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Saturday, 3 August 2013

Long-Term Answer To Recidivism Is More Jobs And Better Education But Can We Afford To Wait And See?

Posted on 09:23 by Unknown
photo courtesy of the Federal Bureau of Investigation
USA Today's news item for Thursday summed it up for Delaware prison reform - we send 8 of 10 people sentenced to more than a year in prison back into the can for a serious offense within 3 years of release.

NEWS: State House GOP Caucus writes ~
Delaware Prisons Filled 
with Repeat Offenders 
A report released this week by the Delaware Criminal Justice Council Statistical Analysis Center contained some sobering information on recidivism in The First State.

Looking at inmates who completed their sentences in 2008 and 2009, the report concluded that more than 67-percent of each cohort was back in prison within three years of their release.

State Rep. Steve Smyk, who is a member of the House Corrections Committee and a retired Delaware State Police officer, said the problem of recidivism is a tangled knot that will take a multifaceted approach to address.  "There will be no easy solutions to reducing this rate, but the economic, societal and human rewards of success make it well worth pursuing."

The report, the first such analysis conducted in 13 years, is the result of a bipartisan omnibus reform law enacted in 2012.  That legislation (Senate Bill 226 w/SA 1) implemented a number of recommendations by a task force charged with studying Delaware's criminal justice and correctional systems and identifying steps to enhance public safety, hold offenders more accountable, improve probation and parole supervision, lower recidivism rates, and explore the reasons for rising prison costs.
 
Click here to read: "Recidivism in Delaware: An Analysis of Prisoners Released in 2008 and 2009."



Also from the House GOP - OPINION:
State Needs Coordinated Strategy for Job Creation

By State Rep. Danny Short

Delaware remains lagging behind most of the country in job creation.

When the recession started in January 2008, the Bureau of Labor Statistics reported that there were 441,500 people employed in non-farm jobs in our state.  According to economists, the recession officially ended four years ago (June 2009), at which point our employed workforce had fallen to 415,900. 

Recovery has been slow.  Recently released U.S. Department of Labor data shows that 43 states have done better at recovering the jobs lost during the recession.  Last month, there were 422,800 people working in The First State, or 18,700 fewer than at the start of the recession.  Only Florida, Alabama, Arizona and Nevada have fared worse.  New Mexico and Oregon tied Delaware's lackluster performance of -4.2 percent.

This comes on the heels of information released by the U.S. Department of Commerce Bureau of Economic Analysis that revealed Delaware ranked 49th among the 50 states in terms of real gross domestic product.

While U.S. unemployment has trended down over the last 12 months, falling from 8.2 percent to 7.6 percent, Delaware's unemployment rate ticked up a tenth of a point to 7.3 percent last month - an increase of 300 people without jobs since last June.

In another sign of our sluggish economy, the number of people using food stamps in Delaware is significantly higher now than it was three years ago.  In January 2010, six months after the recovery began, there were 109,215 Delawareans enrolled in the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program.  The U.S. Department of Agriculture reported this week that there were nearly 154,000 Delawareans - or about one-in-every-six state residents - receiving food stamps as of April.

Nearly every state has faced challenges in the wake of the recession, but the administration of Gov. Jack Markell and the Democratic majority in the General Assembly have not given these problems the attention they warrant.

That is not to say this past legislative session did not contain some positive developments for our state's employers.  We enacted Worker's Compensation Insurance reforms and implemented a plan for restoring the integrity of the safety net for helping the jobless.  We also saw state agencies institute some modest regulatory reforms.

However, these worthy bipartisan efforts were virtual sideshows to debates over legalizing same-sex marriage, gender identity discrimination, and gun control - discussions that monopolized our time and attention, preventing any meaningful effort to get the local economy moving and setting the stage for new employment opportunities.

At a press conference in Milwaukee earlier today (August 2), in his role as the chairman of the National Governors Association, Gov. Markell released a blueprint to increase the hiring of people with disabilities.  The findings and recommendations were compiled during a year-long project led by Gov. Markell.

This is a laudable effort that appears to have yielded results.

