Daylight Saving Time

Why I’m deadly serious about #LockTheClock and fixing DST for good

Look, I get it. Daylight Saving Time is certainly not the most important issue out there.

As I write this, there are huge and really significant issues going on all over the globe, and I don’t want to take away from any of those.

But I’ve been working on this issue now for five years, and I can say that the science is now making it clear that this is not a novelty issue, this is a legitimate public health topic.

I hadn’t added much to my research page in recent months, even though it is one of the most popular pages on the site and is certainly the one that gets copied the most often. (Usually without credit, grumble grumble.)

And in adding to that page I discovered some new research from Germany that has answered a question I’ve had for a long time.

You see, I’d seen all the studies that showed heart attacks went up, strokes went up, etc. I’d read how traffic accidents were worse. The studies, however, didn’t go all the way. For instance the heart attack studies just looked at people who showed up at the hospital having had a myocardial infarction. They might have lived, the study didn’t say. What about the people who had a heart attack at home and died without even making it to the hospital? 

In short, what I hadn’t seen was some researcher just look at the death records. I mean, I would think deaths would go up given all the other science, but I couldn’t actually say that the DST “spring forward” time change was an actual killer.

Now I can.

Hospital-room
Photo by Daan Stevens on Unsplash

The research from Germany published in the International Journal of Legal Medicine looked at actual autopsy reports over a 10-year period.

The findings are clear. More deaths from heart attacks. More deaths from traffic accidents. Statistically significant, scientifically proven… death.

People dying specifically because we lose an hour of sleep artificially.

The cruel irony is that this study comes from Germany, the very country that’s the reason we have DST. It had been proposed, but not yet adopted, in the U.S. and England, before WWI. It was during that war that Germany adopted the clock-switching, and much of the rest of the world followed suit, and we’ve had some form of it ever since.

So, I really do get it. The whole debate can seem kind of frivolous given the really serious problems we have around the world. I have fun every year posting all the creative new memes that come out, and I’ll keep doing that. And it can be fun and slightly mind-warping to think about the very notion of time.

But the science is now clear. Changing clocks kills people every single year, and will keep killing people until we stop it.

Fall Back for Fun! (How many more times do we have to do this?)

OK, we’re getting back into the busy season for #LockTheClock.

I know this blog has been a bit quiet, but in part that’s because I’ve been so busy behind the scenes. Some of the stuff I can talk about, and some I can’t. Not yet. But when I can… Boy Howdy! It’s going to be tremendously fantastically big.

Until then…

If you are just visiting for the first time, here’s what you need to know:

  1. This is the official site for trying to do away with switching the clock in and out of Daylight Saving Time.
  2. It’s not a full-time thing, there’s no money behind it, but it is a legitimate movement now. I’ve been working on it for five years on nights and weekends, and I can tell you for sure that we ARE making progress.
  3. If you are a citizen and want to know what you can do to help, read this post.
  4. If you want to write to tell me you just had a brilliant idea, that we should move the clock 30 minutes and call it a compromise, well, let’s just say you aren’t the first to have that idea. If you want to work on that for five years, contact hundreds of legislators, do tons of press, write scores of blog posts, and convince people it’s a good idea — go for it! Just don’t write to me and tell me about it.

If you just survived the switch into Daylight Saving Time in Australia or New Zealand (weirdly even those two friendly countries don’t switch on the same weekend), welcome! For the first time this year I noticed a huge uptick in visitors from Down Under.

I haven’t yet had too many visitors from Iran, but I learned from a Lyft driver (and confirmed it on the internet) that Iran switches into DST on the first day of Spring and out on the first day of Fall. It doesn’t matter if the equinoxes fall on a Saturday night or not, they just switch, even if it’s mid-week.

 

Buddy-sun-up

The official mutt of #LockTheClock watches the sun come up.

 

While I’m interested in other countries, I’m most interested in what’s happened recently in the European Union.

Europe to Beat the US to #LockTheClock?

The news out of Europe is that all the member states of the EU will be ending the clock-changing insanity, starting in 2021.

It’s not final yet, but if I can read the tea leaves of this official statement, it seems like a done deal.

This is fantastic news for all the regular reasons, but especially because it mirrors what I think is the best solution for us in the U.S.

<Begin DST Nerd section, skip over if you are sleepy.>

There is a lot of debate about if we should switch to permanent Standard Time (what we have in the winter) or permanent Daylight Saving Time.

Officially, the position of this movement is to not take a position. The only thing we are asking is to #LockTheClock, no more changing the clock twice per year.

More specifically, in a country as big and diverse as the United States, there’s no one, clear answer. All of the opinion polls say that people want more daylight later in the day when they can use it more. Most businesses want more daylight later, it’s better for golf and other recreation industries, as well as retail sales.

Also, there are just a lot of weird little exceptions. Eastern Oregon. Northern Idaho. Western Nebraska.

Two of our biggest states by population, Texas and Florida, have relatively small bits hanging out in a less-populous time zone to the west.

Also Arizona, which people think doesn’t participate in DST, except that a huge swath of the state still does in the Navajo Nation. Indiana and Michigan have some odd spots, and Kentucky and Tennessee are cut right in half.

Weirdly, if the U.S. was to adopt the European system, it would be the most American thing we could do. A big part of our history is leaving a lot of the governing up to the states. Congress could pass a law saying that we are going to match the Europeans and stop changing clocks in 2021, and each state would have until then to decide which time zone they’ll be in.

Some states won’t have much say. California will be in the Pacific, New York in the East. But some states could decide that they want to unify, or even move. Michigan and Indiana should be in the Central Time zone if a person were trying to draw somewhat straight lines. I’m not sure why they aren’t, but I would guess it has something to do with big business, even if big business did blame the farmers, the same way they’ve always done.

That’s the best approach to federal legislation, something I am lobbying for. I haven’t gotten there yet, but the fact that the current bill going through Congress seems to be dead may help the sponsors cast about for a new approach. I’m actively working on that right now.

<End DST Nerd section>

The good news is that compared to when I started working on this, I can see the momentum changing in the press inquiries I’m getting, the legislative interest, the visitors to this site, and more.

So, I know you won’t like changing the clock again this fall, even though this is the one where you get an extra hour of sleep. But you can get that sleep with a bit of comfort that the world of clock changing is slowly drifting away.

 

Spring Forward 2019 in Europe is this Weekend, but Change is Coming!

It’s the weekend for the “Spring Forward” clock change in Europe. Everyone in all of the 28 member states set their clocks forward this weekend, and face the harsh reality of the alarm clock waking them up an hour earlier than their body is expecting on Monday morning.

(If you are in Europe, please think about going into work late on Monday, and #SleepInForSafety!)

And while we in the U.S. have hope that we will be able to #LockTheClock and stop changing our clocks twice per year, in Europe they have a solid plan, and 2021 is when the clock changing will end.

Now, I should be the first to say that this is not the most pressing issue in Europe right now. The Brexit issue is overwhelming, and the other issues like the Article 13 copyright rules are important and not to be dismissed. 

That said, this Monday in Europe will see a spike in heart attacks, strokes, traffic accidents, etc. The list goes on and on. So it was proper for the European Parliament to take up this issue, and I was glad to see that it passed so handily, 410 to 192.

