Daylight saving time: Why it isn't going away
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With daylight saving time (DST) ending early Sunday, so, too, will arrive the yearly suggestion that DST is not a good use of, well, time聽鈥 and that it was a bogus idea to start with.
First signed into law by President Woodrow Wilson during World War I, the original iteration of daylight saving time was called "fast time" and was intended to save fuel for the war effort. During World War II, the name was changed to "War Time," but accomplished a similar purpose.
But DST鈥檚 current benefits far outweigh its downsides. During the warm-weather months when daylight saving time is in place, it gives those working adults who spend most of their waking hours indoors more time in the sun, during the early evenings. The result, according to some studies, is .
Some researchers claim that DST doesn鈥檛 just have social benefits, . In 2007, crime rates dropped by as much as seven percent in the days following the implementation of DST, according to an analysis done by Jennifer L. Doleac of the University of Virginia and Nicholas J. Sanders of the College of William & Mary.
That聽resulted in a .听
So why have states throughout the Southwest expressed interest in bills that would allow them to make modifications to the DST schedule, or even eliminate it entirely?
"The end result that we鈥檙e seeking is to have the sun set later during the winter months, as well as not messing up every颅one鈥檚 schedule twice a year, as it often does," said Assemblyman Chris Edwards of Nevada at a hearing this spring. Nevada seeks to follow the DST schedule year-round, which would enable residents of the state to avoid the inconvenience of having to switch their clocks twice a year.
Since the mid-1960s, most of . It is also not observed in聽Hawaii, American Samoa, Guam, Puerto Rico, and the Virgin Islands.听
Other critics of DST, such as Michael Downing, professor of English at Tufts University and author of "Spring Foward: The Annual Madness of Daylight Savings," also note that while DST was originally established to support the war effort, its .
"The Chamber understood that if you give workers more sunlight at the end of the day they鈥檒l stop and shop on their way home," said Downing .
As lawmakers have pushed daylight saving time's start earlier into spring and its end later into fall 鈥 the "fall back" weekend jumped from October to November in 2007 鈥 we now observe DST for the vast majority of the year.
"Today we have eight months of daylight saving and only four months of standard time," Professor Downing said. 鈥淐an you tell me which time is the standard?"