Delaware
Gov. Matt Meyer kicks off July 4th weekend with ice cream treat
Will the July 4 heat wave slow travel in the Philly region?
Philadelphia heat wave may delay holiday travel: highway, SEPTA and Amtrak disruptions; check schedules, stay hydrated.
Delaware Gov. Matt Meyer kicked off the July Fourth weekend with a sweet treat – for himself and the locals around him.
Meyer has been traveling across the state on a bike tour, moving from Lewes to Georgetown on July 2. On July 3, for his first stop, he chose to visit Marmy’s Creamery in Smyrna and treated others to ice cream on him.
“It was a really nice event for the community,” Smyrna’s Rich Wieland said. “It was just something different to do on a hot day.”
According to Wieland, around 50 people made it out for the event, all eager to welcome the governor. Meyer also began his morning with ice cream on July 2, as Uncle David’s Ice Cream truck of Lewes brought treats for Meyer and about a dozen bike riders who chose to travel with him.
The governor told the Cape Gazette that the bike tour was an opportunity to highlight some of the great pieces of Delaware.
“This is a great opportunity for us to come together for a few days and celebrate the beauty that is our state and our country,” Meyer said.
Meyer will head to Odessa by the end of July 3 and then continue to make his way up north on July 4.
Adam Denn is an intern reporter for Delaware Online/The News Journal. You can reach him at apdenn@delawareonline.com.
Delaware
Delaware Man Killed by Falling Camel
A routine chore involving a camel turned fatal for a Delaware man this week. State police say a 65-year-old man died Tuesday evening in Felton after the animal fell onto him while he was tending to it, NBC Philadelphia reports. The man was pronounced dead at the scene. The San Diego Zoo says most domesticated camels are dromedaries, which can weigh up to 1,320 pounds when grown, per WBOC. Longtime friend Torres Hector identified the victim to the Delaware News Journal as Juan Caride, who ran a pawn shop in Dover with his wife, Toni Caride.
In 2014, the News Journal reported on the Carides’ farm, home to 20 horses, nine donkeys, and three camels named Batman, Bubbles, and Chocolate. Tori Caride told the newspaper that the camels, which they had raised since they were babies, were her husband’s idea. “My husband just thought it would be neat to get a camel and he bought Batman,” she said. “He was about a week old when we got him and we felt that he was lonely, so he said I better get a couple more for him. So we went and found two females that were the same age and we got those for him.” Michael Lewis at the state Department of Agriculture says camels are treated like regular livestock in Delaware, meaning no special permit is required.
Delaware
Wilmington fire displaces 20, damages 6 homes on Clayton Road; cause under investigation
WILMINGTON, DE – The Delaware State Fire Marshal is investigating a four-alarm fire that broke out Thursday, July 2, damaging six homes and displacing 20 people on the 1500 block of Clayton Road in Wilmington.
What we know:
The fire was reported shortly after 3:00 p.m. and quickly escalated to four alarms due to the heat, according to the Delaware State Fire Marshal.
Multiple fire companies responded and found heavy fire at the rear of the residences.
Several firefighters were evaluated by EMS and New Castle County Paramedics at the scene.
One firefighter was taken to a hospital for heat exhaustion.
Deputy State Fire Marshals determined the fire started under a deck at the rear of one of the homes.
The fire displaced 20 people from their homes and required a large emergency response, highlighting the risks firefighters face during extreme weather.
The American Red Cross is providing support to the families who lost their homes, showing the importance of community resources during emergencies.
What’s next:
The Delaware State Fire Marshal’s office is continuing to investigate the cause of the fire. Updates will be provided as more information becomes available.
What we don’t know:
The specific cause of the fire has not been determined, and the names of the families affected have not been released.
The Source: Information from the Delaware State Fire Marshal.
Delaware
County councilman says Newark data center plan paused after deal
Delaware Leaders Confront Crushing Utility Costs
Gov. Meyer urges PSC to freeze rates as Delaware tackles Delmarva’s returns, solar delays, data centers and nuclear options.
