Delaware
Delmarva Power hosts a career expo for local students – 47abc
SALISBURY, Md. – As part of Energy Week, Delmarva Power showcased career opportunities to local students in our area.
Over 110 students from Sussex and Wicomico counties gathered together for hands-on training and discussion. Senior Line instructor for Delmarva Power Dean Johnson, said options with the company are endless.
“You are exposed to a lot, it’s good for a young kid to see a truck going down a road and recognize it. Hey, that person looks like me, or someone they know from the community doing the work, and say I remember this, and I could be out there and do that.”
Students from Poly Tech, Salisbury Christian, and several other schools to learn about the career opportunities in the company. Christian School Guidance Counselor, Kasi Lyndaker said, this will be beneficial to students who don’t want to take the college route.
“In the last few years, I have seen a big push where students are asking more about trades, and what that looks like. Due to the cost of college, or because they feel college is not the right fit, or in their family dynamic, maybe they can’t leave home. There is a multitude of different reasons why.” Said Lyndaker.
Several stations were at the expo showcasing a variety of different roles within the company. Electricians, substations, and linemen work was all demonstrated to students.
Senior Supervisor Training Specialist, Andy Boulden, said working in the substation department, no day is the same when dealing with substation work. “Substations are very diversified, you could be wiring up something one day, setting up a transfer with a crane another, or setting up breakers; that’s what attracted me to it, it’s not monotonous, doing the same thing every day.”
Boulden encourages students to get involved because jobs like these, can give students purpose. “If I could come from being a plumber, all the way up to working high voltage through the training program here at Delmarva Power, to being a trainer here today, the possibilities for anyone to get to where they want to go in this company are endless.” Said, Boulden.
Delaware
Sussex County blocks state-approved plan for medical marijuana biz to open store
Chip Guy, the Sussex County spokesman, said Stark was mistaken in believing the county was awarding her a building permit.
“To be clear, the county DID NOT issue a building permit,’’ Guy said in an emailed response to questions about The Farm’s bid to put astore in Sussex.
Guy said an official “notified the applicant that the building plan review [tenant fit-out] had cleared initial steps. That is but one step that is part of the process in determining whether to issue a building permit in the first place.”
Guy said the county’s “due diligence’’ found that The Farm’s location simply did not qualify for approval.
Stark remains flabbergasted by the decision, saying she had relied on the state’s approval of the location as well as the state’s identified patient need for that area of Sussex.
“In my mind, when they approved that location and we started spending money and had rent to pay, and drawings put together, and had to start seeking other approvals and permits, it was an established use,” Stark said.
Robert Coupe, the state’s marijuana commissioner, said the state’s hands are tied as long as the current state law remains in effect.
“There’s nothing for me to do. They have to fight that fight,’’ Coupe said of Stark.
Coupe, whose office will soon issue 30 licenses for retail recreational marijuana stores statewide, added that Sussex’s “three-mile buffer, as it currently exists, definitely presents challenges for our selected applicants” in Sussex, where 10 retail licenses will be granted.
“If it appears that it will be difficult for them to find areas to operate, probably a focus for them will be on specific towns that have said they will allow operations,” he said.
Guy, who has not agreed to do any interviews on the Sussex law, wrote last month that he disagrees with the assertion that no parcels exist in unincorporated Sussex for retail stores. Yet he would not identify any permitted sites, or consent to a request by WHYY News to analyze the zoning map to find any.
Stark said she has spoken to a lawyer about her options, and if her efforts fail, is also considering whether to find a site elsewhere in Sussex, perhaps within the town limits of Frankford, which hasn’t banned cannabis stores.
“It’s ridiculous,’’ Stark said of her company’s predicament in Sussex. “And more people just need to know it’s ridiculous.”
Delaware
U.S. House GOP bans Delaware’s U.S. Rep. from same-sex bathrooms
From Philly and the Pa. suburbs to South Jersey and Delaware, what would you like WHYY News to cover? Let us know!
Rep. Nancy Mace, R-South Carolina, has introduced legislation that would bar transgender women from using women’s restrooms and other facilities on federal property.
It comes just a few days after she filed a resolution intended to institute a bathroom ban in parts of the U.S. Capitol complex that she said was targeted at Delaware Congresswoman-elect Sarah McBride, a Democrat, who First State voters elected to serve as the first openly transgender person in Congress just two weeks ago.
Mace said to reporters Monday that McBride, who she misgendered during her comments, didn’t “belong in women’s spaces, bathrooms and locker rooms.”
While not specifically mentioning Mace’s bills, House Speaker Mike Johnson issued a statement Wednesday dictating that House policy in January would ban transgender women from using facilities — like bathrooms and locker rooms — that do not correspond with the sex they were assigned at birth.
“All single-sex facilities in the Capitol and House Office Buildings — such as restrooms, changing rooms, and locker rooms — are reserved for individuals of that biological sex,” Johnson said in a statement. It was not clear how the policy would be enforced.
“Each Member office has its own private restroom, and unisex restrooms are available throughout the Capitol,” he added.
Mace’s resolution, which she said she wanted to be included in the rules package for the next Congress, requires the House sergeant at arms to enforce the ban.
Delaware
Delaware Co. woman charged with DUI after crashing into Pennsylvania state police vehicle
Wednesday, November 20, 2024 10:33PM
A Drexel Hill woman has been charged with DUI after investigators say she crashed into a Pennsylvania State Police vehicle on I-476.
RIDLEY TWP., Pa. (WPVI) — A Drexel Hill woman has been charged with DUI after investigators say she crashed into a Pennsylvania State Police vehicle on I-476.
Police say Sara Lawver crashed into the troopers’ patrol car in Ridley Township just after 11:30 p.m. Tuesday.
Troopers were conducting a traffic stop at the time and barely avoided being hit.
No one was injured.
Lawver also faces charges of reckless driving and recklessly endangering another person.
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