So the argument that we should do nothing because there are other things we should do (probably the most common argument I hear, right after “The Farmers” as a reason not to fix the clocks) did not carry the day.

Big-ben-summertime-spring-forward
Maybe when Big Ben is fixed, the time will be fixed, too?
Photo by Guilherme Stecanella on Unsplash

And the parliament also did something that our U.S. Congress should take note of: They decided to give power to the individual countries. The year 2021 is the year that the clock-changing stops, and each country has until then to figure out what time zone it wants to stay in year-round.

(By the way, that is a PERFECT approach for the United States. Geography and parochial interests play a part in this discussion. What’s best for Maine may not be the best for Nevada.)

What really made me laugh in the arguments in Europe was a claim that somehow the Parliament wanted to be “Time Lords” by saying that we should not change the clocks twice per year.

“You would think they had other things to worry about without wanting to become time lords,” [John Flack] said, in an apparent reference to the BBC sci-fi drama Doctor Who.

So, right now the government makes us change clocks twice per year, but somehow ending that barbaric practice makes the government more of a Time Lord? I think it’s just the opposite.

As I told The New Yorker, the very concept of “time” is an agreement among people, just as is “government.” It seems like a good goal for both is to keep the health and safety of the people in mind first of all. If we know that changing clocks is bad for people — and we do — then stopping the practice of being a Time Lord twice per year is exactly the right thing for government to do.

So, good luck to my friends in Europe, especially those in England, where losing an hour of sleep seems like exactly the wrong thing at this perilous moment in history. Get as much sleep as you can, and know that we are all pulling for the right thing to happen for you with your government, and with your time, and we in the U.S. hope to follow your example and #LockTheClock.

Tipping Point for Fixing Daylight Saving Time (Summertime)?

Did we just reach the tipping point?

Is the point at which Daylight Saving Time has reached its conclusion now all but inevitable?

I’d like to think so.

And how will we know what tipped it? Is that sort of thing knowable?

I mean, can we just call up Malcolm Gladwell and ask? 

Hey, Malcolm, I know you figured out how Hush Puppies were not cool, and then at some point became cool, but did you know it at the time that the shoes past the Tipping Point? Are we there yet with getting rid of the clock changing twice a year?

It is something I’ve been thinking about a lot of late. Of course, we just passed one week since the change in the U.S., and my inbox was packed with lots of great news. (More on that below.)

I was in Berlin on business for the second half of the week, so had to experience some of that joy vicariously, but I did get to take a small jaunt out to find out about yet another problem with the clock changing.

 

If it is not clear, the part with the numbers rotates in the middle of the part that shows the 24 time zones. The time in Berlin was correct, but the time in New York, etc., showed 11:30 a.m., when it was actually 12:30 p.m. Because that center ring has just one hour for every time zone, there’s no way they could fix it.

Not the most important reason to fix Daylight Saving Time, (as it is called in the U.S., Canada, Australia, and a few others) and Summertime (in Europe), but it’s on the list, something that does not go unnoticed.

It really is a nightmare for all concerned https://t.co/wlqBPdHmUX

— Stuart Myles (@smyles) March 11, 2019

The good news is that there is lots of progress to report:

  • After my letter to the Michigan legislature, the committee there passed that bill out of committee, which is more than what happened when I went there in person! (Maybe they didn’t like my tie? More likely is that we have passed the Tipping Point, and Michigan doesn’t want to be left behind.)
  • New York had been looking at creating a study committee, following in the footsteps of Massachusetts that made a study last year. Well, now they have a bill that would skip the study and just put New York in Standard Time year-round, right now. Most people and most businesses say that they’d like to stay in Daylight Time year-round, but I’ve heard rumblings that the broadcast networks don’t like that. They want it to be dark out so everyone will go inside and sit on the couch and turn on the TV. The guy who is sponsoring the bill lives about as far away from New York City as a guy can live, in Niagara Falls, so who knows? 
  • In Oregon, the governor said not just “yes” but “Hell, Yes” to the idea of year-round Daylight Saving Time. 
  • Also from Oregon, the state’s senior senator, Ron Wyden, said publicly that he will support Marco Rubio’s bill to allow states to go to year-round DST right now. That’s big. Wyden is a Democrat, and we need bipartisan support for this thing to move forward.
  • A bunch of other states, including Utah where I’ve been working with legislators for years, got bills further through the process than they’ve ever gone before.

I don’t know what a tipping point smells like, but this sure smells like we are getting close to the end for changing the clocks!

#LockTheClock!

By the way, I haven’t sent out an email yet using my new tool. I won’t send one out for every post, maybe every handful of posts. If you would like to get on that list, you can do that here.

Fixing Daylight Saving Time – It’s Getting Real

This is my fifth year advocating that we stop changing the clocks twice per year.

Majid-rangraz-643386-unsplash

Photo by Majid Rangraz on Unsplash

In some ways, it is getting easier.

For instance, I once compiled a bunch of research, but then kept adding to it in various blog posts. Then I finally had the brilliant idea that should have come to me two years earlier: Just make a single page that has all the best research about DST.

That makes it easier when I discover yet another study showing that driving in the dark after work is more deadly than in the morning, I can just add it to the page. 

Idaho on Line 3

It is also getting easier because instead of me calling legislators and trying to get them to take this issue seriously, I have legislators calling me, asking for advice, wanting research, model language, and just support. That is fun, and I wish I wasn’t so busy fixing fake news to be able to spend more time doing that.

But I can find some time, and was happy to get to testify in Connecticut recently.

It was great being there, and for those of you who (gasp!) don’t watch the whole thing, you should know that me being there may have helped broker a compromise that will help the bill pass, and help get the concept moving forward in Connecticut.

Indeed Connecticut is just one of more than two dozen states working hard on passing legislation. And they are getting further than ever before.

One small example: I’ve been working with a legislator in Wyoming for years, a very humble guy. He’s the opposite of the saying up there: “All hat, no cattle.”

In the past his bill died unceremoniously and quickly. This year his bill made it out of the House and came one vote away in the Senate. One vote! We’ll be back and get that one vote next year.

Getting the word out

The media has always been great about calling. Probably the highlight for me so far has been an interview with the New Yorker, but there could be a new highlight coming up soon. Stay tuned for that!

But I’m always happy to help local reporters around the country, and I always seem to be getting up extra extra early on the one day that I’d like to sleep in to do radio interviews. 

That’s fine, though, happy to help. Just be in touch.

The hard part about #LockTheClock

The hard part of trying to fix Daylight Saving Time is that it hasn’t happened yet. It was totally clear five years ago that this needed to end, and yet nothing happened.

It was still clear four years ago, but that’s when a handful of states started taking this seriously.

Three years ago when a California legislator passed a resolution based on what I had written, that was awesome, but it did not create the tidal wave I was hoping.

Two years ago when politics seemed so broken after Brexit and Trump, I actually had some hope that fixing DST might be a way to move the conversation forward. It wasn’t.

Last year saw a huge number of bills going through state legislatures, and at the end of the year saw California voters overwhelmingly pass a measure to try to fix all this.

But this year, once again, the clocks will move forward. Once again the alarm clock on that Monday after will seem like an insult piled on a historical travesty.

And next year will probably be the same.

 

But still, I have hope. Things really are getting better, it’s just that I am only one person, and I don’t have a big business coalition behind me. That is fine, and maybe even better in the big picture because it is clear this is a genuine initiative, not something created in a soulless conference room somewhere.

