Delaware
Utility costs are ‘crushing’ in Delaware. What leaders are doing about it
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.
Between energy costs spiking last year and higher Delmarva Power electricity rates kicking off earlier this month, utility affordability remains top of mind for consumers and lawmakers.
In a press conference June 15, Gov. Matt Meyer called on the Public Service Commission to “freeze rates immediately” ahead of an interim hike set for July, as well as implement penalties for delayed action on solar power. The Democrat also announced he will join a petition to stop the “gouging” on ratepayers with the company’s 10.5% return on equity, or money invested in power infrastructure.
Delmarva Power said in a statement that afternoon it shares these affordability concerns, but investments have already been made to “strengthen reliability.” The company said it remains focused on efforts to drive down its supply costs, which it argues have driven 90% of consumer bill increases since 2024.
Meyer’s calls also join several bills passed last year and this session – ranging from rate regulations to expanding eligibility for energy credits – with many already signed into law. Yet, residents remain frustrated and unlikely to feel any impact quickly.
Looking even farther ahead, lawmakers are also still considering future energy sources to help relieve heavy consumer burden.
So, what have Delaware leaders done so far – and what’s left to tackle?
What legislation has passed, with more still on the table
There are 14 pieces of legislation centered on energy and utilities now filed in the General Assembly in 2026 alone, according to state Sen. Stephanie Hansen.
Some highlights include:
- Senate Bill 239, which lifts the 8% cap on net energy metering
- Senate Bill 326, which looks to limit Delmarva’s infrastructure spending, enhance rate transparency and utility communication and caps how much utilities can claim with interim rates, to name a few provisions. This bill builds off previous legislation signed into law last year, which limits yearly capital costs retrievable by Delmarva, as previously reported by Delaware Online/The News Journal.
- House Bill 310, which would exempt data centers from corporate tax breaks or fee reductions granted to new businesses under the state’s Blue Collar Jobs Act, according to Hansen, a co-sponsor of the bill.
- House Bill 233, which mandates certain utilities to set “a separate rate class” for large energy users. Primary bill sponsor Rep. Frank Burns told attendees during a June 15 press conference this bill would take all the expenses created by large-scale data centers, “puts them in a bucket” and ensures those centers pay that price. Without it, the Pike Creek Democrat said, Delawareans would see an estimated 80% increase on their electric bills.
Six of those bills – including Senate Bill 210, Senate Bill 239, Senate Bill 276, Senate Bill 321, House Bill 269 and House Concurrent Resolution 94 – have cleared both chambers.
Two of these bills, Senate Bill 210 and House Bill 269, were signed by Meyer earlier this spring, offering solutions related to interconnections.
Senate Bill 210 – also known as the legislature’s “interconnection bill,” according to Hansen – states that so long as a point of interconnection is located within the Delmarva Power region and under their jurisdiction, it can be connected. This will make room for 10 community solar-related projects, a total of roughly 30 megawatts, to come online with enough to power approximately 30,000 homes, said the Middletown Democrat.
In turn, House Bill 269 clarifies interconnection rules for electric suppliers must match with the most recent procedures from the Interstate Renewable Energy Council.
On June 10, Meyer also signed Senate Bills 239 and 276 into law, removing the 8% cap and allowing electric cooperatives discretion to provide electricity to “large load” electric users.
Others, like House Bill 310, have managed to clear their chamber of origin, according to Hansen, while some have yet to appear before committee.
Lawmakers have also largely focused on cost and the potential impact of data centers.
These centers often require mass amounts of infrastructure to operate, such as coal and natural gas power plants, according to the Environmental and Energy Studies Institute. Additionally, because they have “an immense electricity demand,” they require new substations to function, which in turn can cost a lot of money to build, according to Russell Zerbo of the Clean Air Council.
As a result, lawmakers have not only focused on utility costs, but also how data centers could impact ratepayers and overall reliability, Hansen said.
Delaware has faced its own share of data center proposals. One proposal, called Project Washington, was set to occupy roughly 6 million square feet over two campuses in Delaware City, with approximately 11 buildings and several neighboring electrical fields.
The proposal faced a major setback, however, when the Coastal Zone Industrial Control Board upheld the state Department of Natural Resources and Environmental Control’s decision to bar it this past spring.
What has been done in other states?
Faced with sky-high energy costs, Delaware’s neighbor states have sprung into action.
