Newport Beach may green light blackout backup
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Mathis Winkler
NEWPORT BEACH -- State law’s clear on what drivers must do when
traffic lights go out: They need to treat the dark signals as stop signs.
But not everyone remembers, or follows, this rule and possible
blackouts could lead to accidents at the city’s intersections.
That’s why city officials are expected to set aside at least $100,000
to install battery backup systems that are designed to prevent such
confusion.
Council members, who discussed the plan last week and will again take
up the issue at their July 10 meeting, said it was worth spending the
money.
“It’s a safety issue,” said Councilman Tod Ridgeway on Monday. “Even
though the law says, ‘You must stop,’ people have shown themselves not to
know the law, and it’s better to be on the safe side.”
Backup systems that keep red lights flashing during power outages cost
about $3,500 per intersection and can be installed in four to six weeks,
according to city officials.
An alternative, which keeps traffic signals functioning regularly,
comes to about $8,000. That’s because this version requires
light-emitting diodes, or LEDs, instead of the older incandescent bulbs.
While many of the city’s traffic signals already have red LEDs, the green
lights would also have to be replaced. Because LED supplies are limited,
installing these systems could take up to 10 weeks.
To put the latter system in all of the city’s intersections -- Newport
Beach operates 75, while Caltrans takes care of 35 -- would probably cost
more than $700,000, Rich Edmonston, the city’s transportation and
development services manager, wrote in a report.
On Monday, Edmonston said a third backup system may make it possible
to keep signals fully functioning without replacing the old bulbs with
LEDs. But he added that he was still trying to figure out the long-term
costs for the July 10 meeting.
Like Ridgeway, Mayor Gary Adams said he’d at least like to see this
system brought to the city’s major intersections along Coast Highway,
MacArthur and Newport boulevards, and Jamboree Road.
“I’m not sure how much a flashing red [light] operation really does
for us” to keep traffic moving smoothly during blackouts, Adams said.
“When the power goes down, we really don’t have all the tools we need.”
Caltrans officials are apparently planning to install backup systems
at intersections throughout Orange County this summer if they can receive
adequate funding, according to Edmonston’s report.
But it’s unclear when, and if, Caltrans would install them in Newport
Beach, Edmonston wrote. He added that if city officials decide to install
backup systems in signals operated by Caltrans, the state agency plans to
return the systems to Newport Beach once they put in their own.
Caltrans officials could not be reached for comment Monday.
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