It may not come this year, but it is coming. It is a rebellion, and those are built on hope, so I’m told.

Hope

Legislation and Daylight Saving Time – The Magellan Straits

The 2019 legislative season is shaping up to be the busiest ever in the fight to #LockTheClock and fix Daylight Saving Time for good.

So busy and so hot, in fact, that it’s making me lose sleep.

Do you have a trick when you can’t sleep? I do. I listen to an audio book. The trick for me is to find one that is boring enough that it lulls you to sleep, but not so boring that your mind wanders instead of listening.

I was trying to fall back asleep in the wee hours this morning, so I listened to a book about the Middle Ages. I came in at a section about Magellan.

Ferdinand-Magellan

He was, of course, the Portuguese sailor who was the first to sail from the old world around the new world, and then back home going west the whole way. He was the first to circumnavigate the planet, importantly around the bottom of South America where the straits are now named for him.

(Well, his expedition made it around the world, anyway. He didn’t personally make it, having run afoul of some native chiefs on a Pacific island unhappy with how the sailors were taking advantage of the native women.)

He set out with five ships and 270 men. One ship and 18 men made it back to Europe, and when they got home they had lots to tell about things that had never been seen by Europeans before, including penguins and bananas.

And they also noticed something strange: Although they had kept meticulous logs of their days away, their calendar was off by one day from the calendars kept in Europe.

This was the first group to circumnavigate the planet, proving that it was round, something that had been theorized by people going back to the ancient Greeks.

But none of those theories, and none of the astronomers or big thinkers of the day had figured out the need for an International Date Line. It took actually sailing around the world to make clear the need for that.

No Date Line?

Just to be clear, the planet spun on its axis for eons with no need for an International Date Line. That line was only needed so that as people who kept calendars traveled around the world, they could all keep in synch. The idea of the calendar, and the need to keep it in synch with other calendars, is entirely a human invention.

So it is with time zones. I’ve written about this before, and the history is clear on this. We have time zones because as the trains started zipping across the land, we had a need for uniform times. No longer could the time be set by the one guy in town who set the town clock and looked up at the sun to decide when it was noon.

That’s why time zones are controlled in the U.S. by the Department of Transportation.

Time Zones Kill

With all that in mind, I’m now volunteering to help legislators from around the country (when I can spare the time from my day job of fixing fake news.)

With all of them, I share the research. I talk about the politics (including the story of the legislator in Arizona who tried to start changing the clock twice a year and was so overwhelmed with angry constituent response that he held a press conference to announce he was killing his own bill.)

And the bigger message that I try to share with all of them is just this: The very notion of “time” is just an agreement among people. Shouldn’t we strive to live in a world where such an agreement does not kill people?

I mean, imagine this scenario:

 

Bob: Hey, Ralph, want to get lunch? Say 1 p.m.?

Ralph: Well, I’d love to get lunch, but if we do it at 1, there’s a chance I’ll have a heart attack and die. Can we do it at 12:30 instead?

Bob: No way.

Ralph: Why not?

Bob: The farmers.

 

People who have looked into the issue (and fans of John Oliver) know that the farmers have nothing to do with Daylight Saving Time, and never have, except as a giant PR stunt and a scapegoat.

No, the reason we are forced to change clocks twice a year is, well, inertia. We do it because that’s what we do.

All the science, all of it, says that changing clocks is a bad idea, and yet we keep doing it.

But with the flurry of activity in the state legislatures here in the U.S., and in the European Parliament, and the vote by the people of California, it is becoming clear that the clock is ticking for mindless clock-changing.

And it can’t come soon enough. It will be too late for Magellan, but it’s not too late for us.

Do not take New Hampshire’s plan to fix DST for granite!

OK, sorry. The headline is a small play on the fact that New Hampshire is the Granite State.

I am a huge fan of New Hampshire. My most famous relative lived there for decades, and donated her home and some acreage to the state, and it is now a lovely and quaint state park.

Shieling-forest-daylight-saving-time

Our children will have more time after school to hike the Shieling Forest in Peterborough
if we have Daylight Time year-round. Photo from this FB Group.

 

My relative was Elizabeth Yates, the writer. She wrote dozens of books in her 95 years, the most famous of which was Amos Fortune, Free Man.

She wrote that book after being inspired by a headstone she discovered on a walk through Jaffrey, New Hampshire. It read:

Sacred
to the memory of
Amos Fortune
who was born free in
Africa a slave in America
he purchased liberty
professed Christianity
lived reputably and
died hopefully
Nov. 17, 1801
Aet. 91

With just that, she went to the state librarian in Concord and researched as much as she could about him, and then wrote a piece of historical fiction that was so lyrical, touching and powerful that it was awarded the top U.S. prize for youth fiction, the Newbery Medal for 1951.

A slave to the clock?

What does this have to do with Daylight Saving Time?

Perhaps just this: As the saying goes,  “The arc of history is long, but it bends toward justice.”

I wouldn’t presume to say that fixing daylight saving time is the most important social justice issue of our time, or the most significant freedom and states-rights topic of the day… but it is a real issue.

It wasn’t, of course, in Amos Fortune’s day. Clocks back then were set to a town clock, and that was set by someone in the town figuring out when the sun was most straight overhead.

After the train came through, train conductors wanted synchronized time, so the Department of Transportation took over the regulation of time, and does so to this day.

When my great aunt Elizabeth Yates was a small girl, there was no DST, just Eastern Time. When we entered W.W. I, we started switching the clocks twice a year to stay in synch with the Brits, who themselves did it to stay in synch with the Germans. Why the Germans did it is a matter of some controversy.

As a country we Locked The Clock as soon as the war was over, and then we started switching twice a year again in W.W. II.

(Notice that “The Farmers” are not part of that history. They were not, and never have been and anyone who says they are is just repeating fake news.)

Why are we talking about DST?

Life in New Hampshire is just so much better than it was in the old days. People aren’t enslaved, and don’t have to purchase their own freedom. If you get influenza, you probably won’t die — that wasn’t the case 100 years ago.

So the things that we have to fix these days seem, perhaps, a bit prosaic, compared to the days when we did things like send a teacher into space, as we did with the great New Hampshire citizen Christa McAuliffe, God rest her soul.

But historians like Ken Burns of New Hampshire know that sometimes even small things can mean a lot.

So, what is this small thing we are fixing?

It’s the clock. Twice a year the government makes us change it. Why? It really isn’t the farmers. We change it, basically, because that is what we have done for as long as most people alive can remember. 

And while it won’t save as many lives as George Whipple, (born in Grafton County, he’s the guy who figured out how to keep people from dying from anemia) fixing DST will save lives.

How? The research is very clear that the spring-forward change is deadly. 

In a state as far north as New Hampshire, jolting an entire populace awake an hour before their bodies are ready for it causes traffic accidents, heart attacks, strokes, epileptic seizures, workplace accidents. Even judges are more harsh in their sentencing.

Worried about school kids going to school in the dark? Well, kids don’t die from that, and if the legislature wants to take up the idea of starting school a bit later, I’m sure you’ll have kids and families fully behind you.

The thing we actually need to be worried about these days is childhood obesity. The experts there tell us that another hour of daylight after school gives kids that much more time to play outside, not sitting inside looking at a device.

