12/11/2025 | News release | Distributed by Public on 12/11/2025 14:38
Published on December 11, 2025
The 76th annual Winterhaven Festival of Lights begins this Saturday, Dec.13, and runs through Saturday, Dec. 27, from 6 - 10 p.m. nightly. This holiday celebration is also a major fundraiser for the Community Food Bank of Southern Arizona.
For many of us in our Tucson community, walking through Winterhaven during the Festival of Lights has become a holiday tradition for our families. As our population has grown, and as more of us take advantage of this opportunity to celebrate the holiday while supporting the Community Food Bank, we sometimes have created challenges for the neighbors and neighborhoods around the event area. The City of Tucson and the Winterhaven Festival of Lights are asking our community to take simple steps to be a good neighbor so that we all can contribute to lessening the impacts of this event for the surrounding neighbors / neighborhoods and safer for all of us including:
Parking violations will be enforced in the event impact area which includes all of the neighborhoods surrounding Winterhaven!
We don't want to be "Grinchy" at the holiday and ticket anyone but we will, especially if it is impacting a homeowner accessing their property, blocking visibility for safe driving, or creating any other safety issue.
Park Tucson provides some great parking safety tips to keep motorists in compliance with City Code which include:
A great way to minimize parking impacts in the festival event area is to carpool with friends and family, reducing the number of cars entering and trying to park in the event area.
Another great way to minimize the impacts and eliminate your need to find parking is to use Sun Tran to attend the event.
Almost all of us create a waste stream when we attend events like this. Maybe it is snack wrappers, cups or bottles from drinks that we purchase or bring with us, or even diapers or animal waste.
We should not just leave this waste on the streets or in front of neighborhood homes. That is not much of holiday treat for the neighbors who live in the event area.
Options for dealing with the waste we create include: