THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 2007
VOL. 11 NO. 43
Two die in crash on icy highways
NEWS HEADLINES
Wedding Planner
140 accidents occur in five hours
Inside this edition ELECTIONS - Five western Sussex towns and four school districts have scheduled elections. Find out who has entered the races so far. Page 9 OPEN HOUSES - Looking for a new home? Here’s where to look. Pages 10 and 11 APPLE-SCRAPPLE OPEN - The first annual “Apple-Scrapple Open” will take place at the Heritage Shores golf course this coming fall. Page 12 FLOODING SOLUTION - Eliminating periodic flooding in the Wilmar Village area in Seaford would cost nearly $1 million. Will it happen? Page 13 SENIOR CENTER - Plans for the Nanticoke Senior Center are changing. Find out why and what decisions are needed to move ahead. Page 16 CONFERENCE CHAMPS - The Seaford High boys’ swim team won the Henlopen Conference meet last weekend, giving the team the regular season and tournament titles. Page 41 MIGHTY-MITE - The Western Sussex Boys and Girls Club recently received funding to start a Pop Warner Mighty Mite program to go with its Pee Wee and Midget football and cheerleading teams. Page 47 NEW COACH - The Sussex Tech varsity baseball team will have Seaford ties when head coach Tom Pegelow and his assistants take the helm this spring. Page 48
INSIDE THE STAR BUSINESS BULLETIN BOARD CHURCH CLASSIFIEDS EDUCATION GENE BLEILE GOURMET HEALTH LETTERS LYNN PARKS
6
21 24 31 50 44 8 18 52 17
50 cents
MOVIES OBITUARIES OPINION PAT MURPHY PEOPLE POLICE JOURNAL SNAPSHOTS SPORTS TIDES/WEATHER TODD CROFFORD
7 26 54 40 28 15 14 41-49 55 25
IN MEMORY OF COUNCILMAN MILLER - Lorraine Miller, wife of the late Seaford Councilman Larry Miller, receives a plaque in memory of her husband’s service to the city as police commissioner. Presenting the plaque is Seaford Police Chief Gary Morris. This was part of the 12th Annual Awards Presentation held by Seaford Police Dept. More photos next week. Photo by David Elliott
The Delaware State Police Collision Reconstruction Unit is investigating a single-vehicle fatal crash that occurred Tuesday at approximately 2:48 p.m., on State Route 36, just west of Sussex County Road 207, near Milford. A 1995 Honda Accord operated by Yoel Carillo, 23, of Bridgeville, was traveling east on SR 36 at an apparent high rate of speed. As the Honda rounded a curve, Carillo lost control of it. The Honda then spun out of control and its right side struck a concrete bridge abutment. After striking the abutment, the Honda traveled off the north edge of the roadway and traveled into a small creek where it came to rest. The Honda sustained extensive damage during the crash. Carillo, who was wearing a seatbelt, was pronounced dead at the scene. A passenger in the Honda, Manuela Diaz, 36, of Bridgeville, was also pronounced dead at the scene. Diaz was wearing her seatbelt. The roadway was slick and partially covered with ice at the time of the crash; however, speed also contributed to the crash. Between 2:50 p.m. and 8 p.m. on Tuesday, approximately 72 crashes occurred in Sussex County and 68 in Kent County, police said.
Seaford’s 80-year-old power plant will stay idle for now By Lynn R. Parks The city’s power plant won’t be turning out electricity any time soon. The Seaford City Council voted Tuesday night to accept the recommendation of the electric committee not to renovate the plant to meet new state pollution standards. “It just doesn’t make sense” to renovate the plant, said Councilman Mike Vincent, who is council liaison with the electric committee. The money that
the power plant could generate does not justify the cost of the pollutionremoval devices, he said. Those devices would cost about $1.5 million, he added. “We were looking for a 10-year turnaround,” he said. “But it looks like it would be about 10 times that, a long time.” The 80-year-old Seaford power plant, which has not been in operation since December 2005, has five dieselpowered engines, made in 1958, 1954,
1953, 1939 and 1962. In August, Mark Prettyman, environmental scientist with the Air Quality Management branch of the state Department of Natural Resources and Environmental Control, described them as “very old, very dirty machines.” Under state regulations that went into effect January 2006, the plant cannot resume operations until the city has a plan to reduce pollutants by April 2008. The plant’s “pollutant of conContinued to page 4
Subscribe online: seafordstar.com or call 629-9788