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Delaware House OKs bill to review hospital budgets

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Delaware House OKs bill to review hospital budgets


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This story was supported by a statehouse coverage grant from the Corporation for Public Broadcasting.


Legislation creating a hospital cost review board passed the Delaware House Thursday after a long and contentious debate that frustrated members of both sides of the aisle.

Speaker Valerie Longhurst’s bill passed 21-16 on a near party-line vote, with three Democrats, Reps. Sean Lynn, Stell Parker Selby and Sean Matthews voting in opposition. After more than three hours of debate, Democrats took a short break, came back into session and then used a procedural maneuver to end debate and force a vote on the bill. Some lawmakers said they were disappointed with how the debate on the bill was handled.

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“It’s an embarrassing day,” House Minority Leader Michael Ramone said. “It’s a sad day, and I’m very sad to be a part of this legislature.”

The measure aims to rein in increasing health care costs in the First State by requiring hospitals to submit their budgets to ensure they’re in compliance with government spending benchmarks. The hospital cost review board bill is based on a similar board Vermont created to curb health care costs.

Under Longhurst’s proposal, the board would review each hospital’s budget annually. If a hospital fails to meet spending benchmarks, it would be required to develop a performance improvement plan. Once a hospital meets spending targets for three consecutive years, the board would release it from the performance plan oversight. When a hospital successfully meets its budget goals for three consecutive years, it would no longer be required to participate in the budget approval process.

“This legislation is not about punishing hospitals, but rather ensuring our constituents are able to access quality and affordable health care and to put a system into place to slow down the skyrocketing costs that we have experienced in Delaware,” she said.

The board would consist of seven members, six of whom would be appointed by the governor and confirmed by the state Senate. The executive director of the Delaware Healthcare Association would be the seventh “non-voting” member.

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Longhurst argued that the only year the benchmark had been met was in 2020 due to COVID, when fewer people were accessing regular medical care.

“Every other year, health care spending has far surpassed the benchmark we set for this date, including years with over 11% growth in health care costs,” she said.

2021 saw an 11% increase as more people resumed health care visits they had put off during the pandemic, according to the Delaware Department of Health and Social Services’ third annual benchmark trend report.

Gov. John Carney set a spending benchmark in 2018, which was an aspirational goal for annual per-capita-rate health care spending growth. The 3.8% benchmark took effect in 2019. It’s since fluctuated to various percentages below 4%.

Opponents of the legislation have said it substitutes political judgment for hospital experts’ expertise and doesn’t focus on cost drivers such as prescription drugs, workforce shortages, and insurance companies. Newark-based ChristianaCare, Dover-based Bayhealth and Lewes-based Beebe Health have recently spoken out in opposition to the board.

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Delaware rescinds sponsorship contract, citing conflict with Nomad bar owner

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Delaware rescinds sponsorship contract, citing conflict with Nomad bar owner


Why Should Delaware Care?
The Division of Small Business distributes millions in grants and incentives each year to assist small businesses and organizations. But in September, a business owned by a senior agency official received funding from the agency, raising questions about oversight and conflicts of interest.

Officials at the Delaware Division of Small Business recently rescinded a $7,500 sponsorship contract awarded to a Wilmington bar after learning that an owner of the business was the state agency’s own deputy director. 

Beyond returning the money, agency spokesman Rony Baltazar-Lopez told Spotlight Delaware that officials had also imposed “corrective actions,” in response to the apparent conflict of interest. 

Those included “employee education, discipline, and internal policy revisions,” Baltazar-Lopez said in an email. 

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The situation began in late September when the Division of Small Business received an email from Rachel Lindeman, co-owner of the popular Nomad Bar on Orange Street in Wilmington, asking the state to sponsor her networking series for small business owners

The request didn’t appear to raise any alarm, as Division of Small Business Director C.J. Bell responded three hours later stating that his office would award the Nomad a $7,500 sponsorship, according to emails obtained by Spotlight Delaware through an open records request.

Baltazar-Lopez said the sponsorship was the kind of project the office routinely supported. 

What was different though was that the money went to a business co-owned by Jaimie Watts, deputy director of the Division of Small Business.

But the sponsorship was short-lived after officials learned of Watts dual roles.

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Within weeks of Lindeman’s email, state officials quietly opened an internal investigation, rescinded the money, and determined that the sponsorship posed a conflict of interest inside the agency responsible for overseeing millions of dollars in business grants and incentives each year. 

“We recently learned that a sponsorship was issued to a business that was not eligible to receive DSB funding due to its relationship with a state employee,” Baltazar said in his statement.