Regarding House Bill 567

Now, it is the case that it would be pretty disruptive for New Hampshire to be out of synch with Massachusetts and Maine. That’s why the bill being considered now smartly is following the trend of other bills around the country that say states should move as a group.

It’s very good planning to pass this measure right now. I hate to be the one to point this out, but Massachusetts may not be as neighborly, and could just pass a bill to #LockTheClock and not pay attention to if other nearby states are going to do it or not.

If New Hampshire passes this bill right now, you’ll know that you’ll be set if your noisy neighbor to the south takes action.

And there’s a good chance Massachusetts will act. They performed an excellent service for the whole country by really researching the topic in depth. The report they issued after interviews with the best experts is that staying on Daylight Time year-round is the best overall for everyone.

The panel also recommended that Massachusetts move to year-round DST in coordination with other New England states, but that could just end up being Connecticut and Rhode Island. 

So this bill is the exact right solution at the exact right time.

Passing this bill will follow in the tradition of my great aunt, Amos Fortune, and so many other great residents of New Hampshire to lead on an important issue, and not just wait for the rest of the New England states to act first and then play catch-up.

New Hampshire has a proud tradition of going first in the nation with the primaries. Passing this bill will give New Hampshire a chance to also go first in bringing some sanity to the government’s mandate of us moving the clock around twice a year.

If you’d like to be a part of history, come to the hearing on Wednesday!

Daylight Saving Time and the 2019 Legislative Sessions

This is the fifth legislative session that I’ve been paying attention to the Daylight Saving Time issue, and I can tell already that this one is going to be huge.

David-hertle-766994-unsplash

Photo by David Hertle on Unsplash

The quality and thoughtfulness of the bills is great, and the quantity seems much greater for the first couple weeks of January than I can ever remember.

To what do we owe this surge?

  • The overwhelming victory in California was certainly part of it. The vote was technical, obtuse, and didn’t offer immediate relief from clock-changing madness, and still it passed with more than 60 percent of the vote. I give credit to the farmers and the housewives. 😉
  • Also perhaps is the moves the European Union is making to scrap what they call “Summer Time.”
  • And it may have been Florida, which passed into law the notion that if the feds ever fix the national law, Florida would very much like to just move to permanent DST. One of the U.S. Senators from that state, wanting to catch up to the people he’s leading, immediately said that he would try to fix the federal law. So far all we’ve seen on that front is a press release, but at least that’s more than we had before! 
    (I’ve decided not to grumble too much that the research in the press release from Rubio’s office shares more than just a passing resemblance to the research page on my site. A thank you card might have been nice.)

Other than that, there’s no single thing. The notion that we should #LockTheClock is just catching on.

Legislation getting smarter

And legislators are getting smarter about how to pass bills. For instance, in Wyoming and Connecticut, legislators are proposing that they go to permanent Daylight Saving time (which, for reasons that have to do with the intractability of federal law, involve moving themselves one time zone to the east and then declaring themselves on Standard time year round.) But both of those bills say their state should do it only if neighboring states join in. That’s a solid idea that has been floated around the country before, and may help those bills get passed.

New Mexico had come very close to passing a really smart bill that would have done things properly, but that bill died an ignoble death. I saw it, it wasn’t pretty.

As a guy who’s been working this issue for a long time now, I have some institutional history. So one of the things I need to do is try to contact the sponsor of the new bill in New Mexico, a guy named Bobby Gonzales, and encourage him to talk to Cliff Pirtle. They are in opposite chambers and opposing parties, but if there ever was an issue that is nonpartisan, it’s this one.

PirtleMaybe Bobby can do what Cliff could not do, in spite of his truly amazing beard, and that is to convince Gail Chasey that fixing DST is not some Nixonian plot, as she currently thinks it is.

(Yes, it will make you cynical, but one person really can thwart the will of the people, and in New Mexico that one person is Gail Chasey.)

Working together, we can make this work

If you are a legislator with a Daylight Saving Time bill, or if you are just thinking about one, drop me a line. I’m happy to talk to you privately, to come and testify, to do whatever it takes to help you.

Although there are not a lot of lobbyists working on this issue, there are a few that can crop up, especially from the golf industry. I can let you know what their interests are, and how you can work with them so they won’t fight you, and instead work to help you.

If you are a citizen, why not contact your local legislator? They always love hearing from real constituents. Well, almost always. They for sure will like it on this issue.

If you aren’t sure who that is, just look them up here. Then contact them and say that you really don’t think we should be changing the clocks twice a year for a bunch of reasons backed by research.

If you do that, and get a good response, let me know about it and I’ll highlight it on this blog.

If you happen to live in a state that has a bill on DST working this year (you can find them here) then for sure contact your own legislators AND the sponsors, and tell them how glad you are they are working on a bill to fix this.

And one word of advice: Let’s say the bill in your state is to move the state permanently to standard time, and not daylight time as you’d prefer. I say that you should still support that bill because if we can make ANY change, we can show that change can happen. Let’s get the ball rolling on change first, and then get it exactly right after that.

 

Thanks for joining me on this journey!

Can The Founding Fathers Fix Daylight Saving Time?

Editor’s note: Today we hear from a guest author, someone who contacted me asking about the 10th Amendment implications of Daylight Saving Time. It was immediately clear that he knew more about this than me, so I asked him to write this post. I hope you find it as helpful as I did. – Scott

Ind-hall

Many of us were taught in school that the federal government is the top of the authority hierarchy with the states next in line, and finally city and county government at the bottom. This simplified view of things likely comes from a phrase in the U.S. Constitution often referred to as the supremacy clause. Article VI, clause 2 of the Constitution reads, “This Constitution, and the Laws of the United States which shall be made in Pursuance thereof; and all Treaties made, or which shall be made, under the Authority of the United States, shall be the supreme Law of the Land; and the Judges in every State shall be bound thereby, any Thing in the Constitution or Laws of any State to the Contrary notwithstanding.”

The key words that many people overlook are, “…which shall be made in Pursuance thereof…” So, only laws made in pursuance of, or consistent with, the Constitution are the supreme law of the land.

The 10th Amendment makes it clear that the federal government’s authority is described in its entirety within the Constitution and that anything not included there remains the province of the the states and the people: “The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the States, are reserved to the States respectively, or to the people.”

The federal government is, therefore, one of enumerated powers—it may exercise control over only those matters that the states and the people have explicitly delegated to it.

We all know that’s not the practical reality of 21st century America. The federal government does thousands of things everyday it has not been granted authority to do. The usual response is to bring a law suit and have the courts decide whether a law is legitimate but think about that for a moment—why would the people, who have delegated limited authority to the federal government, turn to that same government to ask if what it is doing is OK? It’s like asking your children to “interpret” their own bed time!

The U.S. Constitution does not delegate authority to the federal government to regulate time but that didn’t stop Congress from passing a variety of laws governing how we set our clocks, including the Uniform Time Act of 1966 and the Standard Time Act of 1918.

Since these laws purport to govern something that is outside of Congressional authority, does that invalidate them? According to U.S. Supreme Court Chief Justice John Marshall in Marbury v. Madison (1803), “…an act of the legislature repugnant to the Constitution is void.”

What would happen if a state or group of states decided that they did not want to use daylight savings time? Or decided to use it year-round? What recourse would the federal government have? Even if it went to court to try to force those states to comply with the Uniform Time Act how could such a decision be enforced?

