Delaware
Take in art exhibits on the water with a proposed floating gallery on the Delaware River

Philadelphia is a metropolis enriched in tradition and humanities. Town will quickly be residence to a brand new attraction, a floating artwork gallery on the Delaware River.
Native structure agency Atkin Olshin Schade Architects is designing a proposed two-story 15,000 square-foot gallery by Philadelphia Up to date.
The gallery shall be moored between piers at Cherry and Race streets. As well as, the cellular artwork gallery will use tugboats to drift throughout the river throughout components of New Jersey and presumably as much as New York.
The floating gallery will embody a foyer, visitor providers, galleries, efficiency areas, a studio, a classroom, places of work, and a restaurant. As well as, the gallery could have photo voltaic panels to supply all of the power wanted.
Philadelphia Up to date, an area artwork group, based in 2016 by Harry Philbrick, raised cash to get an idea for the gallery; nevertheless, to construct it, it should elevate one other $20 to $25 million in funding.
Philbrick drew inspiration for the floating gallery from Fairmount Water Works, the floating water workshop run by the Philadelphia Water Division.
“I assumed, ‘My goodness, in the event you can have a floating classroom, why could not you’ve gotten a floating gallery?’” Philbrick mentioned, based on the Inquirer.
The design for the proposed gallery has already acquired recognition. It acquired an award from the American Institute of Architects, Pennsylvania COTE Quotation for environmental design excellence.
The quotation mentioned, “The Floating Gallery’s fast entry to the river serves as an mental anchor for curatorial applications and permits native artists to make use of water as a medium.” “Along with its potential to supply an area for artists to share their work, the ability’s location on the river creates alternatives for guests to be taught in regards to the methods their lives are linked to the waterway.”
There may be fairly a bit of labor to do earlier than development even begins. Architects from Atkin Olshin Schade mentioned there are about eight months left of design work earlier than plans will be accepted for permits. Following that, development will take roughly 18 months. Nevertheless, Philbrick mentioned he’s prepared to attend for the fundraising market to open, so there isn’t a timeline on when the gallery will open.
Philadelphia Up to date showcases town’s visible, efficiency, and spoken artwork. The group’s mission is to “be a valued associate with the folks of Philadelphia, creating shared arts experiences that strengthen our particular person and group bonds.”

Delaware
Del Gov. Matt Meyer proposes raising taxes, fees in budget ‘reset’ speech

The governor’s recommended budget includes $937 million for capital improvements, $255 million for transportation projects, $83 million in Grant-In-Aid funding and a $60 million supplemental bill. It calls for investments in areas like housing, education and healthcare.
Meyer is calling for emergency funding for school districts and charters with large numbers of students who are failing to read at a proficient level. He declared a “literacy emergency” in Delaware earlier this year after 8th-grade reading scores dropped to a 27-year low. He is also proposing investing $3 million directly into classrooms while also raising $3 million from private donors to put into the effort as a pilot program.
His proposal also calls for a $12 million increase for affordable housing initiatives, including $6 million for state rental assistance. The plan includes reducing homelessness and streamlining the process for constructing affordable housing.
“I like to say the rent is still too damn high,” Meyer said. “There are 50,000 Delawareans that are rent burdened, meaning they pay more than 30% of their income for housing.”
Meyer’s budget spends $85.5 million on Medicaid and sets aside about $22 million to offset potential federal spending cuts. Delaware and other states have seen federal funding freezes since President Donald Trump has taken office, and the members of the state’s congressional delegation say Republicans plan to cut Medicaid spending.
State Rep. Jeffrey Spiegelman, R-Clayton, said he was concerned that creating the new tax brackets would hurt small businesses at a time when the state was facing economic strain.
“I appreciate the governor mentioning that we want to do all of these things for small businesses,” he said. “We want to get regulation out of the way. We want to take a look at some of these land deserts, these properties that can be developed a little easier, make them shovel-ready. And all these things are great. But at the same time, we’re also turning around saying, ‘Hey, small (and) medium manufacturing firms, we’re going to tax you more to pay for these other things.’”
House Minority Leader Tim Dukes, R-Laurel, said there were things about Meyer’s recommended budget he liked, such as money going into classrooms, using Artificial Intelligence as an educational tool, and housing initiatives.
“The question I think that we’re all left with is, how do you pay for it all?” he asked. “That’s where we’re going to have to kind of go back to the drawing board and figure out what our true initiatives are and what we want to get accomplished here in this fiscal year as we’re laying out the budget for 2026.”
Delaware
Medical school in Sussex County? Leaders weigh in on Del. doctor shortage

Weeks said there’s just one primary care physician per 2,100 Sussex residents. That’s a significantly higher ratio than in Kent and New Castle counties.
Local leaders believe that bringing a medical school to Sussex County could be part of the solution. State Sen. Russell Huxtable, who represents the 6th District, said a medical school could help attract more doctors to a place that desperately needs them.
“One of the thoughts that people are having is if we establish a medical school in the fastest-growing county where we have additional challenges as far as health care’s concerned … it could help recruit those folks,” he said. “The three hospitals that are in Sussex County would be a great place for those folks to have their residencies, and it could help build the network of medical capacity within the county.”
While a medical school could help, Weeks emphasized that building one from the ground up is not realistic. Instead, the study suggested a partnership with an existing institution to open a branch campus and for hospitals in the area to support each other.
“What it did suggest, and it’s been done in several places around the country, is you align yourself with a current medical school that would consider opening … a branch campus,” Weeks said. “The critical infrastructure element, if you will, for a medical school [branch] is clinical rotations, clinical practice to get into a hospital and actually work with patients.”
The study found that no single health care system in the county — Beebe Healthcare, Bayhealth or TidalHealth — has enough resources on its own to support a medical school. However, if these three systems collaborate and combine their clinical resources for education, they would have the necessary capacity to make it possible, according to the study.
Despite enthusiasm for the idea, finding the money to build and sustain a medical school remains a major challenge.
“Probably the biggest challenge is just simply money,” Weeks said. “It’s just simply the money to build a medical school, simply the money to help the hospitals grow their medical education programs. Those two things, just the financing alone, that’s kind of a big lift.”
Delaware
Alarm Bells Ring as Delaware 'Radically' Shifts More Power to Corporate Insiders | Common Dreams

