Delaware Inspector General
Why Delaware Needs
an Office of the Inspector General
On August 14, 2025, Governor Matt Meyer signed into law Senate Bill 4, creating an independent and nonpartisan Office of the Inspector General (OIG) in Delaware with the authority to investigate state agencies and state-funded entities for fraud, waste, mismanagement, and corruption. This office will provide oversight of government agencies and ensure the public has confidence in how they operate.
For nearly two decades, open government advocates had fought for the establishment of this critical office. The achievements represents the efforts of thousands of ordinary Delawareans who continued to push for this issue, and the Delaware Coalition for Open Government is proud to have been a part of those efforts.
Thank you for making your voices heard and getting our public officials to create this important office!
Delaware Office of the Inspector General
- Independent and nonpartisan, and not engaged in partisan elections or campaigns.
- Chosen by an independent selection committee to serve a renewable 5-year term.
- Ensures government agencies act in the public interest.
- Ensures public officials perform their duties in accordance with their Oath of Office.
- Ensures protections for whistleblowers who report wrongdoing.
- Saves taxpayer money by recovering misspent funds and preventing governmental waste.
Senate Bill 4, sponsored by Senator Laura Sturgeon and Representative Cyndie Romer along with 23 additional members of the General Assembly, had strong, bipartisan support in the legislature and widespread public support. Despite the efforts of special interests who benefit from the corruption and backroom deals, an Office of the Inspector General is now a reality in Delaware, joining the thirty-five states and the District of Columbia in having an OIG at the state or local level.
The Delaware OIG will enhance public trust in our government by ensuring that state officials perform their duties in accordance with their Oath of Office, which places the public interest before any personal or special interests.

"The most important public official you've never heard of"
Delaware has long struggled with having an open and transparent government that is accountable to residents and taxpayers. In 2015, the Center for Public Integrity ranked Delaware as the 48th worst state for its systems to deter corruption. In 2024, the organization F Minus gave Delaware a failing grade on lobbyist transparency.
The first attempt to create a Delaware Inspector General was House Bill 155, sponsored by Representative Bill Oberle in 2007 with bipartisan support. The bill passed the House of Representatives unanimously, but was kept in the Senate Finance Committee. A similar effort in 2009 with House Bill 134 was never released from the House Administration Committee.
In 2020, after scandals such as asbestos mishandling at a Boxwood Road construction site and backroom deals to dismantle the Rodney Square bus hub, establishing an Office of the Inspector General (OIG) became the main focus for DelCOG, which began working with the Association of Inspectors General to craft model legislation for a state OIG. The culmination of those efforts was House Bill 405, a bipartisan bill sponsored by Representative John Kowalko Jr. that would have created the strongest Inspector General’s office in the country. Seventeen Delaware organizations signed on in support, and the House Administration Committee released the bill, but Speaker Pete Schwartzkopf never brought the bill to a vote in the House.
DelCOG continued pushing for the creation of a Delaware OIG, including presenting at an Inspector General symposium at Villanova Law School. In 2024, Senator Laura Sturgeon introduced Senate Bill 21, an even stronger version of the prior bill. SB 21 was unanimously passed out of the Senate Executive Committee, but the bill never received a hearing in the Senate Finance Committee before the legislative session came to a close at the end of June.
In November 2024, Matt Meyer was elected Governor of Delaware after campaigning on the issue of a Delaware Inspector General, saying “It’s time Delaware had one,” and that he would press for the passage of legislation to create one. This reinvigorated advocates who hoped that Delaware was one step closer to establishing a state OIG.
In January 2025, Senator Laura Sturgeon introduced Senate Bill 4, which was cosponsored by 24 other senators and representatives. This strong, bipartisan sponsorship list represented nearly half of the legislators in the General Assembly. Sen. Sturgeon and House prime sponsor Rep. Cyndie Romer wrote about the importance of the bill in a January 10 op-ed: “It’s about time for a Delaware inspector general”.
The public responded by writing and calling the members of the General Assembly to let them know that this type of government oversight was badly needed. The bill was subsequently passed by the Senate on May 22 and then by the House as the last bill of year in the early hours of July 1. The following month, on August 14, 2025, Governor Meyer signed the bill into law, officially establishing the Delaware Office of the Inspector General.
What will the office do?
By exercising its oversight and investigative authority, an Office of the Delaware Inspector General will:
- Ensure that government agencies act in the public interest and conduct agency affairs with honesty and integrity.
- Uphold the reputation of agencies that are in compliance with the law if wrongly accused of improper or illegal behavior.
- Save taxpayer money — inspectors general have a history of reducing waste in government agencies.
- Investigate and evaluate state-agency deficiencies and questionable practices to deter and stop fraud, waste, abuse, and mismanagement.
- Hold agency officials ethically and legally accountable for their actions or inactions.
- Recommend legal action regarding official misconduct if laws are broken by working in concert with law enforcement, the Attorney General, the State Auditor, and the Public Integrity Commission.
