Light The Way: Can you see in parks across Glasgow at night?
Campaigners want to know if you think trials of lights are making a difference.
Business leaders and charity bosses fighting for improvements to park lighting in Glasgow want to hear if you have noticed any changes to visibility at night.
Last winter, the city council started trials of lighting in Kelvingrove, Cranhill and Queens Park after pressure from the Light The Way campaign.
An online survey is going live for two weeks asking runners, dog walkers and exercise groups if they can see any better at night.
Labour MSP Pam Duncan-Glancy attended the Light The Way meeting at Glasgow Caledonian University in September 2023 when a senior councillor agreed to start the trials.
She told Clyde 1: "We need to know if the trials of the lights in the parks are actually making any difference and what needs to be done to continue to address the safety issues.
"It's hard to know if these lights are helping people without actually asking them how they have felt using the parks over the last 12 months.
"My own experience is that you can see there have been attempts to increase the lighting but some of the lights are dull.
"They're also not always in the right places."
The lighting varies between each park but the local authority has said the trials were all a success and it is considering installing more.
Kelvingrove Park has cat's eye lighting on the pathways as well as solar powered light fixtures near children's play areas.
Queens Park also has cat's eye lighting on some paths alongside one solar powered light fixture near to the entrance on Pollokshaws Road.
Electric light fixtures, which hadn't been in operation for more than a decade, were also repaired.
You can complete the survey here.
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