Delaware
Delaware woman wins $150,000 in lottery scratch-off game
Claiming lottery in Delaware
18 states have laws that allow national lottery prize jackpot winners to remain anonymous, but is Delaware among them?
A Newark woman is a big winner after claiming a $150,000 prize after playing the Platinum Payout Bucks Blowout scratch-off game.
The woman, who has chosen to remain anonymous, purchased the winning ticket at Boyd’s Corner Liquors in Middletown, according to the Delaware Lottery. She claimed her prize July 31.
According to a news release, the winner said that the most she had won previously playing the lottery was $1,000.
Three top prizes of $100,000 still remain for Instant Game $100K along with two $150,000 top prizes for Delaware Lottery’s $20 Cashnado scratch-off game, according to the lottery.
Are you a winner?: $4 million Mega Millions winning lottery ticket sold in Delaware
Check your tickets: Powerball ticket worth $100,000 sold in Delaware. Check the numbers to see if you won
How long do I have to claim my prize?
Tickets are valid for up to one year past the drawing date for drawing game prizes or within one year of the announced end of sales for Instant Games, according to delottery.com.
How can I claim my prize?
First things first, sign the back of your ticket using an ink pen to identify yourself as the ticket owner. Once signed, ownership of a ticket cannot be changed or transferred, according to the Delaware Lottery.
A prize worth $5,001 or more can be claimed at the Delaware Lottery Office on business days from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. You must bring a photo ID with your name and address and a Social Security card.
All winning Powerball, Mega Millions and Lotto America tickets must be redeemed in the state and jurisdiction where they were sold.
Delaware
Kensington outreach group travels to Wilmington, Del. to look for lost homeless they helped
The City of Philadelphia has been working to clean up Kensington for several years now, but in the process, people who once lived on the streets there are moving to other cities. And, outreach groups are losing track of the people they were working to take care of.
NBC10’s Johnny Archer went out with one group, Operation Save Our City, on Wednesday night as they tried to search for missing people in Wilmington, Delaware.
“I’m trying to figure how many of my folks from Kensington ended up here,” said Rosalind Pichardo.
The outreach group said they are concerned because some of the folks who have gone missing won’t get the resources they need.
The group went to a homeless encampment in the Christina Park neighborhood of Wilmington and handed out bananas and Narcan.
“This current drug supply is so dangerous,” Pichardo said. “Other cities might not know how to deal with detox and withdrawal from this current drug supply, and if we get folks back home to deal with their condition, they have a chance to survive.”
Since the City of Philadelphia started cleaning up Kensington under Mayor Cherelle Parker’s administration, many unhoused people have left Philadelphia.
NBC10 investigators reported last month that the City of Philadelphia was buying one-way bus tickets to send unhoused people out of the city.
A program from the city that buys one-way bus tickets for Philadelphia’s unhoused population is using taxpayer money to fund it. NBC10 investigative reporter Claudia Vargas looks into the reasons why.
But neighboring communities are feeling the impact.
Wilmington Mayor John Carney said his city is one of them.
“It’s just not right for these other places to send their folks to Wilmington,” Carney said last week. “The constant influx from cities and towns makes it hard for us to care for the population here. And most importantly, it’s unfair for the city residents who live in these neighborhoods.”
Pichardo said the solution to cleaning up Kensington should not be sending people some place else.
“This certainly can’t be the solution to cleaning up Kensington,” she said. “Rerouting people to other cities to make it another city’s problem.”
NBC10 reached out to Mayor Parker’s office on this issue and has not yet heard back.
Operation Save Our City said they did not find any of the people they were looking for on Wednesday night, but they will be back on Thursday to continue their search.
Delaware
Little Living housing project hopes to bring 172 affordable homes to Kent County
What are journalists missing from the state of Delaware? What would you most like WHYY News to cover? Let us know.
Plans to bring more affordable housing to Delaware’s Kent County are now underway through the Cottage Community at Murphy Farms. The project comes with an estimated price tag of $17 million to $25 million.
While there are still many hurdles to overcome, land now owned by the Murphy family near Frederica would be transformed into a thoughtfully designed community where affordability and sustainability meet.
The plans are an expansion of the Little Living community created in Sussex County in recent years. The opportunity emerged when Little Living’s founder and president George Meringolo learned about the property while undergoing medical treatment. Rather than simply selling it for a large profit, the Murphy family expressed a desire to invest in a community with better intentions.
The project will be right off Rt. 1, near the Delaware Turf Spots Complex that covers about 22.5 acres.
A self-sustaining community
“On that 22 and a half acres, there’ll be approximately 172 houses. There will be a number of one-bedroom, two-bedroom and three-bedroom, which will be sold,” Meringolo said. “Those selling prices will start at about $110,000 for the one bedroom, $120,000 for the two bedroom, and about $130,000 for the three bedroom. Those prices would be firmed up as we get closer to it because you don’t know what’s happening with the cost of materials and those kinds of things.”
