Daylight saving time: Is it worth it?
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It鈥檚 that time of year again. Time to 鈥渇all back鈥 an hour as we go around the house changing the clocks on the features of modern life 鈥 appliances and such like. The really modern stuff 鈥 computers, smart phones, weather devices boasting atomic clocks 鈥 seem to take care of themselves.
The extra hour of sleep that comes for many with the switch to standard time may be welcome. But daylight saving, said to have been thought up by Benjamin Franklin (to save candles) and first put into practice by German Emperor Kaiser Wilhelm II Emperor during World War I, seems to be becoming less popular.
Back in March (when most of us remembered to 鈥渟pring forward鈥) the polling firm Rasmussen Reports found that 鈥渙nly 33 percent of American adults think DST is worth the hassle.鈥
That is down from 37 percent听last year and 45 percent听in 2012. Forty-eight percent 鈥渄o not think the clock changing ritual is worth it,鈥 according to Rasmussen.
For one thing, the time switch may not be saving all that much energy, which is one of the main reasons for the tradition.听 As the Monitor鈥檚 David Clark Scott wrote at this time last year:
鈥淪tudies show mixed results. For example,听海角大神 reports听that in听Indiana, daylight saving time caused a 1 percent jump in electricity, according to a 2010 study. The energy saved from reduced lighting in the summer months was canceled out by an increase in the use of heating and air conditioning, the researchers from听Yale University听补苍诲 University of California Santa Barbara听蝉补颈诲.鈥
In Alabama, state Sen. Rusty Glover听is crafting a bill that ends the semiannual clock switching by keeping time in his state at what now is daylight saving.
"I have heard from constituents and businesses from around the state for years about this issue," Sen. Glover said in a release. "Our legislation will make sure that children riding the late afternoon school bus, or working people who get off at 5 o'clock, won't have to come home in the dark."
"It's time to move on," Glover said. "Our legislation will end the arcane, imposed, and artificial time adjustments that simply make no sense."
In a piece headlined 鈥淒aylight Saving Time Is Bad For Your Health,鈥 Business Insider warns that a small shift in time 鈥渃an have a large impact on our body clock.鈥
鈥淭ransitions associated with the start and end of DST disturb sleep patterns, and make people restless at night, which results in sleepiness the next day,鈥 according to this report. 鈥淭his sleepiness leads to a loss of productivity and an increase in 鈥榗yberloafing鈥 in which people muck around more on the computer instead of working.鈥
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听Time magazine online quotes an expert who agrees, citing the safety reasons Glover notes, including the likelihood of traffic accidents.
鈥淒arkness kills and sunlight saves lives,鈥 University of Washington Law Professor Steve Calandrillo, who has studied the effectiveness of different DST policies, told Time. 鈥淭he question is 鈥榳hen do you want sunlight?'鈥
鈥淎t 5 pm virtually everyone in society is awake,鈥 said Professor Calandrillo, who advocates year-round DST. 鈥淭here are far more people asleep at 7 in the morning than at 7 in the evening.鈥
But for now, people in Alabama and most other states will need to switch clocks before they go to bed tonight. Internet-connected computers and smart phones will do it on their own at 2 a.m. Sunday morning.