Matt Denn Announces for Governor.

Filed in Delaware by on January 20, 2015

The State of Delaware has received $36 million in settlement money from the evil empires of Bank of America and Citigroup, and Attorney General Matt Denn has ideas on how to spend it in order to tackle Delaware’s crime, education and poverty problems, because he rightly views them as connected.

Attorney General Matt Denn wants […] to provide millions in temporary funding for substance abuse treatment, after school programs, community policing patrols, teachers in high-poverty schools and new efforts to fund affordable housing and economic development in low-income areas of the state. […]

Denn made his pitch in emails Sunday to lawmakers and to groups seeking a slice of state funding.

“We believe that this ambitious investment in Delaware’s economically impacted communities has the potential to transform parts of our state.” Denn wrote.

The proposal is just the latest from Denn, who, since taking office on Jan. 6, has acted to seek funding for walking police patrols in dangerous areas of Wilmington and to toughen sentencing for violations of gun laws.

Denn will host a 11:30 a.m. event on Wednesday at the Carvel State Office Building in Wilmington to publicly unveil details of the $36 million plan, which he is branding “Lifting Up Delaware’s Communities.”

His plan includes $3 million for additional substance abuse treatment facilities; $5.9 million for the state’s Neighborhood Building Blocks Fund, which Denn hopes to use partly to fund walking police patrols in Wilmington; and about $5 million for new teachers and paraprofessionals in 16 of the state’s lowest-income elementary schools.

Sixteen schools would receive $300,000 each over three years.

There’s also $10 million for the Delaware State Housing Authority’s Strong Neighborhoods Revolving Housing Fund to create affordable housing, and $4 million for a program to incentivize development in Delaware’s downtown districts, a program first proposed and funded by Gov. Jack Markell last year. Just $1.5 million would go to direct foreclosure assistance.

In some instances – including the strong neighborhoods fund, and the downtown districts program – Denn’s proposals would add funding to programs that already exist. […]

Markell, who will make public his budget proposal next week, backs Denn’s plan: “The Governor supports AG Denn’s proposal and will encourage the General Assembly, and particularly the JFC, to support the plan as well,” Markell spokeswoman Kelly Bachman said.

Why did I title this post “Matt Denn Announces for Governor?” Well, obviously he has not announced, and if you asked the Attorney General I am sure he would say he is not running. But doesn’t this $36 million dollar proposal strike you as something beyond just his duties as Attorney General. Normally Attorneys General do not care how the settlement monies their office secures for the General Fund is spent, and if they do care, they want more policing and more funding for enforcement.

Matt Denn responded to the News Journal scoop on Facebook:

Once again good news from my office has gotten out a couple of days before I wanted it to. When I ran for Attorney General, I said we couldn’t address violent crime just through law enforcement — that we had to invest in dealing with the underlying causes of crime, such as treating substance abuse addiction, helping young people learn in school and stay out of trouble after school, and working with inmates released from prison to ensure that they do not re-offend. This is my first shot at delivering on that, by using these settlement funds to help repair the harm caused to our communities by the recession brought about by the financial institutions’ conduct. If you can join us Wednesday at 11:30 a.m. in the Carvel State Office Building auditorium, come hear the details!

True enough. And the AG has the Governor’s backing, which likely means most of AG Denn’s plan might actually make it into the budget. And looking down the road, that gives Mr. Denn a very good platform on which to run for Governor. A platform that Tom Gordon, John Carney or Beau Biden do not have.

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Comments (11)

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  1. Jason330 says:

    That conclusion doesn’t necessarily follow. It makes perfect sense that early intervention is a cost effective way to reduce crime. This is simply what a good AG looks like.

  2. Plus, maybe he can accomplish more as AG than anyone else would as Governor.

  3. puck says:

    using these settlement funds to help repair the harm caused to our communities by the recession brought about by the financial institutions’ conduct.

    Matt gets it. It is refreshing to hear a public official who doesn’t think the recession was caused by excessive axes or regulations or brown deadbeat homeowners.

  4. In The Know says:

    Headline is appropriate.
    Matt will make the most of his chance to impress potential voters while Beau watches Daddy speak and dials up his campaign finance bundlers.

    However, ElSom, based on reading today’s paper, one of Matt’s early tasks will be convincing your buddy McDowell that this plan has merit.

  5. John Manifold says:

    “We don’t have that kind of money to throw at the City of Wilmington,” said Sen. Harris McDowell, a Wilmington Democrat and co-chair of the General Assembly’s budget writing Joint Finance Committee. … “We’ve got an awful lot of needs to meet.”

    Like Jobs for Delaware Graduates.

  6. Jason330 says:

    And his six figure sinecure with the SEU.

  7. SussexAnon says:

    Or he could use the money to help the people who got screwed by the banks.

  8. mediawatch says:

    Gotta love how that McDowell guy represents his constituents. Senator from the city says “We don’t have that kind of money to throw at the City of Wilmington.”
    Dennis Williams may not be the greatest of mayors but when he was on the JFC he sure as hell wouldn’t stand up and say he was going to screw the people who voted for him.

  9. hmm says:

    He can’t leave another office midway through a term.

  10. WHAT MEDIAWATCH SAID.

  11. In The Know: What McDowell said reflects the difference between the McDowell of 20 years ago and the McDowell of today. He was a great legislator back then. He’s no longer even a good legislator.