Now that this project is over, I would like to see Gov. Markell bring that same focus and spirit of inclusion and cooperation back to Delaware to work with lawmakers of both parties in drafting an action plan for increasing the hiring of Delawareans seeking quality employment.

When our General Assembly and governor have worked cooperatively in the past, we have been able to achieve stunning results.

Our state became a financial industry leader by identifying opportunities and acting collectively to pass laws like the Financial Center Development Act of 1981 and the Bank Insurance Powers Act of 1995.  We continue to regularly update our corporate and banking laws to try to maintain our position in the financial services marketplace.

By contrast, our state's current economic development strategy has seemingly lost its way.  It feels like we are treading water, grabbing at the occasional piece of driftwood that floats by, but not decisively striking out in any particular direction with a sense of purpose.

It is past time for us to develop a coordinated strategy focused on job growth.

Our state faces a potential budget shortfall in the next fiscal year, while unemployment remains uncomfortably high, and the local economy continues to sputter.  An organized effort to create jobs in our state holds the promise of remedying all three ills.

Jack Markell ran on a platform in 2008 of Reentry - Prison recidivism reform. We saw a lot of talk in Cabinet-level pow wows and the end-all be-all creation of I-Adapt. Not much good came out of it. This is his crappy record whether he likes it or not. The buck stops with the Governor.

Also see: News Journal Op-Ed ~ Use statistics to better state’s criminal justice system
Due to a remarkable depth of research and statistical analysis, the governor, state legislators and ev­ery Delawarean now have detailed information about how and why former criminals are returning to jail and the state prisons after their initial release.

However, The Criminal Justice Council’s “Recidivism in Delaware: An Analysis of Prisoners Released in 2008 and 2009” report released this week is more important than a record-keeping tally. The data sup­plies a credible argument for pro­grams and services to end the re­volving door of incarceration before and after release to develop useful government actions. Specifically, those that directly address the pub­lic safety risks and taxpayer costs incurred. The weight of the document fo­cuses on inmates released during that two-year window. The report shows:

» In the first year, more than half former inmates get rearrested and reconvicted of a new crime. And practically half get recommitted to jail or more prison time.

» By the end of three years, more than 75 percent in both groups gets arrested for a serious crime, 71 per­cent are reconvicted and 67 percent return behind bars.

These numbers are useful for capturing a picture of how we’ve been doing since 2002.

Which is not good, considering that most arrest-worthy crimes start in the first two years of an ex-offender’s freedom.

At the same time, the data pro­vides the necessary facts to rebut the usual assumptions about these so-called “re-offenders.”

“Recidivism rates were highest among those offenders who served time for property offenses when compared to the rates for those serving violent or public,” CJC Ex­ecutive Director Drewry Fennell said in one example.

In fact, the report is literally what Gov. Jack Markell and the General Assembly ordered two years ago when he signed Executive Order No. 27, mandating an annual report on recidivism rates so that efforts to promote successful re­entry can be measured against a meaningful baseline.

Not since 2002 has Delaware been able to reliably put a count on the number of inmates it releases from jails and prisoners.

And the report breaks down de­mographics that align with the pub­lic’s fears and views regarding age­related crimes: Those younger than 24 had significantly higher recidivism rates than those older than 45. Men were more likely to recidivate than women, and younger offenders were more likely to re-offend than older offenders.

All of which Attorney General Beau Biden says highlights an alarming rate of recidivism that needs to be ad­dressed with more court resources to make sure the length of sentences reflect the crime’s seriousness and serve “as a significant and meaningful deterrent to re-offending.”

We can’t agree more, particularly in regard to his recommendation for more precise sentencing measures, based on an “individual inmates’ reha­bilitative needs,” as well as the deliv­ery of credible service to address the mental health, job readiness and sub­stance abuse issues before, not after incarceration.

~*~


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Posted in AG Biden, CJC, DE Dept. of Labor, DE GOP, Delaware Community Reinvestment Action Council, Delaware Reentry Consortium, DOC, DOJ, Education, General Assembly, Jack Markell, Justice Reinvestment Center, SURJ | No comments

State Rep. John Kowalko Asks: Why Shouldn't The UD STAR Campus Data Center Run Off Of Bloom Boxes?

