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Delaware Senate Republicans

Home Rule Under Siege – The Delaware General Assembly Must Not Strip Local Authority

June 6, 2025

By Senate Republican Whip Brian Pettyjohn, Former Council Member and Mayor of the Town of Georgetown

Delaware has long respected the principle of home rule, which is the idea that decisions about land use and zoning should be made at the local level by the people and councils who know their communities best. It’s a principle grounded in trust and democracy. We trust local governments because their elected officials live in the very neighborhoods affected by their decisions. They drive the same roads, shop at the same stores, send their kids to the same schools, and hear directly from constituents at grocery stores, ballfields, and public meetings.

This session, that principle is under attack.

Senate Bills 159, 87, 75, and House Bill 135 are a series of proposals that form a troubling pattern of legislative overreach. Together, they threaten to centralize power in Dover and override the carefully considered decisions of county and municipal governments. Each bill addresses a different issue, but all have one thing in common: they erode the authority of local governments and set a dangerous precedent.

Senate Bill 159: Overriding a Local Decision

This bill responds directly to a specific action taken by Sussex County Council in December 2024. The Council denied a conditional use application from Renewable Redevelopment, LLC, a subsidiary of US Wind, seeking to build a massive electrical substation in Sussex County to serve a Maryland-based offshore wind project.

Troublingly, the application hid its connection to US Wind, and the public only discovered the affiliation through a citizen-led FOIA request. Until then, there was no opportunity for community input.

Despite the application being rightfully denied under county zoning law, SB 159 would force approval through legislation. It overrides a quasi-judicial zoning decision, targets a single project for special treatment, and sends the message that if you don’t like a local decision, you can get a do-over in Dover.

The bill is also disguised. It’s presented as utility legislation but is actually a zoning bill, slipped into the wrong section of Delaware law. This raises serious constitutional concerns, including a potential violation of the separation of powers.

Senate Bill 87: Mandated Density

SB 87 would require municipalities and homeowners associations to allow secondary housing units, or accessory dwelling units, on single-family lots without local input. While increasing housing stock is a worthy goal, this approach ignores critical local factors like infrastructure, stormwater, traffic, and school capacity. It assumes all communities are alike and that state officials know better than local residents.

Senate Bill 75: Stripping Oversight of Marijuana Establishments

SB 75 limits local authority over marijuana businesses, including hours of operation and zoning decisions. Even those who support legalization should be concerned. This bill removes the ability of communities to make decisions based on public safety and local character.

House Bill 135: Unfunded Mandates

This bill restricts how local governments can respond to homelessness unless “adequate indoor space” is available. That term is left undefined. Worse, it provides no funding or resources to meet the requirement.

Local Government Is Not the Problem

Together, these bills signal that the State of Delaware no longer trusts local governments. They suggest that if a town or county makes an unpopular decision, Dover will override it. That’s not representative government, it’s centralized control.

Local leaders are your neighbors. They listen and respond directly to residents. That’s how democracy should work.

The Right Path: Collaboration

If we want to solve challenges like housing, energy production, and public health, the state must partner with local governments, not steamroll them. I urge my colleagues to oppose SB 159, SB 87, SB 75, and HB 135.

Let’s stand up for home rule before it disappears. Strong communities depend on it.

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