Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Idaho hoping to cash in on dark skies with more tourists

- By Keith Ridler

BOISE, Idaho — The stars are aligning for Idaho, mainly because they’re visible.

The Internatio­nal Dark-Sky Associatio­n this week named the central Idaho city of Ketchum an Internatio­nal Dark Sky Community, only the 16th in the world, after years of efforts to limit excess artificial light. It comes as bigger parts of the state received or are seeking rare dark-sky designatio­ns that can attract stargazers and boost home values.

Craters of the Moon National Monument and Preserve in southern Idaho, a prime destinatio­n for astronomy buffs, became an Internatio­nal Dark Sky Park earlier this year, one of about 40 in the United States.

And the rarest prize of all could come in December when the associatio­n decides whether to designate 1,400 square miles in central Idaho an Internatio­nal Dark Sky Reserve. It would be the first in the nation.

Idaho is “becoming one of the centers of interest in dark skies in the country,” said John Barentine, program manager at the Tucson, Arizona-based Internatio­nal DarkSky Associatio­n.

Much of Ketchum’s economy runs on tourism, and the designatio­ns could bring in additional visitors. Thousands descended on the mountain resort town for last summer’s total solar eclipse, and it’s sandwiched between the ritzy Sun Valley to the east and Sun Valley Resort’s ski area on Bald Mountain to the west, which draws tourists from across the globe.

The town’s designatio­n is due to the “work of so many who have devoted time and energy to reducing light pollution across our city and neighborho­ods so that we can enjoy the truly amazing views we have of the night sky,” Mayor Nina Jones said in a statement.

Ketchum, with some of the highest home prices in Idaho, is the first city in the state to be named a Dark Sky Community. The associatio­n started making such designatio­ns in 2001, which also include Sedona, Arizona; Beverly Shores, Indiana; and Moffat, Scotland.

Dark-sky measures have drawn opposition in the U.S. from the outdoor advertisin­g industry and those against additional government regulation­s.

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