Posted on 07:29 by Unknown

(WDDE image)

Kowalko's great idea: why can't the new data center at UD's STAR campus run off of Bloom Boxes? (Bloom website video: eBay Data Center powered by Bloom Energy)

Catch Allan Loudell's interview with John Kowalko yesterday ~ WDEL PODCAST: Delaware's News at Noon State Rep. John Kowalko on a proposed power plant at Newark's former auto plant (8/2)

Kowalko notes that proposed industrial-sized power plant concerns center around the environment and quality of life for residents living near the STAR campus. Loudell wonders if the plant will "peddle power on the side". 

Kowalko wants public hearings BEFORE any contract ink has dried and said he was informed that UD President Harker will be answering his letter to the  University Trustees.

There are serious questions about the zoning of the property regardless of the City Solicitor Bruce Herron's opinion that the plant is incidental and subordinate and can bypass City Council altogether ~
[Amy] Roe highlighted the decision by city staff that electrical generation at the site would not require council approval because it falls within the categories of what’s permitted under city code. Power generation would be “incidental and subordinate” to the purpose and use of the main building, Solicitor Bruce Herron wrote in a July 10 memo to the mayor and council.
“To characterize this power plant as a minor consequence without intention or calculation is a gross misrepresentation of the facts,” said Roe, who attended the meeting with her father, also a Newark resident. “There is nothing subordinate about the power plant. Instead, after all reading of the information provided to me in my [records] request, the Data Center s subordinate to the power plant.”
Plus, Kavips writes about gas turbine noise pollution ~ What Newark Must Expect In Their Future
Facebook Plant Addresses Noise Compliants - As you may have heard, a new Data Center with the exact same generators is slated to be built next to Bloom Energy on the tarmac of what used to be the Chrysler Plant. As you heard (or should have in the above videos_, the noise you heard was from 5 miles away. This map shows a radius of 5 miles from the site in Newark.
And the Facebook Data Center uses gas turbines for back up only! 
Also see:
Gas Turbine Failure
Ever Wonder What A Data Center Sounds Like?
DataCenter Noise
Data Center Noise
Shouting At The Data Center

~*~
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Posted in Bloom Energy, City of Newark, DNREC, DPL, Environment, Environmental Justice, General Assembly, Global Economy, Jack Markell, PEPCO, State Chamber of Commerce, University of Delaware | No comments

What Do Tony Bennett, Jeb Bush, Arne Duncan And Jack Markell Have In Common? Very Destructive Education Policy

Posted on 06:42 by Unknown
Maybe the News Journal will FINALLY report this news now that Tony Bennett has resigned.....don't hold your breath....Update: they printed this article from (WaPo) today ~ A-to-F grading systems for schools get renewed scrutiny

The Delaware Blogs are on top of it ~
Transparent Christina talks about the recent grade fixing scandal in Florida while noting that the Education Chief who resigned in disgrace has the same education policy as Governor Markell. Nice tag. [FTR, the grade fixing scandal was in Indiana, he was defeated in 2012 election, after the nefarious acts (and Emails), moved on to FL, where he resigned.]
Also on TC blog ~ Tony Bennett is a complete education FRAUD. 

On Thursday (NYT) Motoko Rich reports ~ Florida’s Education Chief Quits Amid Report That He Changed a School’s Rating
Speaking defiantly at a news conference in Tallahassee, Tony Bennett, who was appointed Florida’s schools chief in December after losing a re-election bid in Indiana in November, referred to “malicious, unfounded reports” when he announced his decision. The resignation came three days after The Associated Press published an article revealing e-mails that showed Mr. Bennett ordered his staff to change a “C” grade given to Christel House Academy, a charter school in Indianapolis, to an “A.”The school takes its name from its founder, Christel DeHaan, a former executive at a time share company and one of Mr. Bennett’s largest donors during the 2012 election. According to the National Institute on Money in State Politics, she donated a total of $90,000 to Mr. Bennett’s re-election campaign. The school grades, which can be based on a number of factors, including student test scores and graduation rates, are used to determine whether a school could be taken over by the state or whether students are eligible for taxpayer-financed vouchers to attend private schools.
........Mr. Bennett’s resignation came a week after he announced the results of a new school grading system in Florida. The system was revised to account for the state’s transition to the Common Core, a set of standards adopted by 45 states that outline what each student should learn in reading and math from kindergarten through high school. Under the new system, the number of Florida schools that received an “F” more than doubled from a year earlier. The number of schools that received an “A” tumbled from close to half of all public schools in the state to 29 percent. 
More on Common Core Standards from Kavips ~