New Jersey has enacted several initiatives to address utility cost hikes. One of Gov. Mikie Sherrill’s first executive orders froze rate spikes and delivered ratepayer relief.
The second expanded programs to look into new power sources in-state, equating more power with lower costs.
Pennsylvania lawmakers introduced a legislative package with the goal of driving down energy costs on May 1. Efforts include data center regulations, updating the state’s electric grid and pushing for the development of “a virtual power plant,” as reported by the Pennsylvania Independent.
Fellow neighbor Maryland also enacted the Utility RELIEF Act, which aims to save residents at least $150 on energy bills on a yearly basis. The act also requires data centers to cover any expenses related to energy infrastructure adjustments, rather than let Maryland families take the fall.
Delaware similarly has two programs in place: the state Energy Fund and the Delmarva Customer Relief Fund.
The energy fund assists any eligible customers – not including Delmarva customers – if their income falls under 350% of the federal poverty level, or $55,860 for a one-person household.
In contrast, Delmarva’s relief fund provides upward of $500 via Energize Delaware and the United Way of Delaware. This is one of many relief funds and programs available designed to support lower-income consumers across the state.
Among the laws signed by Meyer last year included barring the use of consumer funds for non-utility-related purposes; mandating transparency regarding regional energy grid guidance participation; and ensuring consumers benefit from surplus energy credits.
However, because these bills were just signed into law last year, consumers most likely won’t see the results of some of these bills right away. It takes time to put these regulations in place, according to Dustyn Thompson of the Delaware chapter of the Sierra Club.
Hansen said in a statement that legislators understand supply and demand has been “crushing,” hence why the General Assembly has been acting to get these bills passed and onto Meyer’s desk as soon as possible.
“We’re trying to attack this from many different angles,” she continued during the June 15 press conference on the subject. These angles include direct assistance with paying bills – such as the energy fund – and a greater “systemic approach,” scaling back on how much money utilities ask to be recovered.
The same press conference saw Meyer announcing he will join a petition and call on the Public Service Commission to “freeze rates immediately,” as well as implement penalties for delayed action on solar power.
He also voiced support for several bills headed to his desk.
But the work is far from over.
What more can Delaware do?
While the priority has largely been on costs and data centers, legislators have also directed their attention to other available energy sources.
One effort has been the Delaware Nuclear Energy Feasibility Task Force. Established in 2025, this group is responsible for looking at the benefits, dependability and potential impact of using small modular reactors in the First State.
The task force is scheduled to present its final report by the end of July, detailing a direction for Delaware with this energy source, according to Hansen.
However, when it comes to this and other energy sources, a long road lies ahead.
Take offshore wind, for example. After much back-and-forth last session, lawmakers passed an effort that overturned the Sussex County Council’s rejection of a permit needed for US Wind to build a substation critical to plans to erect more than 100 wind turbines off the Delmarva coast, which went into effect earlier this year.
Despite this, President Donald Trump has remained firmly against wind turbines, even signing an executive order temporarily putting permits, approvals and energy lease sales for offshore wind projects on hold last year.
And while the Delmarva project is ready to go, it is still being held up at the federal level, according to Hansen.
“Rather than spending money to build something, we’re spending that to not build something,” Thompson said.
Even if the federal government supports the project, the Sierra Club leader estimates it will take somewhere between five and six years to get off the ground.
As for natural gas or nuclear energy – considered “the largest source of clean power” in the country, according to the U.S. Department of Energy – Hansen said that can take even longer.
Large natural gas turbines usually come with a four-to-eight year waiting period, according to the lawmaker.
“You can’t just buy them off the shelf,” she said.
Additionally, building a nuclear power plant is a multi-million-dollar undertaking, often with construction challenges and long lead times.
In neighbor state New Jersey, lawmakers also passed a bill that would expand nuclear power throughout the state. However, one expert estimates it could take between 10 and 20 years for that power to go online.
Hansen herself made a similar projection, saying it could take eight to 10 years to get up and running in Delaware, maybe more. So, she said it’s also crucial lawmakers look into energy that won’t require as much time to get online, specifically solar.
Hansen previously backed a bill that would have allowed the use of small, plug‑in solar power systems in the First State earlier this spring, a technology gaining traction as energy costs rise nationwide.
Because it is still a new technology in the United States, and doesn’t have set safety standards in place, the bill is now a resolution, Hansen said.
This resolution requests the Delaware Sustainable Energy Utility and the Natural Resources Department conduct a study on the safety and use of balcony and plug-in solar devices. These entities must share a report on the study by Jan. 26, 2027.
