Delaware
Delaware’s legal marijuana industry on hold as FBI stifles background check process
Cannabis industry protests delayed openings for recreational businesses
Supporters of legal cannabis gathered in Dover to call on lawmakers to allow recreational marijuana businesses to open.
The bumpy road to legal recreational marijuana businesses in Delaware hit another roadblock.
The FBI denied the Delaware Office of the Marijuana Commissioner’s request for a service code to complete legally required fingerprinting for everyone who was selected for a marijuana business license. The state office said the FBI denied the request because it wants the law to lay out exactly who requires a background check.
The FBI service code is necessary to conduct the fingerprinting part of the background check. Without it, no one can move on to the next steps of their remaining applications. The state marijuana office said it is working to propose new legislation to amend Title 4 of Delaware’s code “expeditiously” to add the necessary wording that would make the FBI happy. It has not found a legislator to introduce a bill with these changes yet.
The Delaware Division of Alcohol and Tobacco Enforcement is still working through its background checks, which include income tax transcripts, long-term debt obligations, bankruptcies, civil litigation and more for every licensee. The key missing piece is the FBI fingerprinting, which produces the criminal part of the background check.
The requirements for the background checks a few years ago for medical sales and these adult-use recreational sales are virtually the same, the Office of the Marijuana Commissioner said. But it said the FBI wants more specificity in the law for adult-use recreational sales.
Without the FBI-produced criminal records, conditional licenses to operate recreational marijuana businesses will remain in limbo.
Once someone gets a conditional license, they have 18 months to become operational before they can be awarded an active license. Unless there is a good-faith reason they cannot get up and running, the license is rescinded after that time period.
In order for the FBI to perform fingerprinting and national criminal history background checks, it requires state laws to meet the following criteria:
- Require the fingerprinting of applicants
- Authorize the use of FBI records to screen the applicants
- Identify specific categories of people subject to the checks
The last requirement is the sticking point for the FBI’s denial of the current law.
An amendment to the law now has to go through the entire legislative process, stifling the industry for an indefinite amount of time nearly two years after its legalization. Throughout 2024, the state government had the goal to open dispensary doors by this month. The industry, which must be homegrown because it is illegal to transport marijuana over state lines, has yet to get off the ground in Delaware.
For some license holders, this development is adding to their frustrations with the process. Tracee Southerland is a cannabis advocate and holds two social equity licenses for testing facilities in Sussex and New Castle counties. She called the FBI’s denial more than a speed bump.
“Currently, it’s a roadblock because until we get fingerprints, we can’t get our conditional licenses so nothing can move forward,” she said.
She said the state marijuana office told her in an email that she is squared away and needs to complete the background check before she can start to set up her business. Now, with this new delay and the time it takes for marijuana plants to grow, the process could extend for months.
James Brobyn, who owns a medical marijuana dispensary, has his background check completed. However, he wants to welcome recreational customers as soon as he can because of the limited customer base for medical marijuana.
“Everyone’s asleep at the wheel, like no one’s watching,” Brobyn said. “Well, I’m watching. I’ve been trying to scream at this and raise the alarm for a while.”
Cannabis advocates have been calling for Gov. Matt Meyer to appoint a marijuana commissioner to give the agency some power. The state’s first marijuana commissioner, Rob Coupe, stepped down in January. His deputy commissioner, Paul Hyland, has been acting commissioner since then.
A spokesperson for the governor said interviews for the position are underway and that a selection could be announced in the coming weeks. The state Senate must confirm Meyer’s nomination.
Shane Brennan covers New Castle County with a focus on Newark and surrounding communities. Reach out with ideas, tips or feedback at slbrennan@delawareonline.com. Follow @shanebrennan36 on X, formerly Twitter.
Delaware
Delaware Department of Technology & Information implements CloudNuro SaaS Management Platform
Written by
Distributed by EIN Presswire
Delaware Department of Technology & Information implements CloudNuro to improve its SaaS (Salesforce) governance, cost allocation, and chargeback automation.
— Pratul Patel, Chief Product Officer, CloudNuro
CHICAGO, IL, UNITED STATES, January 9, 2026 /EINPresswire.com/ — CloudNuro, the leader in the Public Sector, State and Local Government for the enterprise SaaS, Cloud, and AI governance, today announced that it has entered into an agreement with the State of Delaware Department of Technology & Information (DTI) to modernize and unify Salesforce management across the state agencies.
Under this initiative, CloudNuro will deliver a comprehensive SaaS governance using the FinOps Foundation framework – FinOps-for-SaaS for Salesforce license visibility, cost allocation, and chargeback management. The platform will streamline contract ingestion, automate license-to-usage mapping, and support configurable cost models, including markup, license-based allocation, usage-based chargeback, and hybrid structures. The result is a clear, defensible, and auditable view of technology spending across the state environment.
By adopting CloudNuro’s automated workflows and intelligence-driven governance, the State of Delaware is expected to reduce manual administrative effort. The initiative also creates a single source of truth for Salesforce utilization across agencies and departments, strengthening financial oversight and enabling data-driven budgeting.
