Delaware News


Delaware’s 153rd General Assembly Advances DHSS Priorities to Lower Costs, Strengthen Care Workforce

Delaware Health and Social Services | Newsroom | Date Posted: Wednesday, July 1, 2026



NEW CASTLE (July 1, 2026) – Delaware’s Fiscal Year 2027 operating budget and key legislation enacted by the 153rd General Assembly are delivering important wins for Delaware families. The operating budget, signed by Governor Matt Meyer on June 30, and other legislation take important steps to make health care more affordable, make child care more affordable, and support care workers.

“Health care is a human right, and this budget increases access to high-quality, life-saving care for hardworking Delaware families,” said Governor Matt Meyer. “Families need access to quality and affordable child care, and the professionals that serve our children deserve to be paid fairly.”

Health care affordability: Families across Delaware struggle with high and rising health care costs. The budget and legislation passed this session implement major reforms to make health care more affordable:

Child care affordability: Working families spend an ever-increasing share of their paycheck on child care. To address rapidly growing demand, the operating budget makes a major new investment in child care affordability in the Purchase of Care program. More Delaware families will be able to afford high-quality child care through expanded eligibility for the Purchase of Care program, allowing an estimated 1,400 additional children to receive assistance each month, a roughly 10% increase.

Care workers: Even as Delaware families struggle to afford health care and child care, the workforce that delivers many of these services, like child care workers and direct support professionals, face low wages and struggle to make ends meet. The operating budget recognizes these gaps and makes critical investments that will help raise wages for care workers:

  • Increased reimbursement rates—10% for providers serving children from birth through age 5 and 20% for providers serving children with special needs—will help strengthen child care providers and expand access to high-quality care for Delaware families.
  • Direct support professionals and behavioral health service providers will also see rate increases to help raise wages for critical care workers.

“The work of DHSS touches Delawareans at every stage of life,” said DHSS Secretary Christen Linke Young. “This session’s investments and reforms will strengthen our care workforce, help more families access affordable child care, improve access to health care, and modernize how government serves the public. We’re grateful to Governor Meyer, the Joint Finance Committee, legislative leadership, our partners in the General Assembly, and Delaware’s stakeholder community for their collaboration throughout the session.”

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Keep up to date by receiving a daily digest email, around noon, of current news release posts from state agencies on news.delaware.gov.

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Delaware’s 153rd General Assembly Advances DHSS Priorities to Lower Costs, Strengthen Care Workforce

Delaware Health and Social Services | Newsroom | Date Posted: Wednesday, July 1, 2026



NEW CASTLE (July 1, 2026) – Delaware’s Fiscal Year 2027 operating budget and key legislation enacted by the 153rd General Assembly are delivering important wins for Delaware families. The operating budget, signed by Governor Matt Meyer on June 30, and other legislation take important steps to make health care more affordable, make child care more affordable, and support care workers.

“Health care is a human right, and this budget increases access to high-quality, life-saving care for hardworking Delaware families,” said Governor Matt Meyer. “Families need access to quality and affordable child care, and the professionals that serve our children deserve to be paid fairly.”

Health care affordability: Families across Delaware struggle with high and rising health care costs. The budget and legislation passed this session implement major reforms to make health care more affordable:

Child care affordability: Working families spend an ever-increasing share of their paycheck on child care. To address rapidly growing demand, the operating budget makes a major new investment in child care affordability in the Purchase of Care program. More Delaware families will be able to afford high-quality child care through expanded eligibility for the Purchase of Care program, allowing an estimated 1,400 additional children to receive assistance each month, a roughly 10% increase.

Care workers: Even as Delaware families struggle to afford health care and child care, the workforce that delivers many of these services, like child care workers and direct support professionals, face low wages and struggle to make ends meet. The operating budget recognizes these gaps and makes critical investments that will help raise wages for care workers:

  • Increased reimbursement rates—10% for providers serving children from birth through age 5 and 20% for providers serving children with special needs—will help strengthen child care providers and expand access to high-quality care for Delaware families.
  • Direct support professionals and behavioral health service providers will also see rate increases to help raise wages for critical care workers.

“The work of DHSS touches Delawareans at every stage of life,” said DHSS Secretary Christen Linke Young. “This session’s investments and reforms will strengthen our care workforce, help more families access affordable child care, improve access to health care, and modernize how government serves the public. We’re grateful to Governor Meyer, the Joint Finance Committee, legislative leadership, our partners in the General Assembly, and Delaware’s stakeholder community for their collaboration throughout the session.”

image_printPrint

Graphic that represents delaware news on a mobile phone

Keep up to date by receiving a daily digest email, around noon, of current news release posts from state agencies on news.delaware.gov.

Here you can subscribe to future news updates.