Increase in Copper Wire Theft - Not Just Street Lights
The City of Saint Paul Department of Public Works maintains more than 37,000 street lights and 32,000 light poles throughout Saint Paul. Street lights are a critical part of the City’s infrastructure because they provide illumination for safe pedestrian, bicycle, and vehicle access within the City right of way (sidewalks, boulevards, and streets). Street lights can also serve as a general deterrent for unlawful activities.
In recent years, the City of Saint Paul has experienced an exponential increase of both new and reoccurring copper wire theft from street light fixtures both in city right of way and parks. The theft areas have drastically expanded from a few, regular targeted street lights in isolated areas to now impacting the entire city, including public and private infrastructure such as:
- Park trails and parking lots
- Major arterial and collector streets
- Traffic signals
- EV charging stations
- Street lights
- Ground access panels
- Utility vaults
- Heating and air conditioning systems
- Private businesses and homes
The City of Saint Paul is not unique in dealing with rampant wire theft from public and private infrastructure. Other Minnesota cities, municipalities, and utilities are reporting increase in copper wire thefts. In all parts of the country, wire theft is a growing issue.
Stealing the wire from the street lights is not a victimless crime. Stealing the wire and damaging street lights is illegal and leaves many of our neighborhoods, roadways, and parks dark for extended periods of time. Stealing wire is dangerous. Saint Paul is leaving more lights on, or energized, during the day to deter theft. When stealing wire, thieves often do significant additional damage to the internal conduits, external base, and entire system which takes additional time, resources, and costs to be repaired and replaced.
Saint Paul Continues to Address Ongoing Wire Theft
In 2023, city staff put additional resources to repair and replace street lights that were damaged due to wire theft, only to have the new wire stolen again within a matter of hours. More areas of Saint Paul remain dark as we cannot repair and replace the wire as fast as it is being stolen.
Led by Mayor Carter’s office, Saint Paul Public Works, Saint Paul Parks and Recreation, Department of Safety and Inspections, Saint Paul Police Department, and City Council have been working together on a comprehensive approach towards a long-term, sustainable solution to prevent and deter wire theft, including a new copper metal legislation to make it more difficult for thieves to sell stolen copper materials to recyclers.
The City of Saint Paul is:
Responding to and repairing damaged street lights and other public infrastructure, including making sure there are no safety hazards to the public
Exploring engineering and infrastructure program changes where possible
Increasing public education and engagement efforts, encouraging people to report all suspicious activity to 911
Executing all law enforcement and prosecution strategies currently available
Collaborating with local, state officials, residents, and businesses to pass new state copper metal legislation
In 2023, the City of Saint Paul spent more than $1.2 million to repair and replace street lights and signals damaged by copper wire theft. In 2024, the City Council approved an additional $500,000 for Saint Paul Public Works to replace wire. This includes hiring a dedicated seasonal, full-time electrician crew who are repairing damaged street lights and other infrastructure throughout the city.
The following map illustrates 2,000 locations of non-working street lights/wire theft reported by the public in 2023 to the Saint Paul Public Works main information line via phone, web form or email (651-266-6100, publicworksinfo@ci.stpaul.mn.us)
Please Note: This map represents only ONE way that the city gets reports of wire theft.