County government County executive The county is headed by a
county executive, currently Marcus Henry. The chief administrative officer, who is the county's second-in-command, is appointed by the county executive and serves at his or her pleasure. Mona Parikh was appointed CAO in January 2025.
County offices The New Castle County government maintains the New Castle County Government Center in an unincorporated area; it has a New Castle postal address. The facility opened in May 1997 after it acquired the facility from
Wilmington Trust. Previously these county offices were at the Louis L. Redding City/County Building, with some others in the County Engineering Building. The latter building is no longer in use. By 1998 the majority of the county employees were based at the Government Center. The Redding Building was built in 1976. The city/county council chambers are at Redding.
County Council The county's legislative body is a thirteen-member
county council, consisting of twelve members elected by district and one president elected at large. The council is tasked with drafting laws and managing county government services,
public health ordinances,
land use, transportation, and
zoning. New Castle County Council doubled in size to thirteen from seven members in 2004. Its most famous council member was
Joe Biden, the 46th
president of the United States, who represented the 4th district from 1971 to 1973. Current county council members are: • District 1: Brandon Toole (D) • District 2: Dee Durham (D) • District 3: Janet Kilpatrick (D) • District 4: Penrose Hollins (D) • District 5: Valerie George (D) • District 6: David Carter (D) • District 7: George Smiley (D) • District 8: John J. Cartier (D) • District 9: Timothy P. Sheldon (D) • District 10: Jea P. Street (D) • District 11: David L. Tackett (D) • District 12: Kevin Caneco (D) • At Large: Karen Hartley-Nagle (D), President
County judiciary As with Delaware's other two counties, New Castle County has no judiciary of its own. All judicial functions, except for Alderman's Courts, are managed and funded by the state of
Delaware. In New Castle County, only the cities of Newport and Newark have alderman's courts. These courts have jurisdiction over driving offenses, misdemeanor criminal charges, and minor civil claims.
County row offices The county retains the concept of "row offices" from Pennsylvania, so-called because all of these county offices could be found in a row in smaller courthouses. In Delaware, these offices are
clerk of the peace,
recorder of deeds, register of wills, and
sheriff. The office of clerk of the peace is unique among the 50 states; the office-holder's function is almost exclusively to perform marriages. The current incumbent is Kenneth W. Boulden Jr. (D) The
recorder of deeds is Michael Kozikowski (D). His office is responsible for receiving and recording
deeds,
mortgages and satisfactions thereof, assignments, commissions of
judges,
notaries, and military officers. The recorder of deeds' office is heavily computerized; electronic images of all recent documents and many others are available the office is in the process of imaging further back with the eventual goal of all documents in the office's possession being available electronically. Computerized indexing and searching is also available. The register of wills is Ciro Poppiti, III. His office receives and records
wills and small-estate affidavits upon an individual's death, and issues
letters of administration to estate
executors. The
sheriff of New Castle County has two divisions, criminal and civil. The criminal division is based in the New Castle County Courthouse in Wilmington. The deputies assigned to this division organize and manage
capias returns. They also transport prisoners for Superior Court, Court of Common Pleas, and Family Court. The civil division serves legal process, performs levies & impounds and sells property in satisfaction of
judgments. The civil division also locates and apprehends individuals wanted for civil capias. The current sheriff is Scott T. Phillips.
County zoning and public works New Castle County has a strong
zoning code, known as the Unified Development Code, or UDC. The UDC was developed by the Gordon Administration in response to public perception of over- and misdevelopment in the county. New building projects must go through a process of application and approval before construction is permitted to begin. By operation of state law, New Castle County has no responsibility whatsoever for maintenance of
roadways. Public roadways are maintained exclusively by the Delaware Department of Transportation, while roadways within neighborhoods and developments are, pursuant to County code, maintained by homeowners' or neighborhood associations. The Department of Public Works maintains essential infrastructure elements such as sanitary sewers and drainage ways. It also maintains County-owned parks and buildings such as County libraries. It does not maintain the water distribution system, which is owned and operated by several private companies. In general, it also does not maintain stormwater management facilities within subdivisions.
County public safety Access to
911 emergency services is provided by New Castle County through their emergency communications center for all fire/rescue/emergency medical services (EMS) throughout the county and the majority of police services, though Newark, Wilmington, and the University of Delaware maintain their own police emergency call centers. New Castle County has its own nationally accredited police department. The
New Castle County Police Department is the second largest police organization in the state of Delaware. New Castle County maintains a county wide police force with authorization to enforce laws throughout the county, including within incorporated municipalities. The county police force is supported by local municipality police agencies in
Middletown,
Newark,
Delaware City,
Wilmington,
Newport,
Elsmere, the city of
New Castle, the
University of Delaware, as well as the
Delaware State Police. New Castle County also operates a nationally accredited, county-run paramedic service through its Emergency Medical Services Division. NCC*EMS is the advanced life support (ALS) component of a two-tiered, paramedic intercept EMS system. County paramedics are located in eight full-time stations and one part-time station that operates during the hours of 7:00 a.m. to 7:00 p.m., with a capability of calling in additional personnel during major emergencies or planned events. Basic life support (BLS) ambulance service is provided primarily by volunteer fire companies with the use of paid employees that are trained in fire suppression and EMS. Fire/Rescue protection is provided by twenty-one volunteer
fire departments throughout the county. The city of Wilmington has its own career municipal fire department and contracts with a private ambulance service for basic life support coverage. The contracted private ambulance service in Wilmington operates in a tiered response configuration with the New Castle County Paramedics. The Paul J. Sweeney Public Safety Building, located in
Minquadale off of
US 13, houses the New Castle County Police and Emergency Medical Services Division Headquarters and the emergency communications center supporting 9-1-1 services. The present building opened in 2007 with a construction cost of . Several DSCYF juvenile facilities, including the New Castle County Detention Center (NCCDC), the Ferris School for Boys, and the Grace and Snowden Cottages are in unincorporated New Castle County. Several
Delaware Department of Correction facilities are located in the county. The
James T. Vaughn Correctional Center (JTVCC), formerly the Delaware Correctional Center, is a men's prison in unincorporated New Castle County, housing sentenced prisoners; Vaughn opened in 1971. The
Howard R. Young Correctional Institution, renamed from Multi-Purpose Criminal Justice Facility in 2004 and housing both pretrial and posttrial male prisoners, is located in
Wilmington; it opened in 1982. The
Delores J. Baylor Correctional Institution, a women's prison housing pretrial and posttrial prisoners, is located in unincorporated New Castle County. Baylor opened on December 29, 1991. Executions were to occur at JTVCC, prior to the 2016 suspension of it by the
Delaware Supreme Court. New Castle elects a substantial majority of the state legislature, with 27 state house districts and 17 state senate districts based in the county. ==Communities==