It turns out the Supreme Court has already weighed in on the issue, albeit indirectly. In no fewer than four decisions, the Court has made it clear the the federal government cannot force states to carry out a federal law. The federal government has to enforce its own laws since the resources of the states cannot be “commandeered” by the federal government to execute its laws, a legal concept that has become known as the “anti-commandeering principle.”

In the case of Prigg v. Pennsylvania (1842), Justice Joseph Story held that the federal government could not force states to implement the Fugitive Slave Act of 1793. In New York v. United States (1992), [regarding hazardous waste regulations] Sandra Day O’Conner wrote for the majority: “…Congress may not simply commandee[r] the legislative processes of the States by directly compelling them to enact and enforce a federal regulatory program.”

In Printz v. United States (1997), sheriffs Jay Printz and Richard Mack sued over implementation of the Brady background checks; the court held, “The Federal Government may neither issue directives requiring the States to address particular problems, nor command the States’ officers, or those of their political subdivisions, to administer or enforce a federal regulatory program…such commands are fundamentally incompatible with our constitutional system of dual sovereignty.” And in Independent Business v. Sebelius (2012), the Court held that the federal government cannot force the states to act against their will by withholding funds in a coercive manner. Chief Justice John Roberts argued that allowing Congress to essentially punish states that refused to go along violates the constitutional separation of powers.

So where does all this leave us with respect to daylight savings time? Since the federal government has no authority to regulate the measurement of time and it cannot force the states to carry out federal laws, the states simply need to, in the words of the principle author of the Constitution, James Madison, “refuse to cooperate with officers of the union.” Stop changing time twice a year. It’s that simple. Do our state legislatures have the backbone to make it happen through their own legislation? That remains to be seen.

For more information about the anti-commandeering principle, visit the Tenth Amendment Center. TAC has made great progress on a wide variety of projects all based on anti-commandeering and related legal concepts, such as the nullification of marijuana laws, the use of gold & silver as legal tender, putting an end to militarization of police forces, civil asset forfeiture reform, and many other issues where the federal government oversteps its legal authority.

—-

Michael Gibbs is the deputy director of the Arizona Tenth Amendment Center

California Prop 7 – Are the Farmers and Housewives Against It?

I’ve been getting a ton of interest from reporters and voters in California of late because of Proposition 7, that would set California on a path to stay in Daylight Saving Time year-round.

To be prepared, I did a bit of research, and was so excited about what I found I had to share it with you here.

California-housewife

Image courtesy of the Library of Congress of a California “Housewife” during WWII.

It does seem odd to have to vote on Prop 7 in 2018. It’s got that weird wording that makes it clear this is the first in what would be a long series of steps needed to #LockTheClock.

So why is it needed at all?

Because of Prop 12, approved by voters in 1949.

Check it out:

DST-Prop-12

You see, just after WWII, Californians had to vote to be able to have the newfangled Daylight Saving Time, which was a new version of War Time. That’s what we used during both the world wars, mostly in an effort to stay in sync with the Brits, who in turn did it because the Germans did it first. Why the Germans did that is not agreed on, at all.

Californians had twice before rejected the idea of Daylight Saving Time, in 1930 and again in 1940, but the war changed a lot. For instance, a LOT of women went to work in the war effort, like the one pictured above. The state also ballooned in size during and after the war, though it was still tiny compared to today.

So when the voters of California, especially the women, read in the information provided by the state this argument against Daylight Saving Time, well, it didn’t go so well.

DST-Housewives

My hunch is that a lot of women didn’t particularly like being called “THE HOUSEWIFE” in the first place.

And once again, the poor farmer was used in the argument on the vote no side:

Dst-farmer-prop-7

As I’ve written about, the Farmer has never wanted to have any part of this debate, and yet the PR types love to trot out THE FARMER whenever they want to get their own way.

So, the measure passed, which must have made Californians feel like they were really living in the future.

But, because 1949’s Prop 12 was, like all the other propositions Californians vote on every year, ensconced in the Constitution, the only way to fix it is with another proposition. Hence 2018’s Prop 7.

Does Prop 7 Go Against The Will of the Voter from 1949?

Hard to say. All we know is that the voters wanted more daylight later in the day during the summer.

If they had been asked: Would you like more daylight near the end of the day in the summer AND the winter? I think there’s a pretty good chance they would have said yes and we wouldn’t be stuck trying to figure out how to fix the clock in our cars on Monday morning, but somehow that question never even came up.

So, there you have it. Just like your forefathers and foremothers in California in 1949, it’s up to you, the California voter of today to fix the clock for good.

Proposition 7 Daylight Saving Time in California — Pros and Cons

It’s been clear to readers of this blog that for years public sentiment has been on the side #LockTheClock — ending clock changing for Daylight Saving Time — but the evidence has been a bit scattered and anecdotal.

That’s about to change.

Roberto-nickson-g-715411-unsplash

photo byRoberto Nickson (@g)

Californians get to vote on Proposition 7 — The Permanent Daylight Saving Time Measure — and we’ll finally have some clear data to show to the world about how the public feels about this issue.

Now, it can be a bit confusing figuring out exactly what this proposition is, and the proposition doesn’t actually do a whole lot. It basically sets some governmental wheels in motion that may lead to an end to the clock changing.

But what it can do for sure is let lawmakers in California and around the world know exactly how popular it is to have the government force all of us to get all goofed up twice a year.

So, what are some of the pros and cons of voting on Prop 7?

Pros – Reasons to vote Yes on Prop 7

 

  1. Let politicians know that you are watching.
  2. Send a message to farmers that you know that farmers have ALWAYS been against DST clock changing, and you support them and you like eating.
  3. Let the world know that science and research should drive our decisions about how we set the clocks, not “That’s the way we’ve always done it”-ism.
  4. Give yourself a little hope that government can get something right.
  5. Put California in the spot of leading on this issue, something that Florida is trying to steal away. Of course, Arizona, Hawaii and Puerto Rico are already way ahead of everyone on this one.
  6. Great way to vote for something that will not cause a big fight with your crazy uncle who lives in [insert Michigan, or wherever he lives here] on Facebook.
  7. It’s lucky Number 7!

Cons – Reasons to vote No on Prop 7

  1. You like suddenly having to go home from work in the dark on the Monday after the “Fall Back” time change.
  2. You enjoy that groggy feeling on the Monday morning after the “Spring Forward” time change.
  3. You are in favor of traffic accidents, workplace accidents, strokes, heart attacks, decreased productivity, etc.
  4. You think it’s best to be on the losing side of history.
  5. You think Kaiser Wilhelm got a bad wrap in WWI in Germany, and you want to see his legacy live on.
  6. You enjoy figuring out how to reset the clock in the car, and on the microwave.
  7. You want California to be known as the state that votes for crazy stuff, not stuff that people actually want.

So, there you have it. 

If you live in California, tell all your friends and relatives to vote yes on this one, and if you don’t, this would be a great time to keep in touch with your California pals and tell them to vote yes to make the whole world a better place.

Why do we have Daylight Saving Time? Is it the farmers? FAKE NEWS!!!

Because I’ve been leading the charge against Daylight Saving Time clock-changing for years now, I sometimes lose track of the fact that misperceptions about the ridiculous practice still outweigh the truth.

