About Us

Founded in 1962, the Civic League For New Castle County is an organization comprised of community civic associations, umbrella civic groups, good government groups, businesses, and interested individuals. The League provides a forum for education about, discussion of, and action on issues relating to the impact of government on the quality of life in New Castle County

Thursday, September 27, 2012

CLNCC's New Castle County Candidates Forum Set For 7PM Oct. 17th In Prices Corner

  The Civic League for New Castle County is hosting a


County Candidate Night  
7 - 9 PM 
Wednesday, October 17th
at the Cranston Heights Fire Hall in Prices Corner
3306 Kirkwood Highway  Wilmington, DE 19808
Moderator: WDEL Radio News Personality 
Allan Loudell!!

We'll  be taking questions from the audience so come prepared!
First Panel (7 - 7:45 PM)
New Castle County Council Candidates

Chris  Bullock  - Democratic Council President Nominee
 http://chrisbullock2012.com/

Mike Protack - Republican Council President Nominee
http://www.mikeprotackforcouncil.com/

Tim Sheldon  Democratic Council District 9 Nominee
http://peopleforsheldon.blogspot.com/

Scot Sauer- Republican Council District 9 Nominee


Break (7:45 - 8:15 PM)
Senate-Level Candidates' introductory remarks


Second Panel (8:15 - 9 PM)
New Castle County Executive Candidates

Tom Gordon - Democratic Executive Nominee
http://www.tomgordon2012.com/

Mark Blake - Republican Executive Nominee
http://www.blake4countyexec.com/


for directions -

Cranston Heights Fire Hall

Friday, August 24, 2012

Watch The CLNCC 2012 Delaware Primary Candidate Forum On YouTube!

The Civic League Meeting/Candidate Forum held on Tuesday is now available on Youtube.

We have four videos.

1) Vincent White discusses the role of the Delaware Real Estate Comission and current issues.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7jAAKoKLpDA

2) The Delaware State Legislative Candidate Forum. Six Democratic Party candidates running for different seats in the state legislature discussed issues.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=F_qCpf3zUes

3) Candidate Forum For Insurance Comissioner. All four Democratic Primary candidates participated in this forum.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4PAjYlge8PE

4) New Castle County Candidate Forum. The two Democratic candidates for County President and four candidates for County Exec participated in this forum.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_mm7xNWHBJ4

-Dave Tancredi

 

Monday, August 13, 2012

New Castle County Pre-Primary Forum Line Up!



August 15th

WDEL-1150 AM New Castle County Executive Debate 

at the New Castle County Chamber building

12 Penns Way

New Castle, DE 19720
(302) 737-4343
6:00 PM - 8:00 PM
Aired live, listen in!



August 20th 
Greater Hockessin Area Development Association Forum
at the Hockessin Memorial Hall
7:00 PM - 9:00 PM

Attending:

1st - State Rep District Primary (R) Nick Manolakos & (R) Joe Miro
2nd - County Council President Primary (D) Chris Bullock & (D) Rene Taschner
Final - County Executive Primary (D) Paul Clark, (D) Tom Gordon, (D) Jon Husband, (D) Bill Shahan.



August 21st
Civic League For New Castle County Forum

at the Delaware State Police Troop 2 Building 
100 La Grange Ave
Newark, DE
7:00 PM - 9:00P M

Attending:
James Burton 15th Rep
Bill Dunn 19th Rep
Jim Martin 1st Senate
Claudia Bock and Paul Baumbach 23rd Rep ( they are @ 7PM due to another event)
Tony Deluca and Bryan Townsend 11th Senate
Spinarelli -US Senate
Paul Gallagher, Mitch Crane and Karen Weldin Stewert - Insurance Commissioner
J.Christopher Bullock and Rene Taschner - County Council President
Jonathan Husband, Bill Shahan, Tom  Gordon & Paul Clark - County Executive





August 25th

UUFN Social Justice Committee and Newark Post Forum

at the Unitarian Universalist Fellowship of Newark
420 Willa Road
Newark, Delaware 19711 
302.368.2984 
(All Day)



August 28th
Delaware Agents For Change Forum
at the Ezion Fair Baptist Church
1400 B St, Wilmington, DE 19801
6:00 PM - 8:00 PM

And don't forget the Community Crossfire Mayoral Debate August 19th on Channel 28 from 8:00 PM - 10:00 PM. You can call in your questions, live!




