I found this article on google, West Kittanning is also doing away with their older mercury streetlights too.
KITTANNING -- Decorative holiday lights may not be the only brightness in the borough this winter. Monday, borough council voted unanimously to allow Allegheny Power to begin replacing current mercury vapor street lights with high pressure sodium lights.
Allegheny Power account manager Robin Martin said high pressure sodium lights will provide more light, measured by lumens, per watt than mercury vapor lights, enhancing lighting on borough streets. She told council that Kittanning is one of the first boroughs in several counties to be selected for light replacement. The lights will be replaced at no cost to the borough other than a slight increase in monthly bills.
Council president Gerald Shuster said enhanced lighting was necessary for safety reasons, andthat a small increase in monthly charges was worth it. He asked Martin for specific details on the increased amount of lighting that could be gained by switching to sodium lights.
Martin said that a 175-watt mercury vapor street light provides approximately 8,150 lumens of light. A lumen is a unit of measured light. By comparison Martin said a 100-watt sodium light would provide 9,500 lumens, or approximately 14 percent more light.
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Martin said the borough currently has 298, 175-watt street lights; 27, 250-watt lights; 60, 400-watt; and one, 1000-watt light. The average light bill for the borough using the present mercury vapor lights is approximately $4,644. A light for light replacement with high pressure sodium lights would increase the borough's light bill to approximately $5,300, or an increase of slightly more than $650 per month.
Later, council member Mary Piluso said the borough's light bill is paid with property tax revenues. She said she could foresee no raise in taxes to pay for the increased lighting.
Both Shuster and Piluso said better lighting will serve to deter vandalism and other types of crime.
"If we don't do this today, down the road we will," Piluso said. "We are the county seat so we have to take the lead in these matters."
Martin said the light replacement process will begin once Allegheny Power receives a work request from the borough.
"Once we receive an official request from the borough," she said, "we will turn the matter over to our design and engineering team. They have to verify the physical location of each light and then order the correct number of lights and wattages. Once the lights are shipped to our Kittanning service center work may begin, contingent on the weather and providing that our crews are not called out for emergency assistance in other areas such as in case of a severe weather-related emergency."
Martin said a light-for-light exchange would take approximately six to eight weeks, again, depending on weather.
Piluso said after the work is done, council will re-assess street lighting needs to determine if additional lights are needed in certain areas, or if some increased wattage lights are needed. She said council said additional lighting may be needed in areas such as the upper end of North Water Street, behind the Kittanning High School football field, North Grant Avenue and some areas of the Armstrong Trail.
Although council has requested Allegheny Power study the borough's street light situation for several months, some council members, and borough Police Chief Ed Cassesse, felt that their requests were being ignored. Last month Shuster said part of the problem was that utility company representatives were not located in Pittsburgh or Greensburg, but often in other states. He said, at the same time, that that local representatives of Allegheny Power were not responsible for work not being done. He suggested that council consider withholding power bill payment as a way to call attention to what he felt was poor service by not having dim or burned out lights replaced.
Martin told council that a special toll-free hotline, called Allegheny Pro Advantage Straight Line for Business, has been established and the line would expedite response to requests or concerns the borough might have regarding any Allegheny Power question. She assured council that using the toll-free business line would insure individual attention whether the call required a simple answer or a thorough investigation.