While Democratic Gov. Matt Meyer declared that “Delaware is the best place in the world to incorporate your business, and Senate Bill 21 will help keep it that way,” critics reiterated concerns about the corporate-friendly state legislation he signed this week.
The Delaware House of Representatives sent the Senate-approved S.B. 21 to Meyer’s desk on Tuesday in a 32-7 vote, with two members absent. The Delaware Business Timesreported that the governor “arrived in Dover to sign the measure into law less than two hours after it passed,” and “the bill signing was closed to the press.”
The bill sailed through the Delaware General Assembly despite anti-monopoly, economic, and legal experts blasting it as a “corporate insider power grab” and accusing state legislators of choosing “billionaire insiders—like Elon Musk and Mark Zuckerberg—over pension funds, retirement savers, and other investors.”
Delaware Working Families Party (WFP) political director Karl Stomberg said in a Wednesday statement that “at a time when rank-and-file Democrats across the country are begging their leaders to stand up to” President Donald Trump and Musk, his billionaire adviser, Democratic lawmakers in the state “just gave Musk a $56 billion handout.”
That’s a reference to Musk’s 2018 compensation package for his electric vehicle maker, Tesla, which a Delaware judge ruled against, prompting the richest billionaire on Earth to ditch the state and encourage other business leaders to do the same. Fears of a potential “Dexit” led to lawmakers’ frantic effort to pass S.B. 21.
“The Working Families Party has been standing up against this proposed bill for weeks now, and we recognize the need to fight back against corporate overreach in our government,” said Stomberg. “WFP electeds proposed serious amendments to address our concerns with the bill that would protect the people of Delaware, but the Democrats chose to side with Musk and vote them down.”
“This bill is an indictment of the failed Delaware Way, which continues to allow big corporations and the ultrawealthy like Elon Musk and Mark Zuckerberg to enrich themselves at the expense of working people,” added Stomberg.
Zuckerberg is the CEO of Meta, Facebook and Instagram’s parent company. CNBC recently revealed that “a day after The Wall Street Journal published its story on Meta considering a Delaware departure, Meyer, who was brand new to the job, convened an online meeting with attorneys from law firms that have represented Meta, Musk, Tesla, and others in shareholder disputes in the state, according to public records obtained by CNBC. Other attendees included members of the Delaware Legislature.”
“The following day, records show, Meyer invited a second group to meet with him and new Secretary of State Charuni Patibanda-Sanchez. That invitation went to Kate Kelly, Meta’s corporate secretary, and to Dan Sachs, the company’s senior national director of state and local policy,” according to CNBC. “The invite also went to James Honaker, an attorney with Morris Nichols, a firm that’s represented Meta in federal court in Delaware, and to William Chandler, former chancellor of the Delaware Court of Chancery, who is now part of Wilson Sonsini’s Delaware litigation practice.”
Just weeks after those meetings, the governor urged state lawmakers to swiftly pass S.B. 21. The Lever‘s Luke Goldstein wrote Wednesday that “the timing of the emails obtained by CNBC reveals clear motivations driving the current law which was rushed before the Legislature last month by the new governor: to let top executives off the hook for legal liabilities.”
In earlier reporting, Goldstein highlighted that “Delaware, which has long been perceived as a billionaire playground and corporate tax haven, is the incorporation home to more than 60% of all Fortune 500 companies. That means, if enacted, the wide-ranging regulatory handouts in the bill will have sweeping consequences for corporate behavior across the country.”
The Lever’s founder, David Sirota, on Wednesday lamented the limited attention the Delaware law is receiving, compared with a major national security breach involving several top Trump officials’ unsecure group chat about war plans. As he put it, “Cannot overstate how significant this is—while the national media is focused on the D.C. drama, a group of Democrats off the radar in a tiny state just radically shifted more power to the planet’s largest corporations via world-changing legislation.”
Daniel Hanley, senior legal analyst at the Open Markets Institute, said Wednesday that “the Delaware lawmakers that enacted S.B. 21 are lapdogs for corporations and Musk. How this one state came to control practically all of American corporate law is a long story, but regardless, Congress can and should take the power away.”
-
News1 week ago
Vance to Lead G.O.P. Fund-Raising, an Apparent First for a Vice President
-
News1 week ago
Trump Administration Ends Tracking of Kidnapped Ukrainian Children in Russia
-
Business1 week ago
Egg Prices Have Dropped, Though You May Not Have Noticed
-
Technology1 week ago
Chip race: Microsoft, Meta, Google, and Nvidia battle it out for AI chip supremacy
-
World1 week ago
Commission warns Alphabet and Apple they're breaking EU digital rules
-
News1 week ago
Trump’s Ending of Hunter Biden’s Security Detail Raises Questions About Who Gets Protection
-
News1 week ago
Zelenskyy says he plans to discuss Ukraine ceasefire violations in a call with Trump
-
Movie Reviews1 week ago
‘Novocaine’ Movie Review – InBetweenDrafts