Wednesday, August 1, 2012

CLNCC Primary Candidate's Forum Set For 7PM August 21st In Bear - Also Woodlawn Trustees Will Discuss Brandywine Area Park



CIVIC LEAGUE FOR NEW CASTLE COUNTY 

At 7PM on August 21st, 2012, the Civic League for New Castle County will conduct a candidate forum targeting the primary races for both State and County positions. The candidates will have responded to these questions ahead of time:

Proposed questions for candidates and incumbents at our August Candidate Forum- Charlie Weymouth  
1.  In  three  sentences  or  less,  what  responsibilities  should  the  County uphold and what duties should it carry forth? 
2.  What  incentives  for  economic  improvement  do  you  believe  County government should offer?  To what selective bodies — agriculture, trade, research,  corporate  law,  finance?  Do  you  see  any  importance  of  a residential population growth requiring a precedent economy? 
3. What duties should you perform? Do you foresee needed changes and what should they be? 
4.  Regarding  Land  Use  and  the  present  UDC,  what  does  the  term "concurrence" mean?  Do you believe it is being presently consistently applied?  Do you think the UDC should remain intact?  If not, what changes would you propose? 
5. In land use changes, what infrastructure should be funded?  By who?  Do you think schools, local roads, sewer,  library, police services should be incorporated in the County budget?  Is the present system adequate?  Do you see any problems in traffic flow of our interstate highways due to our directly and immediately adjacent commercial usage? 
6. Should residential growth in our unincorporated areas be encouraged? Who should pay for the infrastructure? 
7. What are the truly 'vital' services the County should perform? 
8. What local services, and for what infrastructure should local residents pay?  Should local taxes be increased if such local services are to be paid by local residents? 
9.  Should  Municipal  and  County  Governments  be  combined  in a Metropolitan  form  to  concentrate  for  efficiency  and  coordination  of services? 
10.  What  do  you  include  as  "infrastructure"  when  speaking  of  Federal,  State,  County,  Municipal government?  What annual contributions into the County Government are Federally and State funded? 
11. Do you think County Government has been best representing your local constituents? 
12.  How  do  you  think reduction  of  our  National  debt  should  impact State  and,  particularly,  County programs? 
13. In establishing a Capital project, due think an inducement for such a project should be to establish and maintain ongoing personnel as a legitimate purpose in founding such project?  Do you see any urgent Capital needs? 
14. Do you believe County Government should endorse "open shop"? 
15. Do  you  believe County  taxpayer  contributions  to retirement  benefits  and  pensions  for County employees are equitable? 
16. Regarding County Police responses, what percent do you believe, result in restraint and arrest? 
17. Should fire response for the County remain essentially volunteer?
  
More  questions for candidates for County office - Fritz Griesinger

1.  Would you support the Delaware State Real Estate Commission seller's disclosure form regarding affordable housing and workforce housing?
2.  Would you support all potential buyers in a workforce / affordable  community be given a disclosure sheet concerning the 15 builder incentives? 

Prior to the forum, we will introduce Vince White, a  member and former President of  the  Delaware Real Estate Commission, and epresentative(s) from the Woodlawn Trustees on the aspect of a new public park in the Brandywine Hundred area.

We will meet at 6:00 PM in the Paris Community Room at Delaware State Police Troop 2
100 LaGrange Avenue (across from Glasgow Regional Park) in Bear
Tentative agenda times:
6:00 PM Woodlawn Trustees
6:30 PM Delaware Real Estate Commission member
7:00 PM primary candidate forum, with questions already distributed to candidates.
9:00 PM Adjournment
In this election year a national business news organization has given Delaware voters important points
to  ponder  as  both  the  primary  and  general  election  dates  approach.  I,  like many,  have received
campaign literature expounding "all the hard work" purported to have been done by those holding
elected office.  Well, how about Delaware's having slipped again in the national rankings for "Quality of
Life",  now to #49,  just above Louisiana,  and confirmed in a July 13th, 2012 email from the Delaware
House of Representatives! The 2012 rankings by CNBC, list Delaware with an overall ranking of 43 ( out of 50 ), a drop from #36 in 2011.

Hope you can attend.
Chuck Mulholland
President, Civic League for New Castle CountyP

Sunday, June 10, 2012

Treasurer Flowers And WILMAPCO's Dan Blevins Stated For June 19th Meeting, 7PM At Troop 2 In Bear

The Civic League for New Castle County

Next meeting:
Tuesday
June 19, 2012
at 7:00 PM

Location:
Delaware State Police
Troop 2 Building
100 La Grange Ave
Newark, DE

Get Map

CIVIC LEAGUE FOR NEW CASTLE COUNTY 
Chuck Mulholland, President
AGENDA
Guest Speakers:
Mr. Dan Blevins - WILMAPCO Planner

Update on population & employment projections

Mr. Chip Flowers - State Treasurer


Come out and you'll get the chance to ask the Treasurer more about the controversy stirring with the Governor and his staff:

(News Journal) Jonanthan Starkey reports ~ Outcast of Markell's inner circle - 

Treasurer Chip Flowers cites 'smear tactics'; official [OMB Director Visalli] says he's 'holding a gun'

Flowers, Delaware’s bombastic first-term treasurer, has accomplished a number of campaign goals since taking office in January 2011, launching online financial literacy tools and an economic warning system that earned praise from the White House. He’s also taken steps to improve performance in Delaware’s $2 billion investment portfolio.
But Flowers’ most surprising attribute as a public official may be his propensity to spar publicly with Delaware’s political establishment – a rarity here. In an election year that should feature sniping between Democrats and Republicans, Flowers’ intraparty clashes with Gov. Jack Markell’s administration have become the state’s most popular political sideshow.
Recently, the discontent has reached a boiling point.
Administration officials are now publicly questioning Flowers’ choices as the state’s top cash manager. Markell’s office cautioned Flowers against chasing “big returns” on taxpayer investments after hiring a financial consultant to monitor the portfolio. And one Markell insider recently accused Flowers of “holding a gun to the head” of state officials after he threatened to hold up a bond sale to fund a controversial Newark Charter School expansion plan. Flowers hasn’t backed down, accusing Markell’s team of “Nixon-style smear tactics” and lobbing criticisms of his own, including questioning Markell’s shaky $20 million investment in electric carmaker Fisker Automotive.
“We have sat here for 15 months and never questioned the administration. I want the governor to succeed,” Flowers said in an interview inside his office here last week. “But what we need to understand is if you’re going to be getting in the business of issuing statements talking about other elected officials, I think that’s a very dicey business to get into.” 

Monday, May 7, 2012

Office Of Management And Budget Director Ann Visalli At The CLNCC Set For 7PM May 15th In New Castle

CIVIC LEAGUE FOR NEW CASTLE COUNTY 

Chuck Mulholland, President

Guest Speaker: Ms. Ann Visalli
Director of the Office of Management and Budget

Tuesday
May 15, 2012
at 7:00 PM

Location:
Del Tech Innovation
& Technology Center
97 Parkway Circle
New Castle, DE 19720
Map


The Civic League also hosted our Secretary of Education, Lillian Lowery, in March:





~*~

Sunday, May 6, 2012

NCC Civic Association Seminar Set For 7PM Monday May 7th In New Castle

From the NCC.DE web site ~


Seminar Announcement: Strengthening Your Civic Association

Monday, May 7, 2012  7:00pm
Gilliam Building Multi-Purpose Room
77 Read’s Way, New Castle Corporate Commons
 
A forum to help Civic Associations manage community activities.
 
An important aspect of this forum will be the ability of civic association leaders to communicate with one another, as well as with representatives of various agencies who can lend assistance. Along with presentations, a Q&A session will facilitate this dialog.
 
Guest speakers include Linda Stump on DELDOT Snow Removal Reimbursement, NCCPD Sr. Corporal Amy Kevis on Community Policing, along with representatives from New Castle County Code Enforcement and Parks departments.
Civic association leaders are encouraged to register to attend this informative, free 90-minute session.
 
Contact Norm Spector at 395-5618 to learn more and to sign up.

Monday, April 16, 2012

County-Wide Candidates Forum 7PM Tonight For Registered DEMs And The CLNCC Hosts Finance Secretary Tom Cook 7PM Tuesday In Bear

Two meetings to catch this week ~

The 12th Democratic RD Committee Meeting, Monday, April 16th, 7:00 pm - New Castle County Democratic Candidates will be addressing the group at Marbrook Elementary School, 2101 Centerville Road, Wilmington, DE - this is open to all registered DEMs. I have confirmation that we can expect to see Bill Dunn and Bill Shahan, candidates for NCC Council President and NCC Executive respectively.

And at 7PM Tuesday the 17th, Delaware Finance Secretary Tom Cook will make a presentation at the Civic League for New Castle County monthly meeting at the Delaware State Police Troop 2, 100 LaGrange Ave., Bear, in the Paris Community Room.

Chuck Mulholland, President, Civic League for New Castle County has some questions for the Secretary~
Regarding the above meeting and the matter of the bonded debt level for the State of Delaware, we are seeking the following information:
#1. Given a current (2012) amount of $1.7B compared to the 2002 amount of $709.9 M, can you outline the average $100M yearly increase over each of the past (10) years and provide the highest (5) different items( ie. specific capital projects) of increased expense each year during that time period?
#2. Is a yearly cost per resident available for that time period?
#3. Is a yearly amount of debt service payments available for that time period? What is the percentage amount necessary from yearly expenditures authorized by the General Assembly?
#4. What are the current projection(s) going forward, both for bonded debt amounts and debt service payments?
#5. Do the $1.7 B and $709.9M amounts, with all intervening amounts, include or exclude bond amounts for road construction and/or DelDOT project(s) ?
#6. Has the Department made any calculation(s) regarding the event of increased interest rates? If so, what are the plans going forward?
#7. Are all bond amounts for capital projects? If not, what is the amount outstanding as "General Obligation Bonds" and can you provide an overview of amounts and increases for this category over the same time frame?
#8. Can you provide an overview of income streams for the State and how these source(s) may have changed over the last (10) years?

