Why End Daylight Saving Time
by Sheila Danzig
StandardTime.com
Why did daylight
saving time (DST) start, and why does it still continue? When asking
a random sample of people we heard two answers again and again:
"To help the farmers" or "Because of World War I
... or was it World War II?" In fact, farmers generally oppose
daylight saving time. In Indiana, where part of the state observes
DST and part does not, farmers have opposed a move to DST. Farmers,
who must wake with the sun no matter what time their clock says,
are greatly inconvenienced by having to change their schedule in
order to sell their crops to people who observe daylight saving
time.
Daylight saving
time did indeed begin in the United States during World War I, primarily
to save fuel by reducing the need to use artificial lighting. Although
some states and communities observed daylight saving time between
the wars, it was not observed nationally again until World War II.
Of course,
World War II is long over. So why do we still observe daylight saving
time?
The Uniform
Time Act of 1966 provided the basic framework for alternating between
daylight saving time and standard time, which we now observe in
the United States. But Congress can't seem to resist tinkering with
it. For example, in 1973 daylight saving time was observed all year,
instead of just the spring and summer. The current system of beginning
DST at 2 AM on the first Sunday in April and ending it at 2 AM on
the last Sunday in October was not standardized until 1986.
The earliest
known reference to the idea of daylight saving time comes from a
purely whimsical 1784 essay by Benjamin Franklin, called "Turkey
versus Eagle, McCauley is my Beagle." It was first seriously
advocated by William Willit, a British Builder, in his pamphlet
"Waste of Daylight" in 1907.
Over the years,
supporters have advanced new reasons in support of DST, even though
they were not the original reasons behind enacting DST.
One is safety.
Some people believe that if we have more daylight at the end of
the day, we will have fewer accidents.
In fact, this
"benefit" comes only at the cost of less daylight in the
morning. When year-round daylight time was tried in 1973, one reason
it was repealed was because of an increased number of school bus
accidents in the morning. Further, a study of traffic accidents
throughout Canada in 1991 and 1992 by Stanley Coren of the University
of British Columbia before, during, and immediately after the so-called
"spring forward" when DST begins in April. Alarmingly,
he found an eight percent jump in traffic accidents on the Monday
after clocks are moved ahead. He attributes the jump to the lost
hour of sleep. In a letter to the New England Journal of Medicine,
Coren explained, "These data show that small changes in the
amount of sleep that people get can have major consequences in everyday
activities." He undertook the study as a follow up to research
showing that even an hour's change can disrupt sleep patterns and
"persist for up to five days after each time shift." Other
observers attribute the huge spike in accidents on the first Monday
of DST to the sudden change in the amount of light during driving
times. Regardless of the reason, there is no denying that changing
our clocks has a significant cost in human lives.
While some
people claim that they would miss the late evening light, a presumably
similar number of people love the morning light. And projects, postponed
during the sun-filled summer, will be tackled with new vigor when
the sun sets an hour earlier each day.
Congress appears
to have felt we were not having enough of a difficult time so in
2007 they passed a law starting Daylight Savings time 3 weeks earlier
and ending it one week later. This cost US companies billions to
reset automated equipment, put us further out of sync with Asia
and Africa time-wise, inconvenienced most of the country, all in
the name of unproven studies that claim we save energy.
STANDARDTIME.COM
SAYS: If we are saving energy let's go year round with Daylight
Saving Time. If we are not saving energy let's drop Daylight Saving
Time!
Reprinted
from StandardTime.com.
November
6, 2010
Copyright
© 2010 StandardTime.com
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