Delaware
Delaware program connects rural mothers to doulas, prenatal care
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Maternal health providers in Sussex County are launching a new initiative aimed at connecting pregnant women in rural Delaware with care earlier in their pregnancies, particularly women of color and immigrant families who often face barriers accessing services.
Last month, La Red Health Center partnered with the Delaware State Housing Authority and several community organizations to launch the Maternal Outreach and Mobile Services: Advancing Health for Rural Delaware Families initiative, known as MOMS.
The program uses community health workers, doulas and La Red’s mobile health unit to bring maternal health services directly into underserved communities throughout southern Delaware.
“Far too many women in Southern Delaware have difficulty accessing women’s health care services,” said Rachel Hersh, CEO of La Red Health Center. “Some of the reasons are as simple as a lack of transportation. Ensuring that all women have the opportunity to receive care, but also care that is well-coordinated will only help improve outcomes for Delaware women. Ultimately, that will lead to healthier communities, which benefits us all.”
For Lisa Butterworth, a certified nurse midwife and clinical director of women’s health at La Red, the initiative is part of a larger effort to address longstanding disparities affecting women of color.
“We know that women of color face a much higher maternal morbidity and mortality rate, and it’s not genetic,” Butterworth said. “It is because of systemic failures.”
“When we address the issues that are affecting Black and minority women, we know that improving the Black and minority women’s health is going to improve all of our health,” she added.
Addressing barriers to care
Butterworth said Latina women in Sussex County often face multiple barriers when seeking prenatal, postpartum and reproductive health care.
“We noticed with the Latina population, they have a lot of barriers to health,” she said. “In Sussex County, we don’t have enough obstetrical providers in general, and then to have obstetrical providers who can provide culturally competent care and provide language services when needed is even harder for this population,” Butterworth said.
Many women also remain uninsured during pregnancy, causing them to delay care.
“They often don’t come into prenatal care until late in the pregnancy,” Butterworth said, adding that cost is also a barrier. “They just can’t afford the visits, the ultrasounds, blood work, all the things that come along with prenatal care,” she said.
Transportation can also be difficult, especially for families living in rural communities.
“Getting to one of the offices that exist for maternal health care can be difficult,” Butterworth said. “A lot of families share a car, a vehicle, and doctors’ offices are open during the day when their husbands are at work.”
The challenges often extend beyond health care itself.
“If you have a mother who’s trying to provide for her kids and she can’t put food on the table and they’re hungry, going to a doctor’s appointment isn’t going to be her priority,” Butterworth said. “Her priority is going to be finding a way to make money to feed her family.”
To help address those barriers, La Red’s MOMS initiative brings services directly into communities through its mobile health unit and a team that includes a bilingual community health worker and a bilingual Latina doula.
“We saw that Sussex County really needed to expand and get out of the building to reach some of these people,” Butterworth said. “That’s kind of why we applied for this grant and we’re so happy to get it to bring the care to the more rural areas of Sussex.”
Delaware
State Police Arrest Magnolia Man for Pointing Gun at School Bus – Delaware State Police – State of Delaware
Date Posted: Friday, June 12th, 2026
The Delaware State Police have arrested 62-year-old Charles McCombs, of Magnolia, Delaware, for aggravated menacing after he pointed a gun at students on a school bus.
On June 9, 2026, at approximately 8:00 p.m., the School Resource Officer assigned to Polytech High School was notified by school administration of a cell phone video that showed a man pointing a gun at students on a school bus. During the investigation, detectives learned that earlier in the day, while traveling on Peachtree Run near Millchop Lane in Magnolia, a student on the school bus sprayed water from a water gun at a man riding a Can-Am Spyder motorcycle while it was next to the bus. After the being sprayed with water, the motorcyclist yelled at the students, pulled a gun, and pointed it at the school bus as it drove away.
Through investigative means, detectives identified the suspect as Charles McCombs and obtained a warrant for his arrest.
On June 11, 2026, McCombs was taken into custody without incident and taken to Troop 3. He was charged with the crimes listed below, arraigned by Justice of the Peace Court 2, and committed to Sussex Correctional Institution on a $48,000 secured bond.
- Possession of a Firearm During the Commission of a Felony (Felony)
- Aggravated Menacing (Felony) – 6 counts
Disclaimer: Any individual charged in this release is presumed innocent until proven guilty in a court of law.
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Delaware
Third Circuit Dismisses Delaware Appeal in DHS Records Clash
A federal appeals court will no longer hear a dispute between Delaware and the Department of Homeland Security over a subpoena for wage data from 15 businesses in the state.
The case is moot after Delaware officials turned over relevant employer records on May 28, Delaware Department of Justice attorneys told the US Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit in an unopposed motion Thursday to dismiss the appeal.
The Third Circuit granted that motion the same day.
Delaware’s Department of Labor had opposed the DHS subpoena aimed at work-site enforcement investigations. State officials, including Gov. Matt Meyer (D) and …
Delaware
City of Wilmington moves forward with evicting homeless park residents
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The city of Wilmington said Thursday that homeless residents of Christina Park must be gone by sunset Monday. Then, officials said they will erect a perimeter fence to block anyone from entering the site.
Wilmington officials issued eviction notices last month to park inhabitants about a month after requiring them to use city tents. The first tents were flimsy and failed during their first night in use after an overnight downpour, prompting the city to purchase sturdier replacements for residents.
When asked at a news conference whether park residents have been informed about the sunset deadline for leaving, Daniel Walker, Mayor John Carney’s deputy chief of staff, said they told the park’s site manager, the Friendship House, a local nonprofit.
Local housing advocate Meryem Dede, who heads the nonprofit TideShift Justice, said communications from the city have been changing day to day.
“The biggest thing is there’s just mass confusion in the park on what’s happening,” Dede said.
Carney’s office is highlighting the number of homeless park residents it says it is working to place in temporary housing or treatment programs.
Walker said out of 85 park residents, it has placed, or is trying to place, about 52 people in some kind of temporary housing or treatment program. City and Friendship House staff say park residents have been connected to beds at the New Castle Hope Center, a New Castle motel, as well as other shelters and treatment programs. A few people have also found permanent housing or plan to stay with family or friends.
Walker said that leaves 31 residents, with 12 of those interested in supportive services. But that still leaves 19 people who he said don’t want to leave the park.
Carney said they are trying to convince them to leave by the deadline.
“What we have to offer is better than a tent in Christina Park, and so getting people to make that choice, to take that step, is a big deal,” he said.
Those who fail to leave the park could face arrest. But Carney and other city officials would not spell out how they will get people who don’t want to leave to depart without the use of force.
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