Lighting Cornwall Bridge

CORNWALL — Will the lights stay on, or go off in the center of Cornwall Bridge?

Business owners and residents who have been paying the cost of lighting seven streetlights for more than 50 years have decided it’s time the state Department of Transportation (DOT) takes on the responsibility.

It’s not so much about the cost — between $7 and $8 per month — as it is about the principle, according to Richard Bramley, a town selectman and owner of the Cornwall Package Store.

“It’s about safety. That’s why those lights were put up in the first place. We think the intersection of routes 7 and 4 is worthy of being lit. We decided it’s time to ask the state to take over.�

Two precedents were set in the last decade when the state agreed to assume lighting costs in West Cornwall and the village. Both cases involved dissolving a lighting district, where taxes were collected from property owners to keep the lights on.

In those cases, the DOT agreed to assume the cost of lights on state roads, particularly at the Covered Bridge.

But Cornwall Bridge does not have a lighting district. Bramley described it as a “loosely knit group� that has paid the bills. Generally, whoever lives or owns a business closest to a light pays for it. Others might donate toward the cost.

As towns in rural areas are discovering, streetlights that are taken for granted are in a rather tenuous situation. Most stretches around here are unlit for miles between town centers. The odd streetlight has generally gone up at the request of a town, business or resident concerned about safety. One of the latter ends up paying for it. When ownership or minds change, bills that go unpaid mean lights will be turned off, and eventually taken down.

“I’m not saying that’s going to happen in Cornwall Bridge,â€� Bramley said, “but the lights are really needed and  we need to work out a better plan.â€�

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