I think if someone with a big budget took a poll, they’d find that a majority of people think we change the clocks twice per year because of “the farmers.”

If you stop and think about it, it’s ridiculous. Everything about agriculture has changed in the last 100 years, and somehow we still change clocks because of what farmers wanted in 1918?

You-dont-even-make-sense

Why do we think “The Farmers” wanted DST?

Simple. It was a PR job. One of the greatest PR con jobs in history.

You see, the guy who ran the biggest department store in Boston decided that people would shop more if they had more time in the daylight after work to shop.

He wasn’t wrong. A study done in this century is clear that more daylight does encourage people to get out of the home more and shop.

But in those days he couldn’t come out and say that he wanted to change the clocks to make more money for himself, so he came up with a plan: Say “the farmers” want it.

It was brilliant! Everyone had a nostalgic love of the farmers just at the start of the trend of people migrating off the farms and into the cities.

So, Lincoln Filene (who’s namesake store exists to this day as Filene’s Basement) had a bunch of what can only be described as Fake News created. His team wrote that fruit was healthier when harvested with the dew still on it.

The reality was that it sucked for farmers. In those days dairy farmers milked cows and delivered the fresh milk to stores and homes at the start of the day. This meant they had to get up even earlier relative to the sun.

The Filene team even ran the equivalent in those days of a social media campaign, creating post cards that constituents could send in to Congress.

Dst2-copy

While that PR effort did help, it wasn’t until WW1 that we actually started observing Daylight Saving Time, then called, “War Time” as a way of staying in synch with the British, who started doing it because the Germans did it.

So as John Oliver correctly points out: You lost an hour of sleep because of Kaiser Wilhelm.

 

The tide is turning, though. The news from Florida is excellent. There are at least 20 state legislatures grappling with the issue. 

So this will get fixed, but not this year, unfortunately.

For Monday, however, be sure to recognize National Turn Off Your Alarm Clock Day.

Yes, it’s a thing. Go into work late on Monday. The life you save may be your own.

 

Historic day for ending Daylight Saving Time?

 The time is always right to do the right thing.

I didn’t say that, Martin Luther King did. And someone else made it a meme:

1703971-Martin-Luther-King-Jr-Quote-The-time-is-always-right-to-do-the

I’m not as quotable, but I’d like to add a similar thought:

There’s always enough time
to do the right thing.

Not as catchy, but important, I think.

Here’s why:

The Florida legislature just passed a bill that takes a HUGE step forward in ending the 100-year-old practice of Daylight Saving Time.

While legislators have been trying for years to pass something, all of them have failed, until now. That’s why this is so huge.

Now what they passed is interesting, because it doesn’t fix the problem directly. Leave it to a woman — or two women in this case — to come up with the smart solution.

What the bill says is that if the U.S. Congress ever fixes the national law, at that point Florida would like to go to permanent Daylight Saving Time.

It’s brilliant. What these two women — Jeanette Nunez and Heather Fitzenhagen — came up with is a way to give their fellow legislators a chance to vote for something that doesn’t come with a high political risk.

They should get lots of credit, and I hope they do. So far it seems like more of the media attention has gone to Greg Steube, who had a bill with a cool title, “The Sunshine Protection Act.” But it’s the language from Nunez and Fitzenhagen that won the day.

Not the most important thing for the Florida Legislature

Ever since I started this movement, I’ve seen the internet trolls complaining: Is this really the most important thing our lawmakers should be doing?

Of course it’s not.

Especially in Florida. My view is that the legislature really needs to listen to the kids from Parkland, and do what they say. History will not look kindly on those who oppose what these kids are working for. Join them, or join those who will go down in the history books as opposing progress.

But there’s plenty of hours in the day. Legislators can vote to keep kids safe, and then vote to fix the clocks, and still be home in time to head to a beachside bar and watch the sun set.

 

There’s always enough time to do the right thing.

How historic is this vote?

It’s hard to say exactly how historic this is. Only after Daylight Saving Time clock-changing has been consigned to the dustbin of history will we be able to look back and know what the key moments were in the efforts to fix it.

I’d like to think that when this blog started, that was a key moment. Or the first time a state adopted language that I proposed

But the reality is that there are a thousand things that will have helped. Every meme. Every funny video. I’ve tried to capture that zeitgeist on this blog.

Maybe it was when I first appeared on CNN.com.

Maybe it was when I got the great hashtag #LockTheClock from Peter Lucido, who worked very hard to get the law changed in Michigan. He hasn’t succeeded yet, but maybe with this Florida language he can make some more progress.

Maybe it was when Ro Khanna got elected to the U.S. Congress. He seems to be the only one talking about fixing the federal law that’s in a position to do so. People are a bit… distracted… right now in DC, so I understand why it’s not moving along quickly. I’ve even written that now is not the time to push it forward just because of all the current disfunction. 

In short, we may never know exactly what the tipping point was.

But we do know that this is a very good day.

Congratulations to all those who got this passed in Florida. I’ll now work hard to see that every other state passes a bill that looks a lot like this, and then we can pass the baton to Rep. Khanna and hopefully some others in Washington, and the deadly and disruptive time changing will be a thing of the past.

Update:

Great piece of reporting and writing from Kim Miller at the Palm Beach Post.

Daylight Saving Time and pop culture

A couple of years back, I published what I thought was a pretty complete guide to all of the videos and memes about Daylight Saving Time.

Well, the creators of the world keep creating.

But it’s not just kids goofing around with meme-makers. Questions about DST are creeping into all parts of our culture, including this gem from the Cartoon Network:

If kids grow up knowing from cartoons that changing the clocks around is a “completely pointless practice” then I know that it’s just a matter of time before we fix it, sort of like gay marriage and gun laws.

But for this year, we are stuck with it. (Blame Trump, really.)

Well, be sure to check out that original collection, but here are some new additions that are worthy of a look or a share here in the 100th year of DST in the United States. Enjoy!

Dst-tweet-boss

 

Dst-facebook

 

Dst-arizona-toast

 

Dst-time-travel

 

Dst-cat

 

  Dst-devices

 

Dst-why-the-hell

Florida and Daylight Saving Time – Hope from the Sunshine State in 2018?

In the years I’ve been paying attention to this issue, I’m fascinated about how it seems there’s always one state per year that leads the way in terms of public attention to the ridiculous clock-changing done in the name of Daylight Saving Time.

Last year it was Massachusetts, which deserves great thanks. True, all they did was study the issue, but at least the study got done. Most other bills on the topic just die. This bill calling for a study actually passed and the study got done.

And the study is terrific, because it says that year-round DST would be the best for the people of the Bay State.

Now Massachusetts basically waits for some other New England states to move forward. I’ll be doing all I can to help, but maybe the people of New England are just too busy praying that NFL referees keep treating Tom Brady well

Florida in the Sunshine

Dst-florida-sunshine

This year, the majority of the press and social media attention seems to be going to Florida.

I’m not exactly sure why. I was a reporter a long time ago, so I know it’s always a bit random, but figuring out why one state gets all the attention, when other states are taking more substantive action, is a mystery.

For whatever reason, Florida is it. I’ve read dozens of stories from the state, and the bills both actually passed their first hurdle, which is a lot more than a lot of bills can say.