Monday, March 12, 2012

Education Secretary Lowery Will Speak At The CLNNC Monthly Meeting 7PM March 20th In Bear



On Tuesday, March 20, 2012, the Civic League for New Castle County will host a presentation by Dr. Lillian Lowery, Delaware Secretary of Education.



This will be our regular monthly meeting, starting at 7:00PM, Paris Community Room, Delaware State Police, Troop 2, 100 LaGrange Ave., Bear.


The public is encouraged to attend.


- prepared by Chuck Mulholland President, Civic League for New Castle County

Coming CLNCC monthly meeting speakers:


Finance Secretary Tom Cook is set for April - 4/17/12 , 7 PM at Troop 2


Office of Managment and Budget Director, Ann Visalli, is set for May - 5/15/12, 7 PM , Del Tech Innovation and Technology Center, 97 Parkway Circle, New Castle ( near Hare's Corner, ie traveling south on 13, turn right on Frenchtown Rd, 97 Parkway is in the new complex behind the magistrate court, on the left )


~*~


Here is a video clip of DelDOT Secretary Bhatt Speaking at Civic League For New Castle County Meeting Feb. 20th , 2012

Sunday, February 19, 2012

DelDOT Secretary And Red Clay School District Are The Featured Speakers At CLNCC's February Meeting, 6:45PM Monday Night In Bear



On Monday, Ferbruary 20, 2012, the Civic League for New Castle County will host Delaware Transportation Secretary Shailen Bhatt for a presentation on his plans for DelDOT moving forward. After Friday's front page News Journal report, this should be a rather informative event. Secretary Bhatt will speak from 7-8 PM.


Thereafter we will hear a presentation from the Red Clay School District committee on their referendum plans in the near future. [Also See: Rick Jensen Interviews Red Clay Officials On Referendum ].


This meeting will start at 6:45 PM, in the Paris Community Room, Delaware State Police Troop 2, 100 LaGrange Ave, Bear.

Finding DelDOT's missing pieces - (Sunday Op-Ed) What is it that we don't know about the Delaware Department of Transportation?

DelDOT records prompt inquiry - Forensics team will audit deals, ethics in push for reforms - Transportation Secretary Shailen Bhatt did not rule out the possibility of criminal misconduct.



The investigation was triggered by a series of Freedom of Information Act requests filed by The News Journal in recent months involving agency land deals and the involvement of political figures in certain highway projects that affect commercial interests. DelDOT officials were unable to document specifics of some land deals, Bhatt said. Records that would show what happened to payments to the agency for taxpayer-funded services and highway entrances also were missing, he said.


...Answers to the recent FOIA requests, Bhatt said, were complicated by DelDOT's paper-intensive and fragmented record-keeping system, and in some cases be inexplicably missing or never-recorded land agreements and roadway plans. As internal inquiries widened and top managers urged disclosure of problems, he said, employees came forward with other concerns, including some involving missing documents and checks from developers.


"The staff has come forward and talked about old checks that were not cashed, and have made assertions that checks may have disappeared," Bhatt said. "Whether that was because they were supposed to have been shredded or because a developer has moved on, it's hard for me to know." DelDOT has since ordered staffers to record and deposit all checks received by the agency within 24 hours of receipt.
In addition, the department plans to:


» Gather, secure and strictly control access to agency files and documents.» Retain outside engineers and planning consultants to examine key files for omissions or shortcomings.


» Work with Kent County to re-record complete site plans spanning a seven-year period after 2003, when the county stopped automatically documenting plans that left original property boundaries intact.


» Acquire a modern document recording and management system, an investment that could approach $1 million.


...The site plan problem was confined to Kent County, Bhatt said, but potentially left DelDOT unable to easily document agreements with developers involving such matters as land acquisition or land donation deals with developers, land easements and provisions for walkways and building line restrictions to protect driver views at intersections.





Check the CLNCC web site for more details.

Saturday, January 21, 2012

What You Won't Hear About New Castle County From The County Executive!