- Respond to alerts by resident and state-employee whistleblowers.
- Recommend changes to state laws, policies, and procedures to help rectify systemic problems by reporting to the governor, state agencies, the legislator, and the public.
- Provide intangible benefits by serving as an alternative resource for employees and staff to report their concerns, while motivating state-agency officials to function in the best interests of all Delawareans.
An independent, nonpartisan Office of the Inspector General fills a void in our state government and benefits state agencies by assisting them to efficiently and effectively carry out their missions, reinforcing agency policies and procedures, and investigating wrongdoing if necessary, while working cooperatively with the Department of Justice and the Auditor of Accounts.
OIGs in other states have recovered billions in misspent taxpayer dollars while deterring further corruption and other wrongdoing. The state estimates that the OIG will cost around $1.5 million each year, which represents around 0.025% of the state’s $6 billion budget for FY 2025. In other states, these offices have recovered funds far exceeding the cost to fund them. The OIG is a good investment to protect public funds and will save taxpayers money by recovering misspent funds and preventing waste and fraud.
Thank you!
Thank you to all those who worked to create the independent, nonpartisan Office of the Inspector General to provide the oversight and accountability that the public deserves. Your voice – the voice of the people – was vitally important.

DelCOG events
- "The Inspector General: Guardian of the Public Trust" (November 14, 2024)
- "The Most Important and Effective Public Official You Never Heard Of: The Inspector General and Why Delaware Needs One" (December 6, 2023)
- "Ensuring Transparency and Accountability: Why Delaware Needs an Inspector General Now!" (August 24, 2023)
DelCOG op-eds
- "Coalition demands action on inspector general bill" (Cape Gazette, May 2, 2025)
- "Why Delaware needs an inspector general now" (Bay to Bay News, April 30, 2025)
- "Coalition expresses need for a Delaware inspector general" (Bay to Bay News, June 18, 2024)
- "Coalition board urges legislators to act on inspector general bill" (Cape Gazette, May 14, 2024)
- "This is why Delaware needs an inspector general" (The News Journal, April 28, 2024)
- "Inspector General office will benefit citizens and state" (Bay to Bay News, May 19, 2022)
- "Delaware needs an inspector general — now" (The News Journal, October 28, 2021)
- "Clarifying the role of a Delaware Office of Inspector General" (Cape Gazette, March 26, 2021)
- "Independent government oversight needed" (Bay to Bay News, December 9, 2019)
News coverage
- The News Journal, "Photos of the week: Capturing the moment" (August 22, 2025)
- Law360 Pulse, "Del. Eyes More Oversight With New Inspector General's Office" (August 21, 2025)
- Cape Gazette, "Meyer eyes short list for inspector general position" (August 19, 2025)
- Coastal Point, "Meyer signs bill establishing inspector general’s office" (August 19, 2025)
- Delaware State News, "After 18 years, Delaware creates Office of Inspector General" (August 15, 2025)
- WHYY, "'Restore faith': Delaware Gov. Matt Meyer signs legislation creating an independent Inspector General Office" (August 15, 2025)
- The News Journal, "Delaware will soon see a new Inspector General's Office. What does this mean?" (August 15, 2025)
- Delaware Public Media, "Delaware establishes new Office of the Inspector General to investigate state fraud and abuse" (August 14, 2025)
- Spotlight Delaware, "Gov. Meyer signs bill creating Delaware Inspector General" (August 14, 2025)
- WDEL, "How will Delaware organize new Office of Inspector General?" (August 14, 2025)
- WDEL, "Video: Governor Meyer signs bill to create Office of Inspector General" (August 14, 2025)
- The News Journal, "Video: Bill that establishes Office of Inspector General in Delaware signed into law" (August 14, 2025)
- CoastTV, "Governor Meyer signs bill creating Delaware inspector general’s office" (August 14, 2025)
- The News Journal, "From new inspector general to medical preauthorization reform. Bills waiting on Gov. Meyer" (August 4, 2025)
- Cape Gazette, "Grants-in-aid funding boosts fire companies, senior centers" (July 11, 2025)
- WHYY, "Delaware lawmakers end session approving bills on medical aid in dying, limiting ICE cooperation and raising DMV fees" (July 6, 2025)
- Cape Gazette, "Meyer’s first budget signed into law" (July 4, 2025)
- Delaware State News, "Offshore wind, medical aid-in-dying, inspector general: a look at the Delaware General Assembly’s business in 2025" (July 3, 2025)
- Delaware State News, "Delaware Gov. Matt Meyer signs spending bills after lengthy June 30 session" (July 2, 2025)
- The News Journal, "Medical aid in dying, offshore wind, other takeaways from Delaware's legislative session" (July 1, 2025)