For the record, the two bills are:

  • The “Sunshine Protection Act” has a cool title, but actually does a smaller thing, which is to move the Florida panhandle (now in Central Time) into Eastern Time with the rest of the state.
  • FL H1013 does not have a cool name, but this is the bill that actually could move the state into year-round DST.

Both bills do something important that many bills around the country do not: They recognize that the federal government needs to change the rules.

They need to watch out though. A couple of noisy legislators from the Panhandle could easily kill your bill, and there’s already some noise being made about that.

DST Nerds-Only Section

Right now the federal law only allows a state to opt out of Daylight Saving Time and stay in Standard Time year-round, which is what Arizona, Hawaii, and our American brothers and sisters in Puerto Rico have done.

A state or territory can’t opt for year-round DST.

What a state potentially could do is opt to move one time zone to the east, and then opt to stay in standard time. That’s what Massachusetts would do if it follows the recommendations of the study. That’s what New Mexico could have done if the bill wasn’t killed by one person.

The Florida bills take the more modest step of politely asking Congress to make a change to the law so that a state can opt for year-round DST, and then Florida would make that change.

It’s a pretty low risk situation for lawmakers in Florida:

Vote yes, and if Congress takes bipartisan action on a bill that makes sense and is then signed by the President, then something will happen. Put another way, if monkeys fly out of my ass then we can have tea at Buckingham Palace!

End of DST Nerd Section, back to Florida

Why are the bills in Florida getting such attention? 

Maybe it’s the story.

A citizen lawmaker, in this case Sen. Greg Steube of Sarasota, went to his barber shop and heard a barber talking about how hard the time-change was on his kids, and then on the whole family.

So Steube decided to do something about it!

That’s fantastic, the American way, etc. I’ve written about that before, with an assemblyman in California who got the idea from his dentist or a representative in Connecticut who got the idea at a Thanksgiving dinner.

Of course the problem is that pesky federal law.

I’m also wondering why it is that Florida’s getting attention this year and didn’t as much a couple of years ago. Rep. Kristin Jacobs carried a bill in 2015, and while it died, I noticed that she’s not a co-sponsor of either of the bills this year. Why is that?

Hey, Greg and Kristin, you two should talk! I hope the fact that you are in different parties won’t keep you from helping each other!

In fact there have been bills on this topic dating back to at least 2008, so there’s a rich history here.

I stayed up all night coming up with an ending for this post. Then it dawned on me.

Sorry about that.

In spite of my pessimistic view of what can and can’t get done in Washington these days, I do think the approach proposed in Florida is a good one.

At some point in the future maybe D.C. will be less dysfunctional and we can get the law changed. Until then, the bills in Florida do a couple of important things:

First, they send a message that states should have the option of staying in year-round Daylight Saving Time. That’s what the research says would be the best for health, best for business, best for people.

And second, if and when Congress does take action, Florida won’t have to wait an extra year after the federal law gets changed to make the switch. It will already be done.

100th Anniversary of Daylight Saving Time in the US – A Comprehensive Guide

In the year 1918, you were twice as likely to die from the flu as from heart disease. Now in 2018 it’s 10 times more likely that your heart will kill you than the flu, and life expectancy is decades longer.

1918

In 1918, about a third of us worked on farms, even with WWI going on. Now it’s about 1 percent.

In 1918 there was certainly no internet, and no television. Some of the rich had radio in their homes, but it was very rare, in part because so few homes even had electricity.

Only about one family in 50 had a car. 

In 1918 one thing started, however, that we still have today: Daylight Saving Time.

One other thing started that year that we also still have today: Hatred of Daylight Saving Time.

Brief History of Daylight Saving Time

The widespread belief, still, is that we have DST because of the farmers. That may be one of the biggest PR fabrications of all time, a total lie that persists now, 100 years later.

The truth is that a retailer in Boston, Filene’s, wanted people to have more time to shop after work. So they hired a PR firm to come up with a rationale. If they just told people it was to make more money for Filene’s, well, that wouldn’t work. (It was true then, and it’s true now, that more daylight later in the day leads to more shopping.)

So they announced a “study” showing that “the farmers” wanted DST, completely making up a bunch of total crap about fruit having more nutrition when picked with the morning dew still on it. People believed it then, and still do today.

The truth is that farmers always hated it. In those days dairy farmers would actually milk cows and deliver the milk to people that same day, before it could go bad. (See above about a lack of electricity, and there certainly were no refrigerated trucks. Pasteurization wouldn’t be mandatory in the US until 1947.) So, DST meant farmers had to get up even earlier in the middle of the night.

(Now most farmers don’t care, but DST still screws the milk producers. Cows are milked on a timed schedule, so for two weeks a year production gets thrown off because the cows don’t know why the milking is off by an hour.)

All of that doesn’t actually even matter that much, because that’s not why the US adopted Daylight Saving Time.

Why did we start?

My theory is that it was all a way to distract a population.

And — foreshadowing — that’s why we still have it.

World War I and Daylight Saving Time

The real reason we started in the US was to keep in synch with the British during the war, and the reason the Brits switched was to keep in pace with the Germans.

Why did the Germans switch? The reason given at the time was that it would save on fuel oil, much needed during the war.

That theory is largely accepted today, but I’m calling BS on that. Very few homes in Germany were heated with fuel oil in 1917, and those that were couldn’t get any fuel oil anyway.

The winter of 1917 was what’s called the “Turnip Winter.” In those days people didn’t eat turnips because… well… for obvious reasons. They were grown only because they were a cheap way to make food for cows and pigs.

But in that winter, all the meat was sent to the troops, so the people in Germany were reduced to eating turnips.

To distract the population, the government came up with A PLAN! The plan was to change the clocks by an hour in the winter.

There’s no evidence that changing the clocks did save any fuel oil, by the way.

Once the Germans changed, the Brits did, and then we in the U.S. did, too, for the rest of WWI.

When the war was over, politicians here in the US didn’t want to do continue to piss off the third of the population of voters that worked on farms, so it was scrapped. Our country had no mandate to change clocks twice per year until after Pearl Harbor.

Modern History of Daylight Saving Time

With a similar lack of science but an abundance of Do Everything Possible To Win The War, we switched to “War Time” for the years of the war.

The war changed so much of our society, with suburbs, science, medicine and all the rest, that my hunch is that we kept DST sort of as a nod to the fact that farmers really didn’t matter any more. We needed to keep the modern and nuclear age version of how we kept time.

The problem, of course, is that people hated it. So local politicians responded to the people by switching into or out of DST based on what they thought people wanted. From after the war to the early 1960s there were hundreds of different local DST moves at a state or local level.

So, the US Congress stepped in and created the Uniform Time Act of 1966, just two years shy of the 50th birthday of DST in the US. That Act took away nearly all of the ability of local jurisdictions to make up their own minds about what time zone to be in. You could either stay in Standard time year-round, or you got with the system, Bub.

Arizona, Hawaii, and Puerto Rico all decided to stay in Standard Time, but all the rest have stayed in clock-changing uniformity, as literally required by federal law.

One change of note came in 1974, right in the middle of Watergate. President Nixon thought it would be a good idea to go back to Daylight Saving Time in January. Just as with the Germans in 1917, the announced reason was to save energy, but the real reason was to distract people from Watergate.

Maybe if everyone is sleep-deprived, they’ll forget about Watergate.

Nixon probably never said that, but I wouldn’t be surprised if he thought it.