True picture of New Castle County? This is not what you will hear from Paul Clark
Middletown Transcript —
New Castle County union leaders at the Civic League for New Castle County:
The union presidents shared their concerns...such as being short staffed in areas where more manpower is needed.
- "We're short staffed," Dan Tharby, president of Local 349- skilled trades ...
- Joe Lavelle, a retired county police officer who represents the police officers through FOP Lodge 5, said that he feels a sense of frustration when dealing with the county. A county police officer's starting salary is lower than that of a University of Delaware officer's, he said. The force is also 22 officers short.
- There also aren't enough paramedics in the field, said Local 3911 President Kenneth Dunn who represents the paramedics. There are about 100 personnel total, with only about 85 on the streets
- there was a five-percent raise for all appointed county positions last year and that county council has never amended the executive's budget when put before them.

See More: Residents express concerns and raise complaints at Civic League panel www.middletowntranscript.com

Janet Kilpatrick Responds To Request To Deny Stoltz's Lifting Of The Deed Restrictions For 20 Montachanin

Please click here to read about what you can do to help Save Our County fight the lifting of deed restrictions on the Stoltz parcel, 20 Montchanin Road, at the gateway to the Brandywine Valley.

According to the agenda posted for the January 24 NCC Council meeting, the vote on this Resolution --R12-015-- is to be withdrawn. A possible date for the vote will be February 14th but that is yet to be determined.

http://www2.nccde.org/council/Documents/MeetingAgendaDocuments/Council%20Agenda%201-24-12.pdf

I received the following information yesterday from Janet Kilpatrick in response to an email asking NCC Council: "Please don't lift the deed restrictions that protect the Brandywine Valley at 20 Montchanin" -


I do not know how I am going to vote on this, but thank you for your
comments. There are both protections and detriments to the proposal.

Below is information that I have so far on the requested change to this
property. This research is based on verifying statements made in emails
that I have received as well as the general research that is required for each vote.


EXISTING RESTRICTION:


1. The existing restrictions allow for a 1.7 acre footprint of building. 2 stories or 40' tall not counting the basement, but the basement is counted as total gross floor space so it can be made into offices, restaurants, or any other commercial or office use allowed under the code for this zoning category. The existing agreement says an office building and accessory uses so anything allowed in this zoning category can be placed within the building.


2. The site as built now is 138,000 sf on a 1.4 ac footprint (it is not at buildout - so without any change someone can build out the remaining .3 ac. which comes to about a 12,000 sf footprint, but as they can use 3 floors (basement, 1st and 2nd) that translates into 36,000 gross floor space more.


3. As it is now, that expansion can be on any side of the building, and this is where I
understand that the Breck's Lane people have concerns. Because of the topography of the site, if the building is builtout on their side , it will be higher than the rest of the building as the measurement goes from the existing ground to the top of the building, not from the lower ground level at the other side of the building. This could give them a towering effect next to their neighborhood.


4. If this were ever rezoned the original deed restrictions automatically are lifted. Existing restrictions take into account the possibility of rezoning.


5. There are no setbacks from propety lines.


NEW PROPOSED RESTRICTIONS


1. Would allow for 1.79 ac footprint - that> is 9/100th of an acre more than allowed in the (same> as in the existing restrictions).


2. Would allow for a separate 1 story building limited to 6000 sf>> and 25' high plus mechanicals. The square footage remains the same, it just allows for a split of buildings.


3. Calls for a 90' setback from property lines which ultimately does not allow buildout on the Breck's Lane side of the existing building. The newly proposed setback line is parallel to Breck's Lane.


4. It preserves the existing entrance and doesn't allow for other entrances.


5. It would only ever allow a rezoning on the 2 ac parcel that has the 1 story building, not allowing the whole site to be rezoned as the exsiting restrictions do. (this protetcs from combining w/the adjacent property to form one 30 ac site for development.


6. It limits use of what can be put on the site, since it is not just limited to office (accessory use per the existing agreement).


The public will have the opportunity to speak at the Tuesday Council
meeting. I encourage all those who have concerns to attend. Janet
Kilpatrick, New Castle County Council Member, 3rd District


Note - the vote is now tabled until February

________________________________________
From: Nancy Willing [http://us.mc1138.mail.yahoo.com/mc/compose?to=nancyvwilling@yahoo.com]Sent: Friday, January 20, 2012 10:10 AMTo: Kovach, Thomas; Reda, Joseph; Weiner, Robert; Kilpatrick, Janet; Hollins, Penrose; Diller, Elisa; Powers, Jr., William; Smiley, George; Cartier, John; Sheldon, Timothy; Street, Jea; Tackett, David; Bell, James
Subject: Please don't lift the deed restrictions that protect the Brandywine Valley at 20 Montchanin

Monday, January 16, 2012

CLNCC Discussion With New Castle County Union Presidents Set For 7PM Tuesday In Bear

On Tuesday, January 17, 2012, the Civic League for New Castle County will host a panel discussion with various union presidents with New Castle County government at their monthly meeting.

