All Council
- Sympathy Joseph H. Alston, Sr
- Sympathy former Wilmington City Councilman Eric D. Robinson
M. Brown
- Sympathy Evelyn Perkins
Wright
- Recognize Apostle Thomas Wesley Weeks
All Council
M. Brown
Wright
Synopsis: This Resolution is being presented by City Council for Council’s review and approval.If approved, Council would be urging the United States Senate to confirm Loretta Lynch as the next U.S. Attorney General. Her nomination by President Obama is currently pending in the Senate. Loretta Elizabeth Lynch is the current United States Attorney for the Eastern District of New York. Her current tenure as U.S. Attorney began in 2010, and she previously held the position from 1999−2001. As U.S. Attorney for the Eastern District of New York, Lynch oversees federal prosecutions in Brooklyn, Queens, Staten Island and Long Island. On November 8, 2014, President Obama nominated her to succeed Eric Holder as Attorney General of the United States.
Synopsis: This Resolution is being presented by City Council for Council’s review and approval.If approved, Council would be supporting the efforts of the Mayor, Governor, State Education Secretary and State Legislators to raise the age of compulsory school attendance from 16 to 18 years of age. Such a change would help improve the current drop-out problem in Wilmington where as high as 27% of the school population leaves school before graduation as opposed to just 3% of the statewide school population in Delaware. Under current State law, students may choose to drop out of school at the age of 16.
Synopsis: This Resolution is being presented by City Council for Council’s review and approval. If approved, Council would be supporting House Bill No. 30 in the Delaware General Assembly which amends Title 14 of the Delaware Code related to public schools. Specifically, House Bill No. 30 would expand special education services to children in Pre-K through third grades. Currently, the state provides funding for only intensive and complex special education needs for children in these lower grades, but does not provide “basic” special education funding for conditions such as developmental delays and ADHD among others. Adoption of this Resolution would also further a Federal mandate that requires schools to meet the need of disabled students. Delaware is one of only three states which the Department of Education determined“needed intervention” to help it fulfill the federal requirements for disabled students.
The content featured and shared on this website may contain perspectives that do not necessarily reflect the views, opinions and/or endorsements of City Council as a whole, or the City of Wilmington. City Council and the City of Wilmington are not responsible for the content of external sites.