This story was produced by Spotlight Delaware as part of a partnership with Delaware Online/The News Journal. For more about Spotlight Delaware, visit www.spotlightdelaware.org.
New Castle County Councilman Tim Sheldon says he recently brokered a handshake deal to pause a data center development project near Newark.
Sheldon, who represents the Newark area, said the deal followed private negotiations with the developer’s prominent Delaware attorney, Shawn Tucker, who told him the New York-based developer behind the project, Shelbourne, agreed to consider the Newark site for uses other than a data center. “This is my art of the deal,” Sheldon said.
But the deal is dependent on the county finalizing an approval for an exploratory plan application from the developer, which would grandfather the land into zoning rules that existed prior to this year, Sheldon said.
That means the developer would not have to follow the county’s recently-passed data center regulations if the company ultimately decides to build a data center there. Since the property’s zoning already allows data center projects, the county likely does not have the legal authority to deny that exploratory plan application. An email sent between Sheldon and Tucker, dated June 10, shows that Tucker agreed to pause the data center project under those conditions.
Neither Tucker nor Shelbourne representatives responded to requests for comment about this deal.
Last year, Shelbourne filed documents with the county that showed plans to demolish the existing White Clay Center office and industrial buildings and construct a three-building data center campus that covered about 850,000 square feet.
After the filing, the plans became wrapped into a larger community backlash in northern Delaware against the growth of the data center industry. Neighbors have voiced fears that such data centers would use too much water and energy, and be too noisy.
Sheldon’s handshake agreement is not binding, and the developer still has the legal right to build a data center.
New Castle County General Manager of Land Use David Culver said he saw the email from Tucker but has no other information.
Sheldon noted that the agreement is between him and Tucker — and not with the county as a party. He further stated that if he decides not to run for reelection in 2028 or loses to a challenger, “it may be null and void.”
“If I’m not there, there’s no promises,” Sheldon said.
Asked if he would try to secure an official county deal barring a data center on that property, Sheldon said the project is “too far in the process” and he doesn’t want to risk the progress he’s made.
He said he will instead work to find another company to lease or buy the land. He said in a text after the interview that the deal is “the best I could’ve got.”
“Nobody else has even done this much and it seems like I’m getting hammered because I did something,” Sheldon said in the text.
Sheldon said an Amtrak train maintenance site will open next door to the White Clay Center property in the next few years, and he thinks the track upgrades needed for that project could make the neighboring site more attractive for manufacturing.
Delaware Public Media reported last week that Alstom, which conducts maintenance on Amtrak’s high-speed Acela trains – will open a new facility on 1601 Ogletown Road, next to the White Clay Center office and industrial buildings.
Alstom did not immediately respond to requests for comment.
What’s the status of data centers in Delaware?
Beyond Shelbourne’s proposal, several other building projects proposed in Delaware could become data centers.
The biggest is Project Washington, a 1.2-gigawatt data center campus planned for the land just north of the Delaware City Refinery. It would use enough energy to power almost a million homes.
That plan faced a major setback in March after a state board unanimously upheld Environmental Secretary Greg Patterson’s decision that the project is not permitted under Delaware’s Coastal Zone Act, a landmark law designed to limit heavy industry along the state’s shorelines.
Developer Starwood Digital Ventures was expected to appeal that decision, but it is unclear whether it will. Representatives from Starwood did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
Another potential data center plan is slated for land near the southern approach to the St. Georges Bridge off U.S. Route 13. The St. Georges project includes the land that hosts the popular Halloween attraction Frightland.
County records show plans for three distribution centers covering 3.6 million square feet on farmland, along with 150 homes.
The records say the buildings will be warehouses. But project engineer Verdantas also submitted letters to the county suggesting that the buildings could be a data center campus.
Delmarva Power filings this winter showed two other potential data center projects. But Technical.ly reported that only one of those projects is still on the table, which would be located in Harrington. City officials are still in the preliminary stages of discussions about that plan, according to the report.
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