AGENDA
Discussion with New Castle County Union Presidents

With some regularity, the Civic League has discussions about County government operations and subsequent costs, and inevitably, taxes. The leadership and elected officials of the County come and talk from time to time, but we have never gotten input from the rank and file employee groups that represent where the rubber hits the road.

Accepting this invitation are:
Kenneth Dunn, AFSCME Local 3911, Paramedics;
Joseph Lavelle, FOP Lodge 5, Police;
Marc Klinefelter, AFSCME Local 1607, salaried positions
Frank Gentry, Local 2270 International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers
Dan Tharby, AFSCME Local 459 - skilled trades

This segment will begin at 7 PM and will include their comments on staffing and funding issues in New Castle County government, from their prospective.

The meeting will be held in the Paris Community Room, Delaware State Police Troop 2, 100 LaGrange Avenue in Bear.

Prepared by Chuck Mulholland
President, Civic League for New Castle County
378-4216

~
DelDOT Secretary Bhatt is the scheduled CLNCC speaker in February - he will attend our meeting at Troop 2 from 7-8:00 PM on Monday, February 20th.
Check the CLNCC web site for more details.

Tuesday, January 10, 2012

2012 Comprehensive Plan Update Public Comment Period Extended To 4PM February 2nd

News Journal reports ~ NCCo growth plan review extended - Land-use map complaints lead to longer public comment

New Castle County Planning Board has extended by 30 days the time for the public comment on the proposed 2012 update of the county’s Comprehensive Plan. The new deadline is 4 p.m. Feb. 2.A copy of the plan is on the county’s website at www.nccde.org. Follow the link under the “NCC Spotlight” area of the home page. For detailed maps down to the parcel level, click on “Draft Documents” and follow the directions to view map layers through the GIS mapping system.All county libraries also have a copy available. Comments on the plan should be sent to compplan12@nccde.org or to NCC Department of Land Use, Attn.: D.J. Guthrie Carter, 87 Reads Way, New Castle, DE 19720.

