Last August, Troy Kester reported four broken streetlights on W. Broadway to Minneapolis’ 311 hot line. The city didn’t fix them until spring.“The fact that there’s a whole string of messed-up lights doesn’t send a good message to the people driving through,” he said. Minneapolis is reviewing its streetlight system after noticing in municipal surveys that residents of north Minneapolis — where Kester reported the lights — and the Phillips community in south Minneapolis report dramatically lower rates of satisfaction with their lighting than anywhere else in the city. Those areas also have higher poverty and crime.
Thursday, April 24, 2014
Minneapolis shining a light on streetlight repairs
Last August, Troy Kester reported four broken streetlights on W. Broadway to Minneapolis’ 311 hot line. The city didn’t fix them until spring.“The fact that there’s a whole string of messed-up lights doesn’t send a good message to the people driving through,” he said. Minneapolis is reviewing its streetlight system after noticing in municipal surveys that residents of north Minneapolis — where Kester reported the lights — and the Phillips community in south Minneapolis report dramatically lower rates of satisfaction with their lighting than anywhere else in the city. Those areas also have higher poverty and crime.
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