Looking ahead, Hansen said lawmakers need to do everything they can to bring “all-size solar” to the state, whether it be community, utility or rooftop. This will help bring down energy costs in the meantime as lawmakers wait for other energy projects to take off.
Because, as Hansen explained, time is of the essence.
“We need more generation,” she said. “And we need it now.”
(This story has been updated to change a video.)
Olivia Montes covers state government and community impact for Delaware Online/The News Journal. If you have a tip or a story idea, reach out to her at omontes@delawareonline.com.
Delaware
What Delaware’s New Probate Threshold Means for Your Estate Plan
What Delaware’s New Probate Threshold Means for Your Estate Plan
On June 10, 2026, Governor Matt Meyer signed House Bill 333 into law, raising Delaware’s small estate probate threshold from $30,000 to $50,000. The change took effect immediately. Under the new law, an estate valued at $30,000 or less still applies if the decedent died before June 10, 2026. For anyone who dies on or after that date, the threshold is now $50,000.
In practical terms, this means that when a person passes away owning $50,000 or less in assets held solely in their own name, their family may be able to use Delaware’s simplified small estate process instead of opening a formal probate administration through the Register of Wills. The prior $30,000 limit had not been updated since 2005, so this adjustment brings Delaware’s threshold in line with neighboring states like Pennsylvania and Maryland, and is intended to ease the burden on families settling modest estates.
So what does this mean for your estate plan? For most people, not much.
It is a welcome update, and will help some Delaware families, particularly those with smaller estates who might otherwise have faced the time and expense of a formal probate proceeding for what amounts to a car and a bank account. If that describes your situation, this change is good news.
But for the majority of Delaware, the probate threshold remains far below what most people accumulate over a lifetime of homeownership and savings. A $50,000 limit still captures most estates well within the reach of formal probate. Owning a home, and/or holding savings with any meaningful balance, is often enough on its own to exceed the new threshold. The estate planning strategies that made sense before HB 333 still make sense today.
A well-structured plan continues to do its job. A properly funded trust, whether revocable or irrevocable, keeps assets titled outside your individual name and outside the probate process altogether, regardless of what the statutory threshold happens to be. Trusts remain one of the most effective tools available for avoiding probate, maintaining privacy, and controlling how and when your assets pass to the people you love.
Alongside a trust, a current Power of Attorney and Advance Health Care Directive are just as essential. These documents have nothing to do with the probate threshold at all. They govern what happens while you are alive, giving someone you trust the legal authority to manage your finances or make health care decisions on your behalf if you become unable to do so yourself. Without them, your family may find themselves in court seeking guardianship at the exact moment they can least afford the delay.
HB 333 is a sensible, incremental update to a number that had been frozen for two decades. It deserves recognition as good public policy. But it is not a substitute for a thoughtful estate plan, and it does not change the guidance we have long given our clients: build a plan around a Trust, keep your Powers of Attorney and Advance Health Care Directives current, and revisit that plan regularly as your life and assets change.
If you have questions about how this update applies to your specific situation, or if it has been a while since your documents were reviewed, we would welcome the opportunity to talk with you.
Procino-Wells & Woodland, LLC is Delaware’s trusted resource for estate planning, elder law, and estate and trust administration. Serving all of Delaware from offices in Lewes and Seaford, our firm is dedicated exclusively to helping families create comprehensive estate plans, protect assets from long-term care costs, navigate Medicaid and Veterans Aid & Attendance benefits, establish supplemental needs trusts, and administer estates. Our team-based approach ensures every client receives consistent, exceptional service from our award winning attorneys and experienced staff, all women who are passionate about this area of law. Whether you’re planning ahead or need immediate assistance with asset protection, our 46 years of combined attorney experience serves Delaware families through in-person and virtual consultations. Learn more at www.pwwlaw.com.
Delaware
Body of missing 19-year-old tuber recovered from Delaware River in Hunterdon County – WRNJ Radio
ALEXANDRIA TOWNSHIP, N.J. (Hunterdon County) — A 19-year-old Flemington man who went missing in the Delaware River Friday night was found dead Sunday, according to the New Jersey State Police.
State Police Sgt. First Class Charles Marchan said troopers from Troop “C” Kingwood Station were notified at approximately 9:41 p.m. on July 3 of a missing person in the Delaware River in Alexandria Township, Hunterdon County.