Spotlight Delaware further asked whether the office has ever rescinded a sponsorship; how long a typical sponsorship decision takes; and what controls exist to ensure contracts do not go to businesses owned by agency staff. The Division of Small Business declined to comment further. 

Watts became deputy director of the Delaware Division of Small Business in April. A month later, she purchased the Nomad Bar with Lindeman. 

Watts also is a member of Spotlight Delaware’s governing board of directors. Read our editorial independence policy here.  

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In an email sent to state officials in October, Lindeman said she had been “informed” that the sponsorship money had to be returned. By early November, an agency official confirmed in an email to a colleague that it had been.

Watts did not answer questions for this story, instead referring Spotlight Delaware to a Division of Small Business spokeswoman.



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Delaware man sentenced to prison after kidnapping, raping woman during crime spree

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Delaware man sentenced to prison after kidnapping, raping woman during crime spree


A Delaware man who was convicted of kidnapping and other offenses for a multi-state crime spree in which he raped a woman at gunpoint has been sentenced to 75 years in prison, officials said.

Tonnaire McNair-Matthews, 26, was sentenced to a total of 900 months, or 75 years, in federal prison for six offenses, including kidnapping, carjacking, robbery, and related firearms offenses, according to the United States Attorney’s Office, District of Delaware. This sentencing follows Nair-Matthews’s conviction on all counts after a July 2024 trial. 

Officials said that court records and evidence presented during the four-day trial, McNair-Matthews conspired with David Hinson, 23, Michael Caldwell, 21, and Mahkiya Powell, 20, to rear-end unsuspecting drivers with a stolen Jeep Grand Cherokee and then rob the drivers when they got out to inspect their vehicles for damage. 

After three unsuccessful attempts, officials said McNair-Matthews rear-ended one victim’s vehicle. When the woman got out, McNair-Matthews abducted her at gunpoint, forcing her back into the passenger seat of her own vehicle. 

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Officials said McNair-Matthews then drove the woman, against her will, from Delaware into Pennsylvania.  During the drive, McNair-Matthews demanded the PIN code for the victim’s bank cards, forced her to disrobe, and “digitally penetrated her against her will.” McNair-Matthews then stopped the vehicle and forcibly raped the victim at gunpoint. 

McNair-Matthews abandoned the victim in Pennsylvania, according to officials. He drove her vehicle back to Delaware, where he visited various convenience stores and used her stolen bank cards and PIN code to withdraw money from ATMs. 

After, officials said McNair-Matthews reunited with Hinson, Powell, and Caldwell in Wilmington. Once there, he provided them with the victim’s bank cards and PIN, as well as the firearm he had used in the carjacking and rape

Hinson, Powell, and Caldwell then cleaned the victim’s car and stole her purse, officials shared.

After McNair-Matthews changed clothes, officials said the four men met up at a Wilmington gas station, where law enforcement found them. McNair-Matthews and Powell quickly fled, leading officers on a high-speed chase in the stolen Jeep. 

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Officials said McNair-Matthews and Powell temporarily evaded police, but McNair-Matthews was found three days later after fleeing to Maryland.

“This was a calculated, predatory attack that shattered an innocent woman’s sense of safety,” Julianne E. Murray, Acting U.S. Attorney for the District of Delaware, said in a news release. “The Court’s sentence delivers justice for a survivor who showed extraordinary courage.  Moreover, it sends a clear message that those who terrorize our communities with violence, intimidation, and exploitation will be pursued, prosecuted, and held fully accountable.  Finally, I commend the vigilant work of the FBI, the Delaware State Police, and the Pennsylvania State Police for swiftly bringing the defendant to justice.”



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State Police seek help locating woman wanted on warrants in Delaware & Chenango Counties

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State Police seek help locating woman wanted on warrants in Delaware & Chenango Counties


DELAWARE COUNTY, N.Y. (WBNG) — New York State Police are asking for help locating a woman with active warrants in both Delaware and Chenango County.

According to police, Alora S. Stott, 25, of Oneonta, is wanted on warrants after failing to appear for scheduled court dates.

The court dates were related to charges Stott is facing including criminal possession of a forged instrument and criminal possession of stolen property.

The charges stem from her arrest in Delaware County in January, at which time state troopers found Stott in possession of a stolen checkbook and multiple forged and stolen checks.

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In addition to these charges, Stott faces an additional charge of criminal possession of stolen property after police found her and three others in possession of a stolen truck in Chenango County.

Anyone with information regarding her whereabouts is asked to contact the New York State Police at 607-561-7400.



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