Wednesday, December 28, 2011

New Castle County Residents File Suit To Overturn Rezoning Of Barley Mill Plaza

The “Save Our County” news release on their Delaware Chancery Court - Barley Mill Plaza Lawsuit: We are asking the Court to overturn this rezoning and send it back to Council for an informed debate and vote. This would provide the opportunity for a full and frank discussion of the true traffic impact on our community and whether this proposal would need to be downsized. The timing and scope of needed road improvements, and who pays for these upgrades, would also be identified -- all based on thorough, in depth traffic analysis. Council would then be in a position to make an informed decision as to whether this rezoning should occur at all or on what terms.


~~~~~~~~~
New Castle County Residents File Suit To Overturn Rezoning of Barley Mill Plaza


Wilmington, Delaware-- The civic association “Save Our County” and four individual plaintiffs filed suit in the Delaware Court of Chancery seeking to overturn New Castle County Council’s approval of Commercial Regional rezoning at Barley Mill Plaza. Among other things, the suit contends that the County should not have granted the zoning change from Office Regional requested by the Stoltz real estate organization ("Stoltz") without following the mandate of Delaware law to first consider existing and projected traffic impact.


On October 25, the County Council approved, by a bare 7-6 majority, developer Stoltz’s proposal calling for a more intensive, commercial use at the site it purchased from DuPont in 2007. The Council’s decision capped several years of local and regional opposition to various plans for the site by Stoltz, which represented the owners and wealthy investors in the parcels.


Stoltz proposes to build a large regional mall with high traffic pad sites along Route 141 at the site. The suit alleges that Commercial Regional zoning, the most intensive commercial zoning status available and intended to attract retail activity from throughout the region, was inappropriately granted to a site primarily surrounded by residential and low impact use uses, and where significant traffic congestion and other problems already exist. Plaintiffs claim that state law required Council to consider effects of existing traffic, projected traffic growth in the area, and projected traffic generated by the proposed Barley Mill development as a regional shopping area. Neither the Council nor the County Department of Land Use, which recommended approval of Stolz’s proposal, had done so.


David Culver, general manager of the Land Use Department and who reports directly to County Executive Paul Clark, is also named as a defendant in the case, as well as New Castle County, the Department of Land Use, County Council, and Barley Mill LLC, applicant for the rezoning and property owner of record. The individual plaintiffs of record are local residents whose homes are located at various points near the Barley Mill Plaza site.


Attorney Joseph Kelly, a leading member of “Save Our County,” said, “Residents throughout New Castle County are quite frankly shocked that aproject of this magnitude and precedence was approved without regard to expert traffic data, despite clear state law requirements. The lawsuit seeks simply to ensure that our decision makers follow the law and review all relevant and appropriate data in order to make informed decisions on behalf of county residents. I am convinced that once a full traffic analysis is presented, it will show that this project or any alternative project must be significantly downsized or scrapped altogether.”


Plaintiff Thomas S. Neuberger, an individual plaintiff in this case, stated, “It was irrational and arbitrary to rezone property bigger than 5 football fields, found along two major highways and in our home neighborhoods, without first requiring a completed traffic study, as state law requires. But instead the County narrowly gave in to the big bucks pressure and threats of the Stoltz machine which never saw a quiet residential neighborhood it did not want to destroy. Fortunately, the Delaware courts will not be bullied or outsmarted by Stoltz, as were the politicians. The other plaintiffs and I will never give up and will fight Stoltz to the end on this new battlefield where the law and not politics will decide this David and Goliath battle.


Mail contributions toward this legal action to: Save Our County, PO Box 4164, Wilmington, DE 19807-0164. soc@hushmail.com - The future of our County is in our hands.


And here's more from (News Journal) Adam Taylor today ~ Group files suit seeking to overturn Barley Mill development vote
...County Attorney Gregg Wilson said Tuesday he hadn’t seen the suit, so it was difficult for him to comment in detail. But Wilson said the intersection has been sufficiently studied by DelDOT for years. In addition to the county government, the suit names County Council, the county Land Use Department, Land Use Department General Manager David Culver and Barley Mill LLC, the owner and developer of the site, as defendants. The suit identifies Keith Stoltz of Stoltz Real Estate Partners as member of Barley Mill LLC.


.... The suit also alleges other “procedural irregularities,” such as adding on 10 deed restrictions late in the process that the suit says “turned the tide” of the Oct. 25 council vote. The legal action is also critical of the Land Use Department’s recommendation that council approve the rezoning. The suit claims that the report, and by extension the council’s vote, could have been influenced by the fact that Pam Scott, County Executive Paul Clark’s wife, was Stoltz’s attorney for three years, until March. Scott resigned from the Saul Ewing firm after the county Ethics Commission said either Scott or Clark would have to step down from their positions to prevent a conflict of interest on Clark’s part. Because Scott was Stoltz’s attorney for so long, the suit claims that the “orientation and mindset” of the Land Use Department officials who authored the report was skewed because of Scott’s former role as Stoltz’s attorney. “The departmental review should be conducted and then reported with total impartiality,” the suit says.

Tuesday, December 6, 2011

Delaware Land Use And The Law - A Never-Ending Saga?

(News Journal - Delaware Voice) Vic Singer writes ~ County violating own law by approving Barley Mills rezoning (with Del Code and County Code section references)


Perhaps FIASCO is too strong a term for the Barley Mill Plaza rezoning. Maybe
not. Judge for yourselves.


New Castle County Council's rezoning of 36.8 acres of the 92.1 acre Barley MillPlaza parcel from Office Regional to Commercial Regional violates portions of the Unified Development Code and State law. Council accepted the Land Use Department's favorable recommendation, not the Planning Board's unfavorable one. All Delaware public officeholders are by oath bound to uphold the law. Therefore they must read and understand it. Ignorance doesn't excuse malfeasance. They needn't be attorneys; the words were given force by lay legislators.


