planning, elder law, and estate and trust administration. Serving all of Delaware from offices in Lewes and Seaford, our firm is dedicated exclusively to helping families create comprehensive estate plans, protect assets from long-term care costs, navigate Medicaid and Veterans Aid & Attendance benefits, establish supplemental needs trusts, and administer estates. Our team-based approach ensures every client receives consistent, exceptional service from our award winning attorneys and experienced staff, all women who are passionate about this area of law. Whether you’re planning ahead or need immediate assistance with asset protection, our 46 years of combined attorney experience serves Delaware families through in-person and virtual consultations. Learn more at www.pwwlaw.com.
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