Will Florida Torpedeo Common Core And Cause the Necessary Implosion?

But There Is A Catch….

Common Core: Is It Really Living Up To It’s Hype?

Well, read all of Kavips' Common Core posts HERE

With recent Kilroy ~ HERE, HERE.

I first read the story at Diane Ravitch. Today's post ~ The Biggest Loser in the Bennett Scandal?

This is a terrific commentary on the Bennett fiasco, written by Valerie Strauss. Who is the biggest loser? Could it be the man behind the curtain who decided that testing would make kids smarter? The one who turned choice into a battle cry? The guy who invited for-profit charters into Florida to make buckets of cash that could be used to hire lobbyists and clear the way for more profits?

Also see:

How Tony Bennett Raised the C to an A

Test Defenders Feeling the Heat from Test Critics

Is the A-F Grading System Fatally Flawed?

This morning’s report by Nirvi Shah ponders whether the departure of Tony Bennett will show that his (and Jeb Bush’s) beloved A-F grading system is damaged goods. The discovery that Bennett toyed with the system to protect a school owned (and named for) a major GOP donor is reason enough to doubt its validity.
In fact, if you read the article closely, you will understand that the A-F system is intended to facilitate privatization. It sets up schools to fail and to be privatized. Once a school is labeled D or F, it goes into a cycle of decline that is usually irreversible as families leave, good teachers leave, funds and programs are cut, and the school dies, a victim of failed policies and malign neglect.........How much more fraud and miseducation will be tolerated until thinkers and leaders step forward and admit that test-based accountability IS the problem

Pasi Sahlberg: Testing and Choice Don’t Work

The Insanity of Florida’s School Grades

“In Gainesville a school called Einstein Montessori received an “F.” It is a charter school specifically created for children with reading disabilities. They gave the children with reading disabilities and their teachers an F because they didn’t do well enough on a reading test!!! It is insanity and dispicable! Parents must be the ones to make this stop!!!”

Tony Bennett Resigns

Stotsky: Why I Oppose Common Core

And a favorite: A Really Cool Reformy Event

InBloom Loses Another Site

Another state has pulled out of using the Gates Foundation’s $100 million technology service project, inBloom. The withdrawal further shrinks the project after other states pulled out in part because of concern about protecting students’ privacy. Guilford County, N.C. told POLITICO on Wednesday that the state decided to stop using the service, which is designed to hold information about students including names, socioeconomic status, test scores, disabilities, discipline records and more in one place, and ideally, help in customizing students’ education. 

Plus, John Young found a link to Gates' InBloom and Delaware. Are we in or out?


~*~

 

. 
 
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Posted in DEM 2013, DOE, Education, General Assembly, GOPer 2013, Jack Markell, USDOE | No comments

Friday, 2 August 2013

Delaware Coalition For Open Government Meeting Set For Noon Monday In Wilmington

Posted on 05:52 by Unknown
Delaware Coalition for Open Government
(DelCOG)
Board of Directors meeting

August 5, 2013 - 12:00 p.m.
Woodlawn Library, Wilmington

Agenda

12:00 - 12:10      I). Welcome - John Flaherty

12:10 - 12:20          2) Approval of Meeting Minutes of June 3, 2013

12:20 - 12:30     3) Treasurer’s Report - Pearson 

12: 30 - 12:40    4)  Chancery Court Update - Finger

12:40  - 12:50        5) DelCOG awards committee - Whitehead

12:50  - 1:00         6) Charter school FOIA complaint - Flaherty

  1:00  - 1:10         7) 501(c)(3) update - Pearson

  1:10  - 1:20          8) Democracy award nominees - Cortes

  1:20  - 1:30          9) Public Comment
 
~*~
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Posted in AG Biden, DE Charter Schools Network, DECOG, Delaware Coalition For Open Government, DOE, Education, FOIA, General Assembly, Jack Markell, Open Government, Transparency | No comments