The UDC constrains land use intensifications initiated after its effective date(12/31/1997) according to the capacity of infrastructure already in place,under construction, or under contract for construction. For land uses thatbecame nonconforming when the UDC became law, a "Nonconforming Situations"Article allows lawful continuation of prior lawful uses without full compliance with the UDC's adequate infrastructure provisions. But redevelopment with a use (zoning) change thereafter had to comply fully with the UDC use provisions (ref: Section 40.08.110).


That was in the UDC at its beginning, and hasn't been amended. Years later, however, Council added subsections (Subsections 40.08.130.B.6.a thru h) establishing for "all major redevelopment plans . . and any plan that is also requesting a rezoning" (Section 40.08.130.B.6.d) that "a traffic impact study (TIS) shall only be required if requested by DelDOT" (Section 40.08.130.B.6.e.7). The first section of the "Transportation Impact" Article of the UDC (Division 40.11.000) states: "No major land development or any rezoning shall be permitted if the proposed development exceeds the level of service set forth in this Article unless the traffic mitigation or the waiver provisions of this Article can be satisfied."The Article requires that "the transportation capacity for a proposed development shall be based upon the available capacity as determined by a traffic impact study" (Section 40.11.110).


No redevelopment exemption is among waiver provisions (Section 40.11.121), but staging to coincide with transportation system improvements and developer contributions to improvement costs are addressed. Our nation is ruled by law, starting with the Constitutions of the US and each State. Each State makes rules governing its Counties and Municipalities. New Castle County Council and the
Land Use Department occasionally forget to comply with State law. Delaware State law demands that when a new County Ordinance repeals or amends prior County law, the new Ordinance must set out in full both the prior language and the new language(Ref. 9 Del. C. 1152).


The recently added UDC subsection clearly authorizes redevelopment with a usechange, which had been forbidden earlier. At the very least, the phrase "except as provided elsewhere in this Chapter" should have been - - but wasn't - - added to the UDC's "Nonconforming Situations" and "Transportation Impact" Articles. Violation of this procedural requirement alone is sufficient to void the UDC change enabling a rezoning without a TIS.


A deeper issue also applies. State law designates that among the purposes of the County's zoning regulations is promoting the safety and convenience of the state's inhabitants by limiting congestion in the streets and roads (Ref. 9 Del. C. 2603(a)). It prohibits any zoning change that doesn't follow an agreement between the County and DelDOT ensuring that while the rezoning is being sought, traffic analyses must be performed that "consider the effects of existing traffic, projected traffic growth in areas surrounding a proposed zoning reclassification and the projected traffic generated by the proposed site development for which the zoning reclassification is sought" (ref. 9 Del. C. 2662).


That State law provision requires the County and DelDOT to share responsibility for congestion on the transportation system. HOW to share - - rather than WHETHER to share - - is left to the County andDelDOT to work out. The County cannot discharge its SHARING responsibility by legislating that it won't think about congestion while giving redevelopment rezonings a free pass. Even if the State's procedural requirements for changing the UDC had been followed to the letter, the recently added UDC changes are voided by their substance.

Plus, (News Journal) Harry Themal writes ~ New Castle County residents must scrutinize county's development plans


News Journal once again demonstrated the real and possible friction between state government and the counties.A story detailed how the State Supreme Court is trying to decide whether SussexCounty or the state Department of Natural Resources and Environmental Controlcan fix the width of buffers along the inland waterways ['Zoning' at issue in court hearing].


In an op-ed column, Victor Singer, former chairman of the New Castle County Planning Board, said the county violated its own Unified Development Code in approving the massive rezoning of DuPont's former Barley Mill Plaza -- in part because it did not get a new appraisal from the state on the transportation effect.


Readers of this column might be aware of my strong feelings that Delaware has too many layers of bureaucracy, and that, as small as our state is, we may notneed the three county governments. But I know that nothing will ever change that constitutional order, which makes it even more important that residents of the counties pay close attention to what's happening on that level. Perhaps nothing is more important to our way of life than the provisions of the New Castle County Development Plan.


....If you are an involved New Castle County resident, you will go to a county library to see all the details and accompanying maps or see them by logging on to nccde.org. Then you may want to attend the first public hearing Jan. 3 at 7 p.m. in the county's Gilliam Building, at 77 Reads Way in New Castle Corporate Commons.

With Charlie's comment and letter from Saturday: I usually agree with Harry Themal, but he is a defeatist on the belief a Constitutional change could not occur on land use. Moreover, the Coastal Zone Act did not require a Constitutional change. Correct me if I am wrong. The only impediment to County change is ourselves----resistence to such needed change must be coming from the quarters that have been accepting Federal and State money for local/parochial desires for over a half a Century---with change, the County direct avenue to such funds could then be denied -
Many parties involved in land use battle


In regards to the recent article "Fight for control of land use heads to Supreme Court," the issue before the court is major. Clearly, the state, having earlier delegated such land use control to the individual counties and incorporated jurisdictions, must now reassert its prerogative, whether through judicial mandate or new legislative change. For Sussex County, land owners, including the chicken/dairy/crop farmer, could earlier rule the day, in being a prime economic generator -- whether or no, the seasonal, vacationing resident might bellyache about nearby stench or reported pollution to recreational waters. Meanwhile, those latter visiting dissidents were, in turn, churning up the bay with their "stink pots" and ignored theirsewer overflow during storms. "The overpopulated geese were the problem." Few were thinking of the fishing economy.


Despite earlier court decisions upholding local, political subjective decisions in land use, the Coastal Zone Act has interceded within its boundaries, such law a basis for counterargument. Beyond the immediate issue, what entity pays for this residential growth and the requisite roads, schools, etc.? Not the county government. It is time to stop this land use dalliance and place such direction strongly to a professional, nonpartisan group, one well-grounded in econometrics -- purpose being long-term [planning], the environment and a prerequisite, viable economy. Let's hope DNREC has their facts straight to every detail. We're now beyond just tree-hugging.
Charles M. Weymouth, Wilmington