In addition to individual homes for sale, Little Living plans around 30 townhouses for rent at about $1,200 each month with utilities included.
“This project will also include a clubhouse. It’ll include self-store sheds that people can rent if they need more room for storage. It’ll include a laundromat for people to take care of their laundry,” he said. “On the outside edge is probably going to be a convenience store with a gas station, so people can pick up day-to-day needs that they need. And there’ll also probably be something like a McDonald’s.”
“It’s really a self-contained little community. It’s going to be powered by solar panels. I think it’s a very, very nice addition to the area,” he added.
To preserve the character and upkeep of the neighborhood, homeowners will lease the land rather than own it outright, ensuring funds are available for maintenance and common area care.
“We will have enough money every month to make sure that the grass is cut, that the houses are maintained on the outside, that the roads are maintained, that it does not fall into disrepair,” he said.
Delaware
Judge rejects new attempt to stall upstate school tax bills pending Supreme Court debate
Delaware property reassessment: How did we get here?
Delaware only got here after a court ruled its previous reassessment and property tax model violated its own constitution. Now, messy or not, results of the reassessment shift tax burden across newly determined fair market values.
A judge has rejected another motion to stall school tax bills in New Castle County tied to the recent property values reassessment.
The ruling issued Nov. 4 rejects the request by a coalition of local landlords and lodging businesses to further delay the issuance of new tax bills while they appeal a court ruling from the final week of October.
That ruling upheld school districts’ plans to charge different tax rates to residential versus non-residential properties for this taxing year. That coalition of business interests had sued the state, county and school districts, arguing so-called split rates are unconstitutional and that it would harm their businesses and by extension, their rent-paying tenants.
Last week, after expedited litigation ahead of the pending due date for taxes, Vice Chancellor Lori Will rejected the business coalitions’ legal claims. That set the county back on track to issue new, split-rate tax bills on behalf of school districts.
The ruling: Why a judge upheld lawmakers’ property tax reassessment relief law for homeowners
After the ruling, the coalition asked Will to again delay those bills while they appeal her ruling to the Delaware Supreme Court. Will’s latest ruling rejects that requested stay and leaves the county on track to issue new bills in the coming weeks.
Why the judge rejected the request
Will weighed four legal factors in assessing the plaintiffs’ request: the likelihood that their appeal would be successful, the potential of irreparable injury to the plaintiffs if they stay isn’t granted, whether other parties would be harmed absent a stay and whether the public interest would be harmed if they stay is granted.
The plaintiffs argued the new, split rates that shift greater tax burden on businesses would cause irreparable harm to their businesses, triggering accelerated loan repayments, diverting money from their operations and leading to the loss of business opportunities and potential foreclosures.
Will rejected this. She noted the Supreme Court is set to hear the appeal of the decision on a similarly expedited manner next week and that would be before the earliest possible issuance of new tax bills on Nov. 18.
She added that the potential harm cited is speculative.
Behind the upset: Why is Delaware’s angst over reassessment, tax changes so centered on New Castle County?
She did agree that the legal matters at hand are novel and present substantial legal questions, which she found favors a stay.
But regarding the harm to public interest and others if the stay was granted, Will noted a stay would just cause further confusion among taxpayers, and delayed bills are depriving the county and school districts of $549 million in revenue that translates into $8 million in investment income over a 60-day period.
“The public interest lies in resolving this uncertainty, not extending it,” Will wrote.
How Delaware got here and what’s next
This tax season is the first since a court-ordered reassessment of the property values that are married with local school, county and municipality taxing rates to calculate individuals’ bills.
In New Castle County, the reassessment of these property values − the first that’s been done for decades − shifted a greater portion of the overall tax burden onto residential properties, leading to higher-than-expected bills for those taxpayers.
Following outcry, state lawmakers convened a special session in August and passed a law to allow school districts to charge different, higher tax rates to non-residential properties to shift the overall tax burden back closer to the share of residential versus non-residential before the assessment. This would give homeowners a break on the tax bills that went out earlier this summer.
The issuance of those split-rate bills was delayed by the lodging-businesses’ lawsuit.
The rejection of the stay means that the county will move forward issuing split-rate tax bills, which Will’s order states will come no earlier than Nov. 18, and the Delaware Supreme Court will hear oral arguments on the plaintiffs’ appeal of her initial ruling on Nov. 10.
Recent: Senate lawmakers set to reconvene for special session on Nov. 6 after property tax ruling
Meanwhile, the Delaware General Assembly has called a special session for Nov. 6 in which they will consider extending the deadline for payment of taxes given this year’s chaotic tax season.”
Contact Xerxes Wilson at (302) 324-2787 or xwilson@delawareonline.com.
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