New York Daily News

Council pol bid for more lights on sidewalks

- BY EVAN SIMKO-BEDNARSKI

If vehicular roadways are lit up, then sidewalks should be illuminate­d too, says a Brooklyn City Council member who wants the Department of Transporta­tion to install new lighting on 500 blocks of sidewalk each year.

Democratic Councilman Lincoln Restler would require the DOT to light up the sidewalks of at least 500 blocks of the city annually.

“Lots of regulation­s and policy-making goes into roadway lighting, but the majority of New Yorkers don’t drive — we walk,” said Restler. “Better sidewalk lighting will improve the day to day experience for New Yorkers.”

The legislatio­n specifical­ly targets “commercial corridors,” mixed-use blocks with residentia­l and commercial zoning. A spokespers­on for Restler estimated there are roughly 10,000 such blocks citywide.

The legislatio­n specifical­ly calls for “pedestrian lighting fixtures,” aimed at sidewalks and not roads.

Kelly Carroll, executive director of Brooklyn’s Atlantic Ave. Business Improvemen­t District, told the Daily News she hoped the legislatio­n becomes law.

“It’s past due for a city like New York,” she said. “Its an economic issue and a public safety issue.”

Carroll said that some business owners in her business improvemen­t district — which extends from the BQE overpass west of Hicks St. to Fourth Ave. in parts of Brooklyn Heights, Cobble Hill and Boerum Hill — have taken to installing sets of decorative string lights on their storefront­s to illuminate the sidewalk in front of their shops.

“It’s woefully under-lit,” Carroll said of the avenue, which includes many historic storefront­s.

Jack Chester, owner of Free Range Wine and Spirits on the corner of Atlantic Ave. and Hoyt St., said that while his section of Atlantic Ave. was lined with “type B” lampposts — designed to light up sidewalks rather than roadways — many had been dark for years.

“On our block, they’re almost all burnt out,” Chester told The News.

The vintner said he’d recently moved his shop to the corner, which has more light, and had seen business improve.

A lamppost near his old shop three doors down toward Smith St. has been burnt out for 10 years, he said.

A Transporta­tion Department spokesman said the agency is reviewing the legislatio­n.

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