Delaware
Lunch With a Purpose supports Higher Ground Outreach
Lunch With a Purpose/Coastal Delaware held its first event of 2024 Jan. 10 at the Atlantic Sands in Rehoboth Beach, hosted by Higher Ground Outreach Inc.
The luncheon was opened by Director Cheryl Mitchell, who brought attendees up to date on the activities of two previous luncheon hosts. Run Saniyah Run loaded up its vehicles with the in-kind donations from the December lunch and paid a visit to the Howard T. Ennis School in Georgetown, delivering sensory toys, art supplies and clothing. The children were very appreciative and very excited to receive the new items at holiday time. The October 2023 lunch host, Fostering Wishes, thanked Lunch With a Purpose/Coastal Delaware and the supporting communities for its most successful holiday gift drive ever to deliver gifts to Delaware children in foster care.
Higher Ground Outreach Director Lou Hernandez, along with spouse and co-founder April Morehouse, spoke about the outreach work and activities at the Higher Ground House in Georgetown. The day center provides food, clothing, shower facilities, programs and help to the homeless in Sussex County. Since November 2022, over $115,000 worth of goods and services have been donated and distributed to individuals in the homeless community.
Although the house is primarily a day center for homeless services, it was opened during the severe storms of Jan. 9, and 30 people came for shelter and safety at night. Also, representatives from Higher Ground Outreach took propane and blankets to the homeless who chose to remain in their tents in the woods instead of seeking indoor shelter. To find out how to help, go to highergroundoutreachinc.org.
The luncheon raised $8,375 cash and $2,550 in in-kind donations. Donations of items to the Food Bank of Delaware totaled 738 pounds.
Rehoboth Art League will be the beneficiary of the Lunch With a Purpose event Wednesday, Feb. 7, at the Clubhouse at Baywood.
For more information, find Lunch With a Purpose/Coastal Delaware on Facebook.
Beginning in February, applications will be accepted for sponsors and nonprofit beneficiaries for the Lunch With a Purpose 2024-25 season, with events beginning in September. To request information, organizations may contact Ruth Pryor at 302-231-8186 or rfcpryor@gmail.com.
Delaware
Delaware taps Code Differently grads to advance thousands of stalled unemployment claims
This story was reported with support from the Delaware Division of Small Business. DSB assists small businesses by providing guidance and advice, helping navigate state permitting processes, increasing access to funding opportunities and connecting owners with strategic partners. Its mission is to help small businesses start, grow and scale in Delaware.
Thousands of Delawareans stuck in a backlog of unemployment claims are finally getting their checks, thanks in part to a group of recent Code Differently graduates.
Mission Backlog, a program that puts recently-trained software engineers to work inside the state’s unemployment system, is a collaboration between the Delaware Department of Labor and the Wilmington-based tech workforce organization. It’s part of the DOL’s Modernization 2.0 strategy, which the department announced on September 30, 2025.
“You naturally feel a sense of urgency, because people are calling and saying, I need to pay my rent,” Delaware Secretary of Labor LaKresha Moultrie told Technical.ly. “Those benefits support everyday basic needs.”
“People are calling and saying, I need to pay my rent. Those benefits support everyday basic needs.” Del. Labor Secretary LaKresha Moultrie
How do people trained for software engineering fit? The logic behind the partnership, according to Code Differently cofounder and CEO Stephanie Eldridge, was about applying an engineering mindset to a complex system.
“Some may look at it as people answering phones, but the way you’re able to drive this backlog down is with people using those logic and critical thinking skills to understand there’s a pattern,” Eldridge said.
That approach mirrors how software engineers are trained to think, she said, even when the work itself isn’t technical in the traditional sense.
The idea for the collaboration goes back to a conversation Secretary Moultrie had with Eldridge earlier last year.
“She has a lot of bright ideas,” Moultrie said of the CEO, whose organization trains people for careers in software engineering and related technical roles. “Organically, through conversation with Stephanie, we decided to take on a [Code Differently] cohort.”
The official Modernization 2.0 plan describes hiring 25 Code Differently graduates as part of the backlog reduction strategy. To move quickly, the department relied on casual and seasonal roles, a more flexible hiring pathway than the formal, bureaucracy-entwined merit process.
The lingering effects of the pandemic, a nationwide issue
Mission Backlog was launched to help clear a lingering backlog of unresolved unemployment insurance claims.
Those claims are intended to function as a short-term safety net, helping workers cover essentials like rent, childcare and groceries after losing a job. When claims go unresolved, those delays can quickly turn into a crisis for households waiting on decisions.
The backlog in Delaware follows a national pattern. When COVID forced shutdowns, unemployment claims surged far beyond what most states’ staffing models and decades-old systems were designed to handle. Some states relied on emergency staffing, including National Guard deployments, to work through the massive backlogs.
Federal oversight agencies later flagged unemployment insurance as a high-risk area, citing legacy technology, heavy manual processing and administrative strain that made it difficult for states to recover once claim volume eased.
Delaware Secretary of Labor LaKresha Moultrie (Courtesy of State of Delaware)Various efforts to modernize state unemployment infrastructure are underway. For example, Kentucky’s state unemployment agency entered a six-year, $55.5 million contract to modernize its unemployment insurance system, expected to be fully functional by 2028.
When Moultrie stepped into her secretary of labor role in January 2025, the strain was still weighing on Delaware’s system.
“Coming in, we had about 7,000 outstanding claims,” she said. Since then, the department reports cutting that number by 40% by the end of 2025. In December, the state said it had reduced the backlog to fewer than 4,000, crediting workflow changes and staffing initiatives tied to Modernization 2.0.
Moultrie said the department is on track to be fully caught up by the end of the first quarter. State leaders are already looking beyond unemployment claims, exploring whether the same approach could be deployed inside other agencies.
Looking ahead, the challenge will be sustaining gains once the backlog is cleared. Delaware leaders have described the work as an early phase of a longer modernization effort, one that other agencies are now watching closely.
Ultimately, Eldridge said, the most meaningful part of Mission Backlog is who’s doing the work.
“The people that are part of this, who come to us, are unemployed,” Eldridge said. “They have been in the place of people that they’re now trying to to help.”
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Delaware
Wilmington community steps up to help animal shelter after heat stops working
A community in Wilmington, Delaware, stepped up and helped a local animal shelter after their building’s heat stopped working on Saturday, Jan. 31, 2026.
The Humane Animal Partners in Wilmington put out a message on Saturday seeking urgent help for the more than 20 dogs and puppies staying at its facility, writing in part, “Now more than ever, we are in desperate need of towels, blankets, comforters, and sheets to help keep our pups warm!”
The team told NBC10 that their dog adoption room went down to around 40 degrees and they were rotating dogs in and out of small areas with utility heaters. However, people in the community began answering their call for help within minutes and showed up with arms full of donations.
“It’s freezing outside, so why not assist people that need it, and animals that need it,” said Alexandra Pantanero, of Wilmington.
The shelter eventually had so much donations that they had piles up to the ceiling.
“I would say thousands,” said Kristen Solge – Humane animal partnership. “We have sleeping bags, beddings, towels sheets, space heaters, treats, of course. I think our most interesting would be the fire place somebody donated. It’s been really overwhelming and great.”
Solge said the heat is expected to be fixed by Monday, but the help is something they will never forget.
“It’s incredible. Anytime our community can come together and support us we are extremely grateful,” Solge said. “It also restores our faith in humanity.”
Delaware
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