Businesses & organizations: Pledge to go Lights Out

Join the effort

Lights Out Louisville—a voluntary program sponsored by the Louisville Audubon Society—asks businesses, organizations, and commercial building owners/operators and tenants to help us make migration safer for birds.

All it takes: reducing your external and internal lighting at night during spring and fall bird migration.

  • We recognize not all suggested actions outlined below are possible for all buildings due to safety, security, or other constraints.
  • We ask only that you do whatever you can to minimize in some way the negative effects of artificial light at night.
  • Questions about what your building can do? Contact us.

By choosing to take one or more of the simple actions outlined below, you’ll help prevent some of the ~1 billion fatalities that occur every year when birds collide with artificially lit buildings and man-made structures.

WHY JOIN LIGHTS OUT LOUISVILLE?
NO COST TO ENROLL

Just fill out the short pledge form below

Save money

Lower energy usage = operational cost savings

SUPPORT NATURE

Demonstrate you back a local conservation program

GET RECOGNIZED

We highlight partners on our website and social media

Enroll in the Lights Out Louisville program:

I pledge to do what I can to reduce light pollution, especially during peak bird migration, at the building(s) or commercial space(s) that my organization owns, operates, or leases/occupies.

Between 11 p.m. and 6 a.m., in April and May in the spring, and in September and October in the fall, I’ll take as many of the below actions that are feasible for me:

⦿ Turn off or reduce exterior decorative lighting, leaving security lighting on as needed
⦿ Moderate necessary indoor or exterior lighting, or use motion sensors or timers, so those areas are lit only as needed
⦿ Down-shield spotlights and other exterior lighting, or limit exterior lighting to ground level
⦿ Choose warmer-toned bulbs (less than 3000 Kelvin) for outdoor lighting
⦿ Turn off unused interior lights or draw window coverings if people are working after sunset—especially on upper floors—to block interior lighting that can be seen from the outside
⦿ Provide task/area lighting for workers staying late
⦿ Dim or reduce lobby or atrium lighting when/where possible, especially after business hours