- The News Journal, "Recap of last hours of session: After late debate, deals, governor signs DE budget bills" (July 1, 2025)
- Delaware Business Now!, "Inspector general bill passes both Houses" (July 1, 2025)
- WDEL, "Del. General Assembly passes remaining FY '26 budget components: how it happened" (July 1, 2025)
- Spotlight Delaware, "Late-night compromise ends legislative standoff over offshore wind" (July 1, 2025)
- Delaware Public Media, "The 153rd Delaware General Assembly ends first leg of legislative session, passes slate of key bills" (July 1, 2025)
- Coastal Point, "Meyer signs 2026-fiscal-year appropriations bills" (July 1, 2025)
- WBOC, "Delaware’s 2025 Legislative Session Summarized" (July 1, 2025)
- CoastTV, "Delaware's General Assembly set to end aggressive first year of current session" (June 30, 2025)
- The News Journal, "What's left to do? Bond bill, inspector general position still pending at Legislative Hall" (June 30, 2025)
- WDEL, "Del. lawmakers race to finish first half of 153rd General Assembly" (June 30, 2025)
- The News Journal, "Delaware operating, one-time supplement budget bills pass; bond bill defeated in Senate" (June 26, 2025)
- WGMD, "Delaware Senate Passes $6.5 Billion Operating Budget with Bipartisan Support" (June 26, 2025)
- CoastTV, "Delaware Senate passes $6.5 billion operating budget for fiscal year 2026" (June 26, 2025)
- Delaware State News, "Delaware General Assembly passes $6.58 billion FY26 budget" (June 26, 2025)
- The News Journal, "Delaware's FY 2026 budget, one-time supplement pass House and head to the Senate" (June 24, 2025)
- Cape Gazette, "Inspector general bill unanimously passes Senate" (June 3, 2025)
- WMDT, "Legislation establishing Office of the Inspector General passes in Senate" (May 28, 2025)
- The News Journal, "Medical aid in dying becomes law, Inspector General bill passes Senate" (May 27, 2025)
- Spotlight Delaware, "Government waste investigator passes Senate; fate in the House remains unclear" (May 25, 2025)
- WGMD, "Bipartisan Bill Establishing Office of the Inspector General Passes Senate" (May 23, 2025)
- Coast TV, "Delaware Senate passes bipartisan bill to establish Office of Inspector General" (May 22, 2025)
- Delaware Business Now, "Senate passes Inspector General Bill" (May 22, 2025)
- Delaware State News, "After positive budget forecast, inspector general bill clears Delaware Senate" (May 22, 2025)
- Delaware Public Media, "Bill that would create an Inspector General's Office clears Delaware Senate" (May 22, 2025)
- WDEL, "Del. moves closer to creating Office of Inspector General" (May 22, 2025)
- WBOC, "Delaware Senate Passes Bill to Create Office of Inspector General" (May 22, 2025)
- Blue Coast Talk, "Why We Need An Inspector General" (May 16, 2025)
- WHYY, "Delaware advocates urge passage of inspector general bill as part of decadeslong fight for more government transparency" (May 10, 2025)
- Delaware State News, "Inspector general bill passed by Senate committee, awaits budget approval" (March 31, 2025)
- WHYY, "Del. Gov. Meyer says state of the state strong despite revenue uncertainties" (April 10, 2025)
- The News Journal, "If Delaware creates an inspector general's office, what would the agency do?" (February 3, 2025)
- Cape Gazette, "Inspector general legislation reintroduced" (January 14, 2025)
- WGMD, "Legislation to Establish the Office of Inspector General Re-introduced in DE General Assembly" (January 12, 2025)
- WDEL, "Del. lawmakers will again consider creating Inspector General's Office" (January 11, 2025)
- Newark Post, "The Meyer Plan: Inspector general, campaign audits for better government" (January 9, 2025)
- Spotlight Delaware, "The Meyer Plan: Inspector general, campaign audits for better government" (January 1, 2025)
- WHYY, "'Right to know': Progressives hope next Delaware governor will push for more government transparency" (October 16, 2024)
- WHYY, "Delaware’s Public Integrity Commission won’t investigate alleged impropriety by state officials over embezzlement" (September 29, 2024)
- WHYY, "Delaware lawmakers support new inspector general's office to increase transparency" (May 20, 2024)
- Cape Gazette, "Inspector general bill introduced in Senate" (March 16, 2024)
- The News Journal, "A renewed, bipartisan effort to create Delaware government Inspector General watchdog" (March 13, 2024)
- WDEL, "State senator pushes for Delaware Inspector General" (March 13, 2024)
- Delaware State News, "State senator introduces bipartisan effort to establish inspector general in Delaware" (March 12, 2024)
- Delaware Public Media, "Bipartisan legislation introduced in Delaware Senate would create Office of Inspector General" (March 12, 2024)
- Delaware Live, "Bipartisan bill would see Inspector General at work by 2025" (March 12, 2024)
- WGMD, "Legislation has Been Filed to Create the Office of the Inspector General in Delaware" (March 12, 2024)