Agenda 38th Club Meeting Monday Aug 4
- 38th District Republican Club

- Aug 2
- 6 min read
I. Call to order 6:30-6:35pm
II. Prayer and Pledge of Allegiance
III. President’s Welcome and Acknowledge our representatives:
A. Sen. Gerald Hocker
B. Rep. Ron Gray
C. Sussex County Council President Doug Hudson
D. Fenwick Island Mayor Natalie Madgeburger
E. Millville Councilman Bob Wisgirda
F. Ocean View Councilman Stephen Cobb
H. IRSD Board President, Mark Steele
I. EDCs
J. Sussex Chair/Vice Chair – Danny Willis/Tom Molnar
K. Guest Speaker – Dave Stevenson, Energy and Environment Center Director of the Caesar Rodney Institute.
IV. Vice President's Report and Featured Business: McGee Farms
V. Secretary Approval of the Minutes
VI. Treasurer's Report
VIII. DE Republican Party 38th RDC Report
A. DE GOP Convention – to elect a New Chair
1. Delegates Only – Saturday Aug 9th 9am, Dover HS.
2. A Chair candidate can be nominated from the floor
3. 38th District Republican Club endorses Gene Truono for Chair
B. Julianne Murray – U.S. District Attorney outranks the DE AG. – will we now see increased prosecutions of crime in Delaware?!
C. Special Election District 20 Update
IX. 38th Vice RDC Report
X. Delaware Legislative Report: Let’s Get the First State Right!
A. Republican Efforts
1. From the DE Pulse: Special Session to review the property tax reassessments and the School districts tax rate increase – Appoquinimink 10% increase. New Castle County property owners are voicing widespread frustration over substantial property tax hikes as bills reflecting the county’s recent reassessment are mailed out, with many residents experiencing “sticker shock” due to the first reassessment in decades, prompting calls for legislative action.
2. Controversy has grown thanks to social media such as NextDoor and Facebook. Katie Ladzinski has become a sensation on Facebook and TikTok with her investigation of dramatic changes in property taxation following the reassessment. In one of her Facebook posts, Ladzinski reports the Sears on Concord Pike received a 55% decrease from $720,906 to $322,746. AstraZeneca 51% decrease, Trader Joe's had a 42% decrease. In the meantime, she reports decreases in property taxes for several prominent elected Democrats. Most people are complaining about a 30-35% increase. State GOP officials have spoken to former County staff who report they seemingly have shifted the tax burden from companies and corporations to homeowners.
5. IRSD also had a 10% tax rate increase - come to the meeting to find out why and ask your tough questions.
B. Delaware Democrat Destroyers Counter Measures
XI. Guest Speaker – Dave Stevenson, Energy & Environment Center Director of Caesar Rodney Institute.
A. New Proposed Data Center
B. Nuclear Energy in Delaware
C. Offshore Wind Update
XII. Representative Report
A. Senator Gerald Hocker
B. Representative Ron Gray
C. Sussex County Council President Doug Hudson
XIII. Members Mic
XIV. Adjournment 8:10 pm

