The newly painted city trucks had a hopeful slogan: "Philly's traffic lights are all turning green."
But, no, there will still be red lights, and drivers will still have to stop for them.
While they're waiting, perhaps they can take comfort from the fact that the new traffic signals are saving the city electricity. And money.
Mayor Nutter and a bevy of officials were at 52d and Chestnut Streets Monday, cheering on Streets Department workers as they began replacing 55,000 incandescent green and yellow traffic signals with energy-saving light-emitting diode (LED) arrays.
Half of the $6 million for the project came from a federal Department of Energy grant, the other half from Peco Energy. The lights are expected to conserve enough energy to power 700 homes and save the city $1 million a year in electric costs.