Daylight savings why do we have it




















In , the U. Congress approved a bill to increase the period of Daylight Saving Time, moving the start to the first Sunday in April. The goal was to conserve oil used for generating electricity—an estimated , barrels annually.

In , the entire state of Indiana became the 48th state to observe Daylight Saving Time. The current daylight saving period was established with the Energy Policy Act of , which went into effect in Today, most Americans spring forward turn clocks ahead and lose an hour on the second Sunday in March at A. Some farmers point out that the Daylight Saving Time is deceptively misnamed. However, the practice has its detractors. Other experts insist that the extra hour of daylight reduces crime.

As of March , an impressive 32 states have proposed bills to end the practice of switching clocks. However, the legislation can only go into effect if the federal law changes. The Uniform Time Act would need to be amended to allow such a change. See the latest on which states have passed bills to put a stop to DST changes.

As you can see, our Almanac readers are quite passionate about this topic! End DST, stop messing with the animals schedules. Those that want to get up early can get up with the sun if they want. Mostly agree this practice is just another government intervention into citizens lives to show the control they have over the entire country. We are not at war, this is not , there is no evidence showing any savings or change to electric or gas usage, at least not on my electric or gas bills?!

Amend the old federal law and let us be free of at least this one effort by the government to control us. Thanks for reading. I personally think it is a waste of time. The amount of sunlight does not change whether you turn the clocks or not. I would rather stay on Standard Time year-round and this is mainly because I am an early riser. I would rather have the sunlight in the morning and if we went to Daylight Saving year-around by the time we got into dark winter the sunrise would be very late in the morning here in Maryland.

Please practice correct English. Thank you! I feel strongly that we should switch to constant Daylight Savings time--no more "standard time". Why have it get dark at ?? It feels like every fall we enter into this weird kind of hibernation where it seems dark most of the time. DST does only 1 thing, it forces everybody to do everything an hour earlier whether they like it or not.

IOW say you work a stereotypical job, during the summer you are actually working solar time. We don't need DST, many businesses already have seasonal changes to their operating hours, if a business wanted to open an hour early in the summer they should have been allowed to do it voluntarily. It didn't have to be mandatory. The whole point of DST was so people would get up with the sun rise and then go to bed earlier at night to use less energy for lighting etc.

In my opinion there is absolutely no value for it to be dark at pm. People are driving home in the dark. Commute auto accidents increase dramatically. We should keep Day Light Savings time all year long. There is no reason not too. DST should have ended long ago! It disrupts sleep, and it's been proven that people have a hard time adjusting to the change in the spring, causing accidents and even health problems due to sleep deprivation. It serves no purpose except to disrupt the lives of every person in this country.

Who is the government to disrupt my natural internal clock which all animals follow? Standard is our natural time and messing with that messes with my system, my personal system! My body belongs to me, not to a government. Consider the effect on the elderly, babies, children, families where both parents work, the mentally ill etc.

Consider the effect on child neglect issues and domestic violence. Much money is spent to address these issues. Leave them alone. Stop it, there is no need for it any longer, leave it so we have a little more light in the winter afternoons, and longer summer evenings Every year twice for a week my system is messed up until it adjusts. This is not something we need if we ever did. Leaving it DST all the time makes most sense to me, since "standard" isn't even five months anymore. After all "standard transmission" is now called "manual", since automatic is the most common in vehicles.

Most Americans only saw the time adjustment as a wartime act, and it was later repealed in Standard time ruled until , when President Franklin D.

Roosevelt re-instituted daylight saving during World War II. This time, more states continued using daylight saving after the conflict ended, but for decades there was little consistency with regard to its schedule. Finally, in , Congress passed the Uniform Time Act, which standardized daylight saving across the country and established its start and end times in April and October later changed to March and November in Today, daylight saving time is used in dozens of countries across the globe, but it remains a controversial practice.

Most studies show that its energy savings are only negligible, and some have even found that costs are higher, since people in hot climates are more apt to use air conditioners in the daytime. Meanwhile, Hawaii and Arizona have opted out of daylight saving altogether and remain on standard time year round. Benjamin Franklin came up with the concept of Daylight Saving Time as a way to reset clocks during the summer months to conserve energy, according to the book Seize The Daylight.

When he was ambassador to Paris in , he made the discovery that the sun provides light as soon as it rises. The rest of Europe woke up to the idea not too long after, and pretty soon the U. After the war ended, there was a period of a few years of letting states and municipalities decide on whether or not to establish DST.

To end this free-for-all, Congress enacted the Uniform Time Act of , which stated that all states observing DST had to follow a uniform protocol that was statewide in which DST would begin in the spring and end in the late fall. According to timeanddate. The countries that do observe DST use it to take advantage of one extra hour of daylight during the summer, as days get longer when Earth moves from winter and spring to summer.

Regions of the Earth that are located furthest from the equator reap the most benefit from DST because they experience more dramatic shifts in sunlight between seasons, according to Live Science.



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