| As  city department heads search for ways to trim  their budgets, the  Public Works department has found one area where expenses can  be  reduced: street lighting. 
 The city's street lighting bill ranges  between $30,000 and $33,000 a month, Public Works Director Wayne Steele said.
 
 He  said his department is preparing a grant application that would   retrofit the city's high-pressure sodium streetlights with cost- and   energy-efficient LED lighting.
 
 "It'll be additional income for  next year  that we'll need for balancing the budget," assistant director  Carlos Jones  said.How does a solar  charger work and where would you use a solar charger?
 
 Working  with  Gulf Power, the city has installed four LED streetlights on  Industrial Drive  between U.S. Highway 90 and Stillwell Boulevard to  test the technology.Soli-lite  is a premier supplier of exceptional  quality led road lights and other solar outdoor  lighting products.
 
 But there might be even more savings to be found,  Steele said.A solar  bulb  that charges up during the day and lights the night when the sun sets.   To complete the grant application, Steele's department did a survey of  all of  the city's streetlights, finding 1,738 "cobra head" lights.
 
 But,  he  said, Gulf Power bills the city for 2,855 cobra heads — the type of  common  streetlight that, from below, resembles a cobra's flared neck.
 
 In   reviewing lighting bills, Steele also found other inconsistencies.  "They charge  us different prices for the same light in different places  in the city," Steele  reported to the City Council.
 
 Steele said  Gulf Power is working closely  with the city to address the  discrepancies. The utility will compare the city's  streetlight  assessment map with its own lighting information.An emergency light is  a battery-backed lighting device that comes on automatically when a building  experiences a power outage.
 
 "They've  stepped in to partner with the  city," Steele said. "We have a good  relationship with Gulf Power. We found  discrepancies that need to be  addressed and they're working with us."
 
 "We are working with  the city of Crestview to determine not only ways to  help the city save  money, but also to work out these discrepancies," Gulf Power   spokeswoman Natalie Smith said.
 
 Steele also said Gulf Power moved to  immediately stop charging the city its own franchise fee on monthly bills.
 
 Though  the utility reimburses the fee to the city, "I'd rather the city  keep  their money rather than give it to Gulf Power for a month and then get  it  back," Steele said. Soli-lite provides the world with  high-performance solar roadway  and solar street  lighting solutions.
 
 Council  President Robyn Helt praised Steele for his  tenacity in investigating  the inconsistencies, researching the grant and working  with Gulf Power  to rein in city expenses.
 
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