Thieves continue to gut public streetlight poles and make off with their precious copper innards, leaving neighborhoods eerily darkened in Minneapolis and St. Paul.
Minneapolis is committing $1 million of contingency funding to the problem, officials said Thursday.
“There’s a couple pieces that you should be considering if you yourself are considering stealing copper wire from the street, you or any of your friends,” Mayor Jacob Frey said.
“First is, you might break into the light, and there will be no copper wire there, and that is increasingly the case. The second is, we’re going to be watching, and if you’re breaking into our light posts, there will be consequences.”
Minneapolis has about 22,000 streetlights. About 450 of them are out — from the Midtown Greenway to Lake of the Isles Parkway to the Bancroft neighborhood on the city’s south side, where officials held their news conference.
Thieves have hit a total of 17 miles of streetlights. Replacing the stolen copper wire with less desirable aluminum wire will cost the city $40,000 per mile.
Workers have already repaired 4.5 miles of lights this year and will complete the remainder by November, said City Operations Officer Margaret Anderson Kelliher.
“This is absolutely a core function of city government to be able to provide lighting,” she said.