Governor Walz Proclaims Dark Sky Week 2026 in Minnesota
NEWS & ADVOCACY | STARRY SKIES NORTH
Governor Walz Proclaims Dark Sky Week 2026 in Minnesota
April 13–20 is officially Dark Sky Week in the state of Minnesota. Here is what that means, and how you can be part of it.
By Starry Skies North | April 2026
The Announcement
Governor Tim Walz has signed a proclamation declaring April 13–20, 2026 as Dark Sky Week in the State of Minnesota. The proclamation calls on state agencies, businesses, and residents to recognize the value of natural darkness and adopt responsible lighting practices that protect Minnesota's environment and night skies for future generations.
This is the third consecutive year Minnesota has issued this proclamation. Starry Skies North, in partnership with DarkSky International, has led the effort each year. The continued recognition reflects a genuine alignment between the dark sky movement and the state's own values around conservation, public health, and the natural landscapes that define Minnesota.
What Is Dark Sky Week?
Dark Sky Week is an annual international observance held each April during the new moon. Founded by students, it invites people everywhere to turn off unnecessary lights, look up, and reconnect with a night sky that excessive light has slowly been erasing from our lives.
Starry Skies North is an official DarkSky International chapter and a 501(c)(3) nonprofit focused on protecting Minnesota's night skies. We work alongside a network of 80+ partner organizations to advance dark sky education, outreach, and advocacy across the state.
Light Pollution Is a Real Problem. And a Solvable One.
The proclamation does not mince words. Light pollution carries documented costs: wasted energy, increased carbon emissions, disrupted ecosystems, and real impacts on human health. Minnesota sits at the heart of a major migratory bird flyway, and the state is home to countless pollinators and nocturnal species that depend on natural darkness to survive. The science is clear.
The good news is that light pollution is one of the most reversible environmental problems we face. Properly shielded fixtures, warmer-spectrum LEDs, motion-activated lighting, and simply turning off what does not need to be on can make a measurable difference. These are not hard changes. They just require awareness, which is exactly what Dark Sky Week is for.
What the Proclamation Says
The proclamation language captures something true about Minnesota and why this state is a natural fit for dark sky leadership:
"The beauty and wonder of a natural night sky is a shared heritage of all humankind and a source of inspiration, scientific discovery, and quiet reflection... Minnesota's identity is deeply connected to its natural landscapes, from the Boundary Waters Canoe Area Wilderness and Voyageurs National Park to its forests, prairies, and lakes, where natural darkness remains an essential part of the environment."
Minnesota Dark Sky Week Proclamation, April 2026
Get Involved This April
Dark Sky Week (April 13–20) overlaps this year with Globe at Night, a worldwide citizen science campaign running April 9–18. Together, they make for a powerful two-week stretch to take action, contribute to real science, and share the night sky with your community.
Participate in Globe at Night (April 9–18) by measuring light pollution in your neighborhood and submitting observations to a global database. It takes about 10 minutes and the data genuinely matters. Visit globeatnight.org to get started.
Turn off unnecessary outdoor lights during Dark Sky Week, especially unshielded fixtures that spill light upward or sideways.
Get outside on a clear night. Minnesota's state forests and parks offer some of the darkest skies in the Midwest. Find the darkest spot near you and spend some time with it.
Bring the proclamation to your city or county. A statewide proclamation is a natural conversation starter for local officials, and many municipalities are open to issuing their own recognition. Contact us and we can help you make the ask.
Explore Dark Sky Week events and resources at starryskysnorth.org.
Share this with someone who should see it: a neighbor, a city council member, a local business, a school.
About Starry Skies North
Starry Skies North is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization and official chapter of DarkSky International, focused on protecting Minnesota's night skies through education, outreach, and advocacy. We work with a network of 80+ partner organizations across the state. The night sky belongs to all of us. We intend to keep it that way.
Press inquiries and partnership opportunities: info@starryskiesnorth.org | starryskiesnorth.org
Tags: Dark Sky Week 2026, Minnesota dark sky proclamation, Governor Walz dark sky, light pollution Minnesota, DarkSky International, Starry Skies North, Globe at Night 2026, night sky Minnesota, dark sky advocacy, Minnesota environment, light pollution awareness, migratory birds Minnesota, astrotourism Minnesota