Orange City considers better street lighting | News

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ONE OF 534 — This streetlight in an Orange City neighborhood is one of more than 500 in the city, according to an inventory recently done by city staff and Duke Energy personnel.

ONE OF 534 — This streetlight in an Orange City neighborhood is one of more than 500 in the city, according to an inventory recently done by city staff and Duke Energy personnel.

With help from Duke Energy, officials propose to provide citywide street lighting. At its June 25 meeting, the City Council asked for more information and estimates of the costs.

Orange City now has a total of 534 streetlights, according to an inventory recently completed by city staffers and Duke personnel.

Of those, only four have LED (light-emitting diode) bulbs, which use less electricity and generally last longer than the high-pressure sodium bulbs now in use.

Finance Director Christine Davis said Orange City spends about $76,800 each year to light the streets. The cost of switching out 530 fixtures to LED may initially make that annual expense rise to $79,680, but would likely lower the expense in the future.

“The Police Department drove the entire city at night, and thought lighting throughout the city may be improved by moving to LED,” City Council members were told.

Orange City may also work with the Florida Department of Transportation to improve the lighting at pedestrian crossings along Volusia Avenue — U.S. Highway 17-92 — in the city’s core and its Community Redevelopment Area.

The FDOT has offered to pay to replace poles and light fixtures at eight intersections on Volusia Avenue: Minnesota Avenue, New York Avenue, French Avenue, Graves Avenue, Blue Springs Avenue, Ohio Avenue, Rhode Island Avenue and Enterprise Road.

One concern city staffers identified was “additional poles at each intersection along Volusia Avenue may make an already cluttered corridor worse.”

Another corridor in need of lighting, council members said, is the western segment of Saxon Boulevard between Enterprise Road and Volusia Avenue. The land west of the Orange City Marketplace shopping center, along the south side of Saxon, is inside DeBary city limits.

Orange City has one streetlight district, in Shadow Ridge, a neighborhood on the city’s southeast central section. There, the owners of 79 homes pay an annual assessment for lighting when they pay their property taxes.


Post time: Jul-08-2019
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