How a New Data Center Could Impact Your Electric Bill
By David T. Stevenson, Director
Center for Energy & Environmental Policy
July 31, 2025
The proposed New Castle County data center project — known as Project Washington and backed by developer Starwood Digital Ventures — could significantly affect Delaware’s electricity supply and pricing. The project plans to buy power from Delmarva Power, with only limited on‑site diesel or natural gas backup.
The developer has not provided a full forecast of electricity demand. However, at a July 24 public forum, Starwood estimated the project would require 1.2 gigawatts of capacity. That translates to 7.4 to 10.5 million megawatt‑hours per year, depending on the energy source — roughly double Delmarva Power’s current demand, or about the same as the entire state’s usage.
Delaware’s Energy Dependence and Rising Costs:
Delaware already imports nearly 60% of its electricity, up from just 20% in 2016. A major reason is the rising cost of carbon taxes under the state’s Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative mandate, which has made Delaware‑based natural gas‑fired power plants uncompetitive in the daily PJM (Pennsylvania-New Jersey- Maryland power grid) regional grid auction. Efforts to repeal the tax failed this year, so it is expected to remain in place.
Importing so much power raises costs and adds stress to the grid. The farther electricity travels, the more is lost, and customers pay for those line losses. Starwood emphasized the benefit of locating near the 500‑kilovolt regional power line. What it did not mention is that this line already faces serious congestion near York, Pennsylvania, which adds further transmission fees.
The added demand would also increase the cost of keeping power plants on standby. Capacity prices in Delaware rose this June from $179 per megawatt‑day to $269.92 due to a shortage of baseload capacity.
Virginia Offers a Warning
Other states provide a preview of what Delaware could face. In Virginia, where new data centers are proliferating, capacity prices reached $444.26. A report commissioned by the Virginia legislature estimated that residential bills may rise $168 to $444 annually as more data centers come online. That estimate does not include the cost of needed infrastructure, and the report highlighted other risks tied to rapid growth in the sector.
Regional Lessons from Maryland and Pennsylvania
These concerns aren’t just theoretical. Neighboring states have already faced tough choices with major energy projects. In Maryland, the Public Service Commission’s consultant recommended against approving the US Wind offshore Momentum Wind project unless congestion issues were resolved, warning that power could not be reliably delivered otherwise. At the same time, Pennsylvania regulators considered a $250 million to $470 million plan to ease the York bottleneck but rejected it weeks after Maryland approved the project. With Project Washington’s demand, the same bottleneck must be addressed. The question remains: Will Starwood help pay?
Reliability on the Line
PJM representatives testified in the Delaware legislature this year that the state could soon face brownouts and blackouts during extreme weather. They warned that the risk could begin as early as this year and will grow as more baseload plants retire early. A project of this size could accelerate those risks.
Recommendations for County Council:
Require detailed demand estimates: Starwood should project its use in megawatt‑hours, not just megawatts of capacity. That’s like asking not only how big a car’s gas tank is, but how many miles it will drive.
Protect existing customers: Delmarva Power should seek approval from the Public Service Commission for a special data center rate. This would ensure higher costs tied to the project are not shifted to Delaware households and businesses.
Project Washington may promise growth, but its true test is whether Delaware’s power grid — and its people — can handle the cost and reliability challenges it brings.
By David T. Stevenson, Director
Center for Energy & Environmental Policy
Caesar Rodney Institute
July 31, 2025

ABOUT CAESAR RODNEY INSTITUTE
The Caesar Rodney Institute is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit, nonpartisan Delaware-based public policy think tank committed to protecting individual liberties. We create fact-based analyses to help Delawareans make more informed decisions. We envision a Delaware where all Delawareans are empowered to make informed decisions that best enable them to pursue their aspirations and achieve their goals. www.CaeserRodney.org. Subscribe to the CRI updates here.
Next 38th District Republican Club Meeting
For more information on what is going on in Delaware politics, come to our next 38th District Republican Club meeting, Monday, August 4th, 6:30 pm at the Millville Town Hall on Club House Drive! Guest speaker will be Caesar Rodney Institute, Dave Stevenson, who will talk to us about the planned Data Center and nuclear energy options in Delaware!
What Topics Would YOU Like To Hear About
If there are other topics you would like to hear about, please let us know! Email your suggestions to info@38thdrcp.com.
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Do you want to get more involved locally? The 38th District includes Bethany Beach, South Bethany, Fenwick Island, Ocean View, Millville, Selbyville and Frankford. YOU can make a difference! Email info@38thdrcp.com for more information. Also, sign up for the State GOP e-Newsletters here.
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Upcoming Meetings
Sussex GOP Region Meeting, NO MEETING August Millsboro Fire Hall
NO CLUB Meeting in July
38th Club Meeting, Monday, August 4th, 6:30pm, Millville Town Hall, Club House Drive
We welcome your support as we support conservative values and responsible government.

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