Troopers responded to the scene and, with assistance from the New Jersey State Police Marine Services Bureau, Aviation Bureau and Target Hardening Unit, along with multiple other agencies, searched the area but were unable to locate the missing man.
The search resumed July 4 with the Marine Services Bureau but again ended without locating him.
Earlier Sunday, the victim was found by a civilian boater in a shallow area of the Delaware River adjacent to the Riverview Parking Area.
State police identified the victim as Jason Blanco, 19, of Flemington.
According to a preliminary investigation, Blanco got off an inner tube, entered the water and did not resurface.
The investigation remains active, and no additional information was immediately available.
Delaware
Jersey Mike’s is nation’s top food chain, but score a local sandwich
Dover site on Route 13 is between Tasty Crab House and Citizens Bank
The coffee, donut and sandwich chain started in Canada chain and has over 6,000 locations but only about 675 in the United States
After 11 years of Chick-fil-A’s holding the top spot, Jersey Mike’s is now the nation’s top fast-food chain, according to a press release.
In 2025, Jersey Mike’s added 238 new locations around the country and “reached $4.2 billion in systemwide sales,” the release said.
The sub shop first opened on the Jersey Shore boardwalk in 1956. About two decades later, it began expanding and now has more than 4,000 locations open and under development around the country today, including 13 in Delaware.
Delaware is home to plenty of sandwich shops, many of which have been local favorites for years.
Here are a few must-try sandwich spots across the First State.
Capriotti’s
Capriotti’s deserves an honorable mention. Founded in Wilmington in 1976, the sandwich shop has grown into a national chain while staying true to its Delaware roots. Capriotti’s is most known for Bobbie, a sandwich inspired by Thanksgiving dinner. Founders, Lois and Alan Margolet created the signature sandwich at their first shop, naming after their Aunt Bobbie, who made them sandwiches from Thanksgiving leftovers each year. Over the years, the menu has expanded to include specialty sandwiches, fries, salads, desserts and catering options. Today, Capriotti’s has more than 175 locations around the country, all tracing their roots back to the First State.
Casapulla’s
Casapulla’s has remained a family-owned business since its founding and is not a franchise. Each location is operated by members of the Casapulla family. In 1956, founder Luigi Casapulla bought a neighborhood grocery store and turned it into Casapulla’s Grocery & Deli. As more grocery chains were coming to Delaware, Casapulla knew he had to make his store stand out to compete and turned his business into a full-service Italian deli and eat-in restaurant. This family business now has six locations, all in Delaware. The family continues to follow Luigis Casapulla’s vision “by serving the best subs, steaks, and delicatessen items, using the freshest ingredients and selling them at a reasonable price” in a welcoming environment, according to the company’s website.
Gaudiello’s
Another family-owned business, located in Trolley Square, has been around since 1982 providing the community with hand-crafted Italian sandwiches. Though its menu isn’t as expansive as other sandwich shops, each ingridient is crafted from the high-quality olive oil sprinkled on rolls to artisanal deli meats. The current owner, Eric Huntley, says the menu hasn’t changed since its opening. Even though the shop is tucked in the back of the Trolley Square Shopping Center, new and returning customers keep finding their way back.
Ioannoni’s Specialty Sandwiches
Ioannoni’s brings Philadelphia-style sandwiches to Delaware, so there’s no need to make the drive for a traditional roast pork, roast beef or chicken cutlet sandwich. Located in New Castle, Ioannoni’s is known for its Italian specialty sandwiches, many of which are inspired by founder Michael Ioannoni’s grandmother’s recipes and years of recipe development. They slow roast their beef, turkey and pork overnight and prepare toppings such as broccoli rabe, fried long hot peppers and roasted red peppers fresh each day. Cheesesteaks are another favorite. Ioannoni’s uses freshly sliced rib-eye steak on a seeded roll with melted Cooper Sharp cheese, delivering a classic Philadelphia-style cheesesteak.
Malin’s Deli
Malin’s Deli has been serving Newark for decades and has been a go-to spot for sandwiches, hoagies and wraps. In the mornings, the aroma of a fresh pot of coffee and breakfast sandwiches fills the deli whereas by afternoon, the focus shifts to serving up made-to-order sandwiches, wraps, hoagies and other deli favorites. Malin’s long-standing reputation in Delaware is perfect for any occasion, from catering to needing a quick and tasty bite to eat.
Lauren Lingle is a summer intern with Delaware Online/The News Journal.
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