PSC: Delmarva Power's Rate Increase Public Hearing Set For 7PM Monday In Wilmington

Posted on 04:30 by Unknown
(News Journal) Aaron Nathans reports ~ First Delmarva electric rate case hearing is Monday
The first of three public hearings on Delmarva Power’s controversial $42 million proposed rate increase will be Monday in Wilmington. The change would increase the average monthly residential power bill by $7.63 a month.

The public hearings, at which any Delmarva customers can voice their opinion, will be: 
Monday, 7 p.m., Carvel State Office Building, Auditorium, Mezzanine Level, 820 N. French St., Wilmington, 19801

Thursday, 7 p.m., Delaware Tech­nical Community College, Jack F. Owens Campus, Arts & Science Center, The Theatre, Georgetown, 19947 

 Aug. 13, 7 p.m. Public Service Commission Hearing Room, 861 Silver Lake Blvd., Suite 100, Dover, 19903 
The PSC also will accept written comments until Aug. 20 at the PSC’s address above.

~*~
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Posted in Civil Rights, DPL, Human Rights, PEPCO, PSC, Public Advocate | No comments

DEDO's Tourism Office May Want To Focus A Bit More Upstate.......

Posted on 03:14 by Unknown
We love our resorts but how about some positive PR for our beloved City of Wilmington?

(WDEL) Amy Cherry reports ~ Conde Nast: Wilmington ranks 8th in U.S. among unfriendly cities



A reader survey by Conde Nast Traveler magazine has ranked Delaware's largest city as the 17th most unfriendly city in the world and eighth most unfriendly in the nation. The magazine notes one reader says he would rather avoid Wilmington, a city only necessary to visit on business. Another reader said Wilmington doesn't have any charm and needs some work.

The survey ranks Newark, New Jersey, as the most unfriendly city in the world. The friendliest city in the world is Florianopolis in Brazil. The report comes after Wilmington was ranked America's most dangerous city by Parenting Magazine last year.

You can see the full list of friend and unfriendly cities by clicking here
(News Journal) Andrew Staub also reported ~ Wilmington No. 8 on the list of unfriendliest cities in US - I’m not your friend ... I live in Wilmington
“Wilmington, the state’s largest city, didn’t appeal to our survey tak­ers as much as Delaware’s better known beach areas,” Wilmington’s en­try read. “One reader says he ‘would rather avoid’ the city that is only ‘neces­sary to visit on business.’ Other readers say Wil­mington is a place with ‘not much charm’ that ‘needs work.’ ” Councilwoman Loretta Walsh called that “B.S.” She’s often seen resi­dents help others in need of di­rections and wit­nessed neighbors come to the aid of strangers, she said.

Walsh playfully won­dered whether there was a broader plot against the city. How else could tiny Wilmington end up as Par­enting magazine’s most dangerous city last year and as Men’s Health mag­azine’s sixth-angriest city
in America in 2006? “There’s a conspiracy against our town, and I’m going to put a bounty out on whomever is doing this to us,” Walsh said, laugh­ing as she set the reward at $25 for the identity of the perpetrator. Last year, in a search for the pornography cap­ital of America, Men’s Health ranked Wilming­ton No. 3 on its list of smuttiest cities. The mag­azine based the list upon several X-rated statistics — including the number of DVDs purchased, rent­ed or streamed, the num­ber of adult entertain­ment stores and the rate of online searches for por­nography.
 
 ~*~
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Posted in City of Wilmington, DEDO, Dennis Williams, Jack Markell | No comments

Thursday, 1 August 2013

Did Then NCC Executive Coons' Community Services Department Improperly Exclude Low And Very Low Income Units From Master Workforce Housing Agreements?

