Gerald Koch said:
Since color film is sensitive to all visible light the color darkroom must be completely dark.
Sodium vapor safelights can only be used with B&W papers.
Come-on Gerald! Sodium Vapor lamps are not just for B&W papers but quite well suited to colour. As with all lamps (notice I did not call them safelights yet) they must be tested with the environment and papers. Some like the Osram/Kaiser Duka lamp (NA-10FL sodium vapor lamp with integrated vapor deposited dichoic notch filter to only let the major line through) have even a (mechanical) mechanism to adjust the amount of light. Others like my Durst Sanat (NA-10 lamp + filter) or the Meteor-Siegen (SOX-E based lamp) need a bit more effort and are ill-suited to "on the fly" adjustment to different materials. Should attenuation, for instance, be needed with my Sanat it must be installed as a neutral density filter inside the lamp. I use both Osram/Kaiser Duka and Durst Sanat lamps in my darkroom.
Some of the new RA-4 materials like Kodak's Endura have been designed for digital rendering in machines (Fontier, Lambda, LightJet and the like) and are really too sensitive (and fast) for our darkrooms but can still be used: loads of neutral density to our colour heads and safelights (resp. turning the Duka down very very low). Fuji Crystal Achive, however, is much slower and I've found I can run my lights at much higher levels (I also like the paper better).
Since the light levels are lower than when working with B&W materials (I have a very bright hanging lamp from Kindermann called the Dukalux Tandem I got for B&W to conserve on my use of expensive sodium bulbs) not every inch of my darkroom is well flooded during colour sessions. To look for stuff I then use one of those glamorized LED pocket lights from Jobo.
Add into the mix the light coming from my colour analyzer (Lici) and the place is hardly "total darkness"... and brighter than some "B&W" darkrooms I've seen (or not seen)...
As one can tell I like to work in bright light

My design goal is to have things as bright (subjectively) as is possible without any detectable effects on my photosenstive materials. Its so bright in my darkroom--- even during colour sesssions--- that I don't need much any time to "adjust" my eyes.
P.S.: These lamps are also suited to ILFOCHROME (!).