Model lighting ordinance for your city
By Michael on February 11, 2009 at 12:51 pm | In Blog Posts | 3 CommentsYou live somewhere, yes? Chances are you live in a place that has a local government which has authority to create guidelines for activities within its jurisdiction. Where I live, these are called City Councils and lighting ordinances for new construction are within their purview.
You, as their constituent, have more voice than you are probably aware. If you go to your City Council or equivalent they will listen to you. They won’t necessarily act in your favor but they will, for sure, listen to you.
Light pollution is a lose-lose scenario. Said more positively, smart lighting saves money and is more safe than lights which create light pollution. You don’t have to be an astronomer to understand that light should be directed where needed and should not shine where/when it is not needed or unwelcome. To me, that is just obvious.
So the International Dark Sky Association (IDA) is doing a very, very smart thing. They are creating a model lighting ordinance that you can propose to your City Council. Just print it out, go to a meeting (or even meet with City Councilors individually) and tell them you want them to put this on the agenda, debate it and bring it to a vote. Insist that they do so. If they seem unwilling to listen to you, get a bunch of your neighbors to sign a petition saying you insist that they consider adopting an ordinance based on the model lighting ordinance.
The IDA is currently seeking feedback on the model lighting ordinance. If you are an astronomer, a developer, a corporation, lobbyist, public servant or someone who lives somewhere, take a moment to read the ordinance and let the IDA know if you think it can be improved.
I really believe that we can ultimately win the war against light pollution and bring the beauty of the night sky back to our cities. At the same time we will be safer and we’ll be saving money. I applaud the IDA for working towards this goal.
Entries and comments feeds.
Valid XHTML and CSS. ^Top^
13 queries. 0.238 seconds.
Powered by WordPress with jd-nebula theme design by John Doe.
This site runs like Clockwork.