Posted on 07:14 by Unknown


 (Chuck Mulholland - News Journal image)
Some background ~

Penrose Hollins' 2007 Workforce Housing Ordinance 07-150
2011 DREC Sellers Disclosure Form
Delaware Way's WFH posts

Chuck Mulholland's Update on Workforce Housing in the Civic League for New Castle County's June 2013 newsletter.

For The Civics, The Clock Is Ticking On Affordable Housing Accountability From New Castle County

Kavips' 2008 post: A Tale of Two Meetings
Here's the sign in the front yard of Chuck's Vance Neck Road home ~ 

And here's Chuck's July 2013 WDEL interview on Workforce Housing ~

WFH PODCAST: Al Mascitti Civic activist Chuck Mulholland on problems with New Castle County's "workforce housing" ordinance (7/17)

http://wdel.com/features/0717mulholland.mp3
This is a fascinating interview. Chuck doesn't hold anything back, accusing the county and developers of Hypocrisy, Trickery and Deceit. Mascitti agrees saying "the complete botch that is the county's so-called WFH that was a stalking horse all the way through." Make pretend that housing for the public sector is soooooo expensive and set up special circumstances so developers could evade zoning rules.

Yup. That sums it up. Development attorneys like Pam Scott authored the WFH code for their benefit and NCC Council didn't even blink. WFH was sold as the end-all be-all for affordable housing but the evidence clearly shows that it isn't what has happened. 

The Gordon administration's investigation of WFH has found that only one Workforce Housing unit has actually been sold. EVER. In addition none have even been advertised as Workforce Housing projects. EVER.

How did this happen? Chuck points to contradictory language in WFH code for income levels.

In writing WFH plan contracts, NCC Community Services' selection of moderate and low income (UDC sec. 40.07.312) instead of low and or very low incomes (UDC sec. 40.07.321) reveals what appears to have been a level of discrimination against the very low income and low income households. 

Chuck writes "the language contained in the individual plan contracts (UDC sec. 40.07.341) for Bayberry North, the Ponds of Odessa, and High Hook, for instance, calls for only moderate income dwellings to be constructed". The selection of that section of the code for the creation of these plans is not supported by "the wording of UDC sec. 40.07.311A - compliance with all provisions of this Division - which would not permit such exclusion." 

Plus, the wording of UDC sec. 40.07.311B - that Any plan submitted pursuant to this division only shall be considered vested at the time of application - precludes any variance from the original Ordinance #07-150 as written, adopted and signed.

So there you have it. Currently, NCC has WFH plans with vastly increased density granted WITHOUT ANY AFFORDABLE HOUSING TO SHOW FOR IT.

Meanwhile, New Castle County was unable to answer Chuck's FOIA (below). The Department of Community Services could not justify how they contracted Master Workforce Housing Agreements that gave density bonuses for moderate income-only priced housing for those WFH plans vested under code allowing density bonuses only for low and very low income-priced housing.

It is difficult not to conclude that the county's Community Services Department under Coons (presumably by then department manager, Anne Farley) improperly approved contracts for WFH developments to allow for moderate-only priced housing when the code these plans were vested under allow for only low and very low WFH pricing. And it's Tom Gordon's mess to clean up.
The unanswered FOIA ~
Mon, Apr 22, 2013 at 10:23 PM
Subject: Freedom of Information request, contracts and agreements signed under 40.07.341
To: ccasey@nccde.org, SLGuy@nccde.org
New Castle County Department of Community Services
via email

RE: Freedom of Information request, contracts and agreements signed under 40.07.341 for the following projects / developments:

