Unfortunately, 3500K, 4500K, and 5000K, are all way beyond AMA guidance for outdoor lighting. Those color temperatures of light suppress melatonin and leptin leading to multiple health implications. The sleep aspect regarding blue rich LEDs has been addressed .
Regarding those LED street lights listed above 3000K.
“High-intensity LED lighting designs emit a large amount of blue light that appears white to the naked eye and create worse nighttime glare than conventional lighting. Discomfort and disability from intense, blue-rich LED lighting can decrease visual acuity and safety, resulting in concerns and creating a road hazard.”
From Harvard regarding the implications with obesity …
“A Harvard study shed a little bit of light on the possible connection to diabetes and possibly obesity. The researchers put 10 people on a schedule that gradually shifted the timing of their circadian rhythms. Their blood sugar levels increased, throwing them into a prediabetic state, and levels of leptin, a hormone that leaves people feeling full after a meal, went down.”
There are further peer reviewed studies that are coming to similar conclusions. Light above 3000K doesn’t belong anywhere lighting our streets at night. Further, studies conducted in Davis, CA showed that people were nearly 20-1 against the original 4000K fixtures. Their early implementation of warm white LED street lights indicated that even 3000K was too high, and that eventually LED them to a custom order of 2700K Leotek Green Cobra Jr.s’. 2700K should really be the maximum permitted in residential areas with 3000K/2700K reserved more for the larger streets.
The EU, as well, their, outdoor lighting guidance for roadways calls for 3000K max with warmer color temperatures having relaxed efficiency standards thus passively encouraging better light.
Also, I would be really careful about using voilet pump emitters. These Soraa lights were tested by Dr. Travis Longcore as having substantially greater negative impacts on wildlife then most warm white light sources that included warm white blue-pump LED, metal halide, and CFL, and even higher CCT cool white LED street lights.