• Virtual Zoom Webinar (map)
  • Scranton

Join the Center for the Living City for a conversation with dark skies advocate and photographer Bettymaya Foott as she shows how disappearing darkness and starlight are causing or worsening many of our problems in cities and the environment. She’ll offer practical suggestions for how each of us can contribute to solutions in the design field and as community members. Foott challenges us to think of light pollution as a serious environmental concern and not simply as an aesthetic issue.

A special thank you to Marywood University’s School of Architecture for sponsoring this lecture.

Space is limited but the event will be recorded and available on our website and YouTube channel afterward. 

The Jane Jacobs Lecture Series is free and open to the public, but your support makes our work possible.

Please, donate now to support our work and future lectures.

Bettymaya Foott

Bettymaya Foott loves to bring people to the dark side. As the Director of Engagement for the International Dark-Sky Association (IDA), Bettymaya works with a global community of dark sky defenders, empowering them with tools, resources, and inspiration to protect the night sky. An avid astrophotographer, you can usually find her out under the stars with her cameras battling off mosquitos. Bettymaya’s photography has been featured in Sky and Telescope, National Geographic, and the Los Angeles Times. Her dark sky efforts have reached TedX Kansas City and the New York Times.

Growing up in picturesque Moab, Utah, and spending summer nights sleeping on the trampoline under the stars, Bettymaya fostered an early appreciation for the night sky. Her childhood was filled with hiking, camping, boating, and wandering in the desert, both below the hot sun and under clear dark skies. She graduated from the University of Utah Honors Program with an H.B.S. in Environmental and Sustainability Studies and a Minor in Spanish Language and wrote a thesis entitled “Light pollution hazards within ecosystems and mitigation strategies for the future.” Her dark sky career began working for Utah State Parks, starting 12 International Dark Sky Park applications across the state. She then worked as the Coordinator for the Colorado Plateau Dark Sky Cooperative and the Consortium for Dark Sky Studies at the University of Utah before making her way to IDA. Preserving dark skies is her life goal and she is incredibly excited to continue this journey of saving the stars!