Regarding the following New Castle County Department of Land Use Projects numbered and titled as follows:
application 2007-0421, Marra Landing, agreement 20100128-004683 as filed with the Recorder of Deeds, signed by New Castle County Chief Administrative Officer Rick Gregory on 01/27/10, with page 1 , paragraphs 5 & 6, reading, in part, low and moderate income households;

application 2008-0804, Goldsborough Farm, agreement 20100804-0040615 as filed with the Recorded of Deeds, signed by New Castle County Chief Administrative Officer Rick Gregory on 07/29/10, with page 1, paragraphs 5 & 6  reading, in part, low and moderate income households;

application 2007-0438 , High Hook, agreement 20111024-0064361 as filed with the Recorder of Deeds, signed by New Castle County Executive Paul G. Clark on 10/10/11, with page 1, paragraphs 5 & 6  reading, in part,  moderate income households;

application 208-0917 , Ponds of Odessa, agreement 20110728-0042210 as filed with the Recorder of Deeds, signed by New Castle County Chief Administrative Officer Gregg Wilson on 07/28/11, with page 1, paragraphs 5 & 6  reading, in part,  moderate income households;

application 2008-0829 , Village of Bayberry North, agreement 20091228-0081362 as filed with the Recorder of Deeds, signed by  New Castle County Chief Administrative Officer Rick Gregory on 12/28/09, paragraphs 4 & 5  reading, in part,  moderate income households.
Given that each of these agreements lists the ordinance ( substitute 1 for Ordinance 07-150, adopted by New Castle County Council on 2/26/08 ) under which these agreements and applications were made to and by New Castle County Department of Land Use and the Department of Community Services, I am seeking the legal basis for the income levels cited and listed in these above  agreements, given the wording of 40.07.321 A & B as contained in Ordinance 07-150,ie low and or very low income households, and also the wording of 40.07.311 B, ie applications vested..
I also note that the term moderate income households does not appear in any density bonus section in Ordinance 07-150, and does not appear in an approved New Castle County Workforce Housing Ordinance until February 2009, as listed in Ordinance 08-121, and thus not appearing to apply to any of the above listed plans.

I have read the New Castle County FOIA policy and file this request by email to the Department Community Services of New Castle County.


Chuck Mulholland

President, Southern New Castle County Alliance

Vance Neck Rd

Middletown, DE 19709

4/22/13

Chuck's index for the WDEL interview with Al Mascitti ~
http://www3.nccde.org/PDFDocument/default.aspx?DocumentID=28:977AAF103AD0CFB2C0B4D7A43F10DF56DAE444000CE0492881ACBE2C9173EF545234F5F79DAD9F1C&x=temp.pdf

The above link is for the original ordinance that has created what David Grimaldi described as major problems.
Depending on what you wish to discuss I would reference the ordinance, and what has happened thereafter.
I will reference Unified Development Code sections
                      40.07.311 A , B and C; 
                      40.07.321 A 1 and 2;
                      40.07.312;
                      40.07.313;
                      40.07.331;
                      40.07.332 and 333;
                      40.07.341;
                      40.07.343;
                      40.07.345;
                      40.07.353 
and the Delaware Seller's Disclosure form for new construction -namely section II, line 13
http://dpr.delaware.gov/boards/realestate/documents/DREC%20New%20Construction%20Property%20Disclosure%20effective%20010111.pdf  
David Grimaldi, NCC CAO, has promised that NCC’s workforce housing program will be among the first items the new Land Use General Manager will be asked to review.

And I am happy to report that State Senator Bruce Ennis is continuing to work hard to make sure Delaware gives full disclosure to home buyers of any unit under a Master Workforce Housing Agreement and that NCC's affordable housing policy is actually producing what it's selling to the public.




~*~

And as always, if you like our work at CLNCC and want to support it and see it continue, please consider joining! Individuals, businesses and civic associations are all welcome. 
See HERE for [Membership Form - PDF]

~*~ 
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Posted in AG Biden, Bruce Ennis, Chris Coons, CLNCC, Dave Grimaldi, Delaware Real Estate Commission, DSHA, NCC Council, NCC Government, NCC Land Use, Pam Scott-Paul Clarky, Shawn Tucker, SNCCA, Tom Gordon, WFH, YCST | No comments
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Blog Archive

