Streets across the UK are in the dark as Parliament cannot afford to repair the lights.
According to new data, more than 33,000 street lamps are currently considered necessary on the road.
In some cases, it took parliament nearly three years to address these issues.
The 15 councils have a street lamp that took a year or more to repair in 2016/17.
The Liberal Democrats received these figures in requests for freedom of information to all councils, and 118 of the councils responded.
Last night, the AA warned that as the streets became too dark to walk, elderly residents felt they were actually placed under curfew.
The news was disclosed despite local authorities planning to raise the municipal tax by 5 cents.
As part of the cost, dozens of committees have turned their lights off completely
Cutting measures.
The increase in the number of streets falling into darkness has raised concerns about increased crime and road accidents.
The Liberal Democratic Party has warned that the lack of street lights is a gift for criminals.
Wera Hobhouse, a local community spokesperson for Lib Dem, said: "It's shocking that in some areas it takes months or even years to fix faulty street lights.
Our streets are in the dark because of the cuts in council funding.
This is a gift for criminals and a threat to public safety.
"Especially in the dark winter, people go home safely with street lights.
She also said street lights are essential to reduce crime and reduce the risk of traffic accidents. 'Cash-
More resources must be given to the tight parliament to detect street lights in question and fix them as soon as possible.
Jack Cousens, head of road policy at AA, said: "As local authorities have spent more than a year repairing street lights, Parliament is putting some roads in unnecessary danger.
"Ignoring the timely repair of street lights means that some elderly residents feel they are placed under curfew because some streets are getting too dark to walk.
Since 2009, 11 people have been killed by the darkening of street lights.
This drag-and-pull behavior is unacceptable and residents will be interested to know why it will take nearly three years for the lights on the road to be repaired.
How long does it take for a Council to change the street light?
It may sound like the beginning of a joke, but the truth is, it's not a joke.
The data shows that most parliaments take an average of a week to fix broken street lights, but for some, the average time is almost a month long.
At present, more than 33,000 street lamps are considered bad in the country.
It is reported that the number of street lamp failures has decreased from 641,000 two years ago to 562,000 this year.
12 cents down.
But local government officials said the fall could be the result of a night patrol inspection of how many lights failed.
The longest delay occurred in Suffolk, where a lamp took 1053 days to fix, followed by the northley Council, which spent 1002 days in the current financial year fixing a lamp
Swindon Council waited 871 days before they fixed the broken lights.
The average time it takes for the northley Committee to fix the lights is eight days this year.
Excuses for delays include the need to trim trees in large quantities, the need for portable scaffolding to reach inaccessible areas, and the lack of special equipment.
Last year, 85 per cent of the Council was dimming or turning off some lights, an increase from 75 per cent three years ago. An FOI found 1.
27 million lights-a total of 42-are either turned off at night or darkened.
Compared to the 2014 survey of 141 committees, the lights found in the survey were turned off or darkened.