Daylight Saving Time (United States) 2013 begins at 2:00 AM on Sunday, March 10 and ends at 2:00 AM on Sunday, November 3
Does it not seem to you that DST seems to extend itself farther and farther every year?
To what end? And why?
First, a petition is circulating to kill DST or make it the new “now.” From HuffPo:
On March 10, Americans will set their clocks forward an hour in the biannual ritual known as Daylight Saving Time (DST). But the hour of reckoning could be close at hand for DST, if some online petitioners get their way, that is.
A petition seeking to eliminate DST (or make it the year-round standard) has surfaced on the White House’s “We the People” crowdsourcing platform. The document, which needs 100,000 signatures to prompt a response from the West Wing, urges President Obama to eliminate the “archaic practice” of adjusting clocks twice a year.
Daylight Saving Time was standardized in the U.S. by the 1966 Uniform Time Act, according to National Geographic. That act has since been amended several times, most recently by the Energy Policy Act of 2005, which extended DST by one month.
The “We the People” petition claims that, while some industries still support DST, studies have shown the change is a health risk, leads to a loss in productivity and is “really annoying.”
I don’t know about the health issues, but I gladly cast DST into the “really annoying” category. Because: we’re “saving daylight” for — what?
And one very interesting point I’d guess you’ve never realized:
Though participating areas of the country must switch their clocks on the same day, no federal law forces states to observe the time change, according to National Geographic. Arizona, for example, has not observed DST for decades.
Good for them, I say. Independent thinkers who can make their own decisions. Where are the other so-called “independent thinkers”?
Oh yes, that’s correct. Pandering to DC for cash. More Free Cheese.
The WashingtonCityPaper actually has a measured and logical view: get rid of DST.
For nearly 100 years, daylight saving time has been a pox on American sanity. It’s time for its long, dumb history to end.
Enough with changing our clocks (car, watch, bedside, kitchen); enough with the cutesy mnemonic devices (“spring forward—or backward?”); and enough with remembering things period (“is it this Saturday?”). Daylight saving time has been tried and tested all over the world for different reasons by many generations, and the only solid, incontrovertible fact to glean from this grand temporal experiment is that it’s a pain in the ass.
Yes!
Belief in DST’s energy-saving powers is often traced to a 1970s study from the Department of Transportation. A later review of that research by the National Bureau of Standards, however, found that the results were not significant. A more recent study by Yale professor Matthew Kotchen of energy consumption in Indiana (a state that formerly did not observe DST, and then observed it on a county-by-county basis) found that Indianans actually increased their energy use during daylight saving time by 2 percent: People might have turned on their lights less frequently, but they ran their air-conditioners more.
If the science behind DST’s supposed energy-saving powers is so inconclusive, why does this irritating pastime persist? Good question; let’s ask 7-Eleven. The convenience-store chain was the main source of funding behind a coalition supporting the extension of DST in 2005. Why? Because more sunlight in the summer meant more retail business. The National Golf Association also supported the extension, estimating that increased sunlight would increase golf revenues by $200 or $300 million, as detailed by Michael Downing in his 2005 book Spring Forward: The Annual Madness of Daylight Saving Time.
It’s stupid, it’s complicated, it yields much of nothing.
Time to become more simple and plain, I submit.
What say you?
BZ
It is a pain in the ass. Makes more kids walk to school in the dark, and more commuters drive in the dark.
I hate it as I live in Hawaii and we don’t change so all of you become an hour farther away. It sucks for travel and communications with those on the mainland. So you on the mainland win daylight in the evening but lose it in the morning….very sensible (Ha). I’ll sign the petition to eliminate it and tough luck to the golfers and 7-Eleven.
Living in Arizona, I don’t observe the idiocy except from afar. I used to live in Ohio, right on the Indiana border, back when they didn’t observe it. Try to remember how to coordinate get-togethers over the line. And reservations in Richmond? You are either an hour early, or you missed your seating.
As far as “saving daylight” – phooey. We have plenty here. And note to the golf industry “professionals” – there is no “increase in sunlight” – just a shifting of when the light falls on the clock. Morons.
I concur with your assessment. Get rid of it!
Dump it… Never have liked the idea, never will…
It certainly hasn’t shed any light on the underpinnings of the Obasturd administration.
B.T.W. With Rand Paul’s filibuster ending, you’d think someone would bring to light the inconvenient truth that it was John Owen Brennan’s Analysis Corporation employees who breached the state department records of Clinton, McCain, and Obasturd employing subterfuge to remove records pertaining to the true status of our president elect’s citizenship. Nawwwwww!
Skunks are nocturnal.
So are raccoons: thieves.
BZ
Well, I do like having “extra” daylight hours in the evening — particularly on days that I work or take Mr. AOW to car shows and cruise ins.
But making the switch to DST? Sheesh. It’s gets worse for me every year! I takes me at least a week to re-set my internal clock!
Ditteaux!
BZ