  • ▼  2013 (500)
    • ▼  November (67)
      • Chief Justice Myron Steele Favors SCOTUS Test Of C...
      • TDC's Corporate Entity Is A Mail Boxes Etc. UPS St...
      • Please Urge New Castle County Council To Vote Down...
      • Community Involvement Advisory Council Workshop - ...
      • Petition The Senate To STOP THE FILIBUSTER Today
      • Evidence Is Mounting That The Proposed UD Campus P...
      • DE Fast Food Forward Speaks To New Castle County C...
      • Tonight's NCC Historic Review Board Meeting Has Be...
      • Crackhead Mayor In Name Only Now
      • Pacem In Terris Update: Place Your Wreaths For Pea...
      • HB 90 - Enrollment Preference Task Force - Meeting...
      • Nuke Power Update: Fukushima Rod Removal In Progress
      • Gearing Up For Newark's Mayoral Election - Eight D...
      • Catching Up With Single Payer Health Care Insuranc...
      • UD/TDC Update: Op-Ed Trifecta Plus Alan Muller's M...
      • State House GOP Note Septic Regulation Hearings; O...
      • Delaware’s Recycling Public Advisory Council Update
      • Join Fast Food Workers' Support Of Fair Wages At ...
      • Superior Court Deliberates Pike Creek Valley Open ...
      • Coons Works Through The Issues In Budget Conferenc...
      • When The Dams Are Gone, Will Fish Come Back To Whi...
      • Red Clay School Board Rejects Class Size Waiver Re...
      • Push To "Ban The Box" At New Castle County Council...
      • Treasurer Chip Flowers Releases Long-Held State Cr...
      • Coons' Early Education Bill - Strong Start For Ame...
      • Newark's Mayoral Candidate Quesionnaires Are Now O...
      • Delaware Transportation Infrastructure Forum Set F...
      • Nuke Power Update: Support Markey's American Renew...
      • Delaware Americans For Democratic Action Update: B...
      • Sci-Fi For The 99%
      • Large Crowd For RAPP Presser Includes News Journal...
      • A Veteran Thanks Opponents Of The Power Plant
      • Wishing Dad A Happy Birthday
      • Newark Residents Against the Power Plant Presser 6...
      • Concord Township Incumbents Squeak By Candidates A...
      • Delaweare Supreme Court To Hear Stoltz - Barley Mi...
      • UD/TDC Update: UD FOOTBALL YES - POWER PLANT NO! G...
      • Petition Senate For A True Talking Filibuster
      • Common Cause Delaware Honors Senator Ted Kaufman A...
      • Recent Letters On The Shameful Politics Behind The...
      • New Castle County Officials Targets Of Anti-Semiti...
      • Newark Post Interviews Mayoral Candidate Dr. Amy Roe
      • American Heart Association Gives Shout Out To Asse...
      • Climate Change: Delaware Sets Plans For Water Leve...
      • Petition Congress To Strengthen And Expand Protect...
      • Petition University Of Delaware President Harker T...
      • Media Frenzy Whipped Up Against David Grimaldi Res...
      • Four Judges - Berger, Vaughn, Jurden And Strine - ...
      • Newark Natural Food Community Cooperative Annual M...
      • UD/TDC Update: TDC Submits Falsified Permit Applic...
      • Delaware Audubon Society Conservation Chair: Spend...
      • FEMA And Sussex County Public Meeting On Flood Map...
      • Wagoner's Row's Million-A-Pop Housing Cluster Up A...
      • Done Deal In Jersey
      • Vote For Amy Roe For Mayor Of Newark!
      • Save The Valley Promotes The Vote Tomorrow In Conc...
      • Playing Whack-A-Mole With Rumors Racking Up TDC Pr...
      • Will Someone Please Tell The Governor To Stay Out ...
      • UD/TDC Update: Power Plant Fails To Meet Newark Zo...
      • Public Meeting On HB 74 - Single Payer Healthcare ...
      • Come Hear CLNCC's Monthly Meeting Guest Speaker, S...
      • Delaware Coalition For Open Government Meeting Set...
      • How To Juxtapose Markell's Jobs For People With Di...
      • Newark Communities Shouldn't Be Bamboozled Into Ac...
      • Congress Is For Sale And Wall Street's Buyin'
      • DelDOT Public Workshop On Old Baltimore Pike-Area ...
      • Amy Roe's Delaware Voice Column Today
    • ►  October (100)
    • ►  September (100)
    • ►  August (145)
    • ►  July (88)
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