Delaware House District 26

Making cycling and walking safe, convenient and fun in Delaware

House District 26 covers the suburban communities southeast of Newark located south of I-95 and east of SR72 extending south towards Pulaski Highway and east towards SR1. (If you are not 100% sure whether you live in House District 26, you can search here using your address.) If you live in this district your choice on November 8 to represent you in the Delaware House of Representatives is between the incumbent Representative Madinah Wilson-Anton and her challenger Tim Conrad. Using a multiple choice format, we asked these two candidates to share their views on four questions related to traffic safety in Delaware. Mr. Conrad did not respond but Representative Wilson-Anton’s answers are here:

1) In May the 151st Delaware General Assembly voted unanimously to approve the Everyone Gets Home resolution (SCR 94). SCR94 called for reducing traffic fatalities in Delaware to no more than 100 people each year and tasked state agencies to meet that goal by 2025.

Wilson-Anton: “Progress in reducing traffic fatalities is possible and elected state officials have an important role to play in holding state agencies accountable for meeting traffic safety goals.”


2) There is significant disagreement among transportation professionals about how limited resources for government traffic safety efforts should be allocated.

Wilson-Anton: “All types of crashes need to be addressed but greater resources should be allocated to reducing fatal crash types compared to property damage and injury crashes.”


3) Traffic safety professionals often describe their work in terms of the ‘3 Es’ (education, enforcement and engineering).

Wilson-Anton: “Everyone makes mistakes but in a well-engineered system good infrastructure both encourages safer behavior and also prevents human fallibility from turning into human fatalities.”


4)  Many of Delaware’s deadliest roads – including Dupont Highway, Coastal Highway, Kirkwood Highway and Pulaski Highway – have become deadlier over time as commercial development along those roads has increased the number of potential conflicts between vehicles, and between vehicles and pedestrians, entering and exiting driveways and changing lanes either to enter or after exiting driveways.

Wilson-Anton: “DelDOT should partner with counties to consolidate driveway entrances and exits onto busy, high-speed, multi-lane highways.”