Mayor Leonard Desiderio and the city's Chief Financial Officer Paula Doll look at one of the new, larger street signs featuring a black background and white lettering.
By DONALD WITTKOWSKI
The old street signs are smaller and have a green background and white lettering, like this one at 56th Street.
Desiderio consulted with the Police Department, the Traffic Maintenance and Safety Department and City Business Administrator George Savastano for new signs that would be more visible to motorists.
The city began installing the new signs this month and it will take until sometime next year to finish the project, Desiderio said.
Altogether, hundreds of new signs will be put up from First Street in the north end of town to 94th Street at the southern end.
As mayor, Desiderio has placed a premium on street signs. In 2019, the city unveiled 78 yellow “Road Flooded When Flashing” signs that are scattered around town to warn motorists of stormwater.
The flashing signs were part of a $226,000 flood warning system considered the largest of its kind for any New Jersey municipality. The sensor-controlled signs act as an early warning system to protect people from flood hazards.