Key capabilities Delaware will gain include:
• Single-pane-of-glass view of Salesforce subscriptions, usage, users, and costs across the state
• Centralized ingestion of Salesforce contracts, entitlements, and renewals
• Automated mapping of licenses to actual usage patterns
• Configurable chargeback models (license-based, consumption-based, or hybrid)
• Agency-level dashboards for cost transparency and optimization
• Cross-agency visibility into unused, underutilized, or misaligned licenses
• Standardized governance to support audits, procurement workflows and renewal planning
“We’re proud to support the State of Delaware in bringing financial discipline and transparency to Salesforce governance across agencies,” said Shyam Kumar, CEO of CloudNuro. “This engagement reflects the growing need for accountable, data-driven technology management in the public sector.”
This engagement reflects CloudNuro’s expanding role in supporting public sector digital modernization. By providing automated governance, FinOps-ready cost insights, and seamless alignment with procurement, IT, and finance operations, CloudNuro helps government organizations strengthen accountability, reduce waste, and streamline complex technology environments. The CloudNuro FinOps platform is used by several large public-sector agencies, including Los Angeles Metro, Cook County, DuPage County, the Greater Orlando Aviation Authority, and the City of Aurora.
For public-sector IT leaders, CloudNuro delivers a modernized approach to SaaS and cloud governance – purpose-built for the scale, rigor, and compliance needs of state operations.
About CloudNuro Corp:
CloudNuro is a leader in Enterprise SaaS Management Platforms, giving enterprises and government unmatched visibility, governance, and cost optimization. Recognized twice in a row by Gartner in the SaaS Management Platforms Magic Quadrant and named a Leader in the Info-Tech SoftwareReviews Data Quadrant, CloudNuro is trusted by several public sector and government agencies, including Cook County, DuPage County, City of Aurora, Los Angeles Metro, Greater Orlando Aviation Authority, State of Delaware, and Metropolitan Water District of Southern California.
As the only Unified FinOps Platform for the Enterprise, CloudNuro brings AI, SaaS and IaaS management together in a unified view. With a 15-minute setup and measurable results in under 24 hours, CloudNuro gives IT teams a fast path to value.
For more information, visit www.cloudnuro.ai.
Media Contact
Shyam Kumar
CEO, CloudNuro
📞 +1 630-347-0833
✉️ shyam.kumar@cloudnuro.com
🌐 www.cloudnuro.ai
Shyam Kumar
CloudNuro Corp
email us here
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Delaware
Delaware County’s 250th events aim to boost local economy
DELAWARE COUNTY – Delaware County is gearing up for a year-long celebration of the United States’ 250th anniversary, bringing together community partners for a series of events and programs.
Delaware County’s plans for the semiquincentennial
The Delaware County America 250 Commission hosted a “We the People” party to unveil plans for the upcoming celebrations.
The events aim to educate and connect the local community while drawing visitors from outside Philadelphia to explore the area’s rich history.
What they’re saying:
“Delaware County is not just watching from the sidelines, we are proud to be an essential part of a massive regional and national celebration,” said Christine Reuther, Delaware County Council Vice Chair.
Andrea Silva, director of the Delaware County America 250 Commission, highlighted the diverse themes that will be showcased throughout the year.
Celebrating 250 years of history
The backstory:
Friday’s event celebrated Delaware County’s 250-year history, with different tables reflecting various themes.
Attendees included Colonial Farmstead, Penn’s Woods Winery, and Pathways to Freedom.
The programming will feature over 100 events, including the Battle for Independence: Amazing Race to Brandywine and the Irish America 250 Kick Off on Jan. 14.
The celebrations are expected to leave a lasting legacy, with hopes of boosting the local economy.
“We want to see real economic impact for our local businesses as visitors from around the world come to shop on our main streets and stay in our towns and eat in our restaurants,” said Reuther.
What’s next:
This year’s county event specifics can be found here.
The Source: Information from the Delaware County America 250 Commission.
Delaware
Wilmington’s first homicide of 2026 claims life of 19-year-old
How to report a crime to Delaware Crime Stoppers
This video details what Delaware Crime Stoppers is and how to report a crime. 8/25/23
A 19-year-old man was shot dead in Wilmington’s Southbridge neighborhood in the early hours of Jan. 9, police said.
Wilmington officers arriving to the 200 block of S. Claymont St. about 3:30 a.m. found the teen there.
The teen, whom police have not named, was pronounced dead at the scene.
Anyone with information about this shooting should contact Wilmington Police Detective Derek Haines at (302) 576-3656. People can also provide information to Delaware Crime Stoppers at (800) TIP-3333 or delawarecrimestoppers.com.
Violence by the numbers
This is the first homicide reported this year in Delaware, which last year saw a slight drop in all violent killings.
Delaware police reported 52 people being killed in violent crimes in 2025, a drop of nearly 12% when compared with 59 people killed in 2024, according to a Delaware Online/The News Journal database.
While the number of people killed in homicides statewide is down, the number of people killed by gunfire in Delaware was up in 2025 for the third year in a row.
According to the Delaware Online database, 47 were shot dead in Delaware last year. That was one more victim (46) than in 2024, three more (44) than in 2023 and nine more (38) than in 2022.
Despite the increase in gun-related deaths, there were fewer people shot last year in Delaware for the second year in a row.
Police reported 164 people being shot last year in Delaware. The previous year saw 195 people shot and police reported 210 people being shot in 2023.
This was the fewest people shot in Delaware since 2018, when police reported 146 people being shot statewide.
Send tips or story ideas to Esteban Parra at (302) 324-2299 or eparra@delawareonline.com.
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