Everyone hated a sudden change to the clocks in the middle of the winter, and it didn’t distract anyone. Nixon resigned in August of that year, and Congress went back to the old style of Daylight Saving Time that fall.

And because of that, New Mexico was blocked from fixing the situation in 2017. No kidding.

What can you do today to #LockTheClock and fix DST?

If you are one of the vast majority of people who hate changing clocks twice per year, there is something that you can do.

I’m a citizen.

Awesome. You hold the power. Begin talking about this to anyone and everyone. Read more on this blog. Share the #LockTheClock hashtag. 

In short, let everyone know that we really don’t have to go through this insanity twice per year.

I’m a state legislator.

If you are here, you’ve probably already figured out that your options are limited. You know that you can’t just change your state into year-round DST because of the federal law, and a big pile of lobbyists from golf, retail, recreation and more will fight you if you try to take away the sunshine from summer afternoons and evenings and go to standard time year-round.

There’s one very narrow window that might work.

  1. If your state is all in one time zone now, and
  2. If you are on the Eastern border of your time zone.

If both of those things are true you might be able to choose to move one time zone to the east, and then take the legal option to stay in standard time year round.

That way you can do what the people want, which is year-round DST, even though it seems a little funny legislatively.

(New Mexico tried to do that, only to have the bill die on the last day of the session last year because of… wait for it… Watergate. True Story.)

The reason I say you might be able to move one time zone to the east is that the law hasn’t really been tested. You should for sure try it, and let the feds tell you that you can’t. “States rights” and “power reserved to the states” etc.

Chances are you can’t really fix it for your state alone, so what I recommend is passing a resolution. California did it with broad, bi-partisan support, and you can do it, too. If enough states pass that resolution, that will go a long way to getting Congress to fix it.

I’m a teacher.

First, thanks for all you do.

When the spring-forward clock change comes, it would be a perfect time to do a science unit. Have students run an experiment on how hard robbing people of an hour of sleep is. Then take those results and deliver them to your state legislator. Sounds like an interdisciplinary dream unit!

Is this the year we end DST?

I see many hopeful signs. The study committee in Massachusetts did great work. There’s a raft of proposed legislation coming again this year. 

The problem, as I’ve written, really is Trump. Just as Watergate was both the reason for the last big change to DST and the reason that it hasn’t changed again in the last 40 years, I don’t want to have another DST change now as a distraction from the current Trump-Russia situation.

So — and it breaks my heart to say this — I actually do not think this will be the year for the change. There’s just too much else going on.

That being said, we can and should do all we can. See what I wrote above. If you are a teacher, dive in! The kids will love it. If you are a citizen, make some noise! If you are a legislator, propose a resolution or a study committee. 

This scourge of Daylight Saving Time is bad, and while it would be poetic and lovely for it to end in its 100th year, I want to make sure that when we kill it, it stays dead forever.

Fall Back to the Future – DST FAQ for the Easy Change in 2017

With the fall-back weekend here, this blog is getting lots of activity and I’m getting lots of requests for interviews, along with e-mails from fellow #LockTheClock citizens, etc.

To make it easy for everyone, here’s a quick FAQ:

I hate changing the clocks twice per year, what can I do?

Given the current situation in Washington, I don’t think there’s much we can do there.

But we can work at the state level. I recommend you find your state legislators, and contact them. Do it now, while most of them are not in session. They’ll be happy to hear from you. Then show them this page, and recommend that they try to pass a resolution.

I have an idea that will fix everything! Will you take my idea and run with it?

No. 

Sorry, but I get lots of emails from people who think they are the first person in the world to come up with the idea that we just move the clocks 30 minutes, or whatever. This is a complex problem, and there are no simple solutions.

Also, I come from the world of startups. What I’ve learned is that ideas are easy, doing the work to get an idea out there in the world is hard. This is a hard problem that will take years to fix.

I saw a funny meme once about DST. Have you seen it?

Probably. Either for the fall, or the spring.

My friend in Europe said they changed their clocks a couple of weeks ago. Why are we behind?

It will make you cynical, but the reason is The Swamp. Lobbyists from the candy industry gave a basket of candy to members of congress, and they extended DST until after Halloween for the safety of the children (and so they would have more time for trick-or-treating.) 

Fall-back-meme

Can’t I sign a petition or something?

You can. At last check there were 62 different petitions just on change.org. You could also just scream into a pillow. That one might make you feel better.

Look, change is hard, as they say. It’s coming, but it’s going to take a while. So:

It may take time and hard work, but anything worthwhile does.

Back to Basics to #LockTheClock

This spring, in the weeks before and after the time change, I did a bunch to try to #LockTheClock and stop the twice-annual insanity of changing in and out of Daylight Saving Time.

Then I got busy with the other parts of my life.

Well, I recently decided to step back and analyze the whole effort. Every bit. Every assumption, every hope, every idea.

What would the world be like after all of us join together to end the insanity?

I realized that so far, my efforts have all been in vain. 

MI-DST-testimony

Take a look:

  • I testified in four states (the photo is from my testimony in Michigan with the incomparable Rep. Peter Lucido.) In all four states, the bills died.
  • I didn’t testify in a couple dozen other states, but the bills met a similar end.
  • At least 68 people have tried to fix this with a petition. All those have gone nowhere.
  • More research comes out every month or so showing the dangers of DST clock changing, and still we are stuck with it.

Failure like that would make a lot of people… well… give up.

But, I’m an entrepreneur. Startups are the one place where failure is OK. Celebrated even.

I will not, however, keep doing the same things in the same ways, so that’s why I went back to the basics.

From that exercise, with some key help, I figured out two things:

  1. My underlying plan needs an overhaul, and…
  2. I need to make it easier for people to connect to this.

As for my underlying plan, I will let you know how that develops. I’m actually going to visit the heart of the matter, the Department of Transportation in Washington D.C. That’s where the Uniform Time Act is administered, and that’s the place with the people who understand the law better than anyone. I need to go there, and learn.

From that, I’ll come out with a new plan that works better on a technical level.

After that, the next job will be to find a way to make what can work on a technical level work on an emotional level as well.

There’s no question that many people feel the pain of DST clock changing, and aren’t afraid to express it in memes, videos, cartoons, articles and more. You can find all those on this blog.

But it hasn’t been enough. We haven’t yet reached the Tipping Point.

So, keep in touch and be sure to follow us on whatever social media is your thing to be able to learn how we’re going to be able to move forward.

Yours in sanity,

I remain,

-Scott

Daylight Saving Time is here. What can you do?

Welcome to the blog on the weekend of the deadly change. Below you’ll find lots, some of it hard-nosed, and some of it just fun.

The number of bills this year going through state legislatures is way up. The press attention is way up. It really seems like the momentum is finally moving our way.

Even this cartoon today gave me some hope.

Screen Shot 2017-03-11 at 6.23.57 PM

Even last year there would NOT have been a joke that included even the idea that Daylight Saving Time clock-changing may go away.

If you hate clock-changing, I hope you’ll do a little to raise your voice. Talk to a state legislator, even just tweet about it.

And be in touch with me to let me know what you are doing and we’ll put it on this blog.

I recently drove across Nebraska to testify to the senate there. The legislative aid said it would be great if I could do it if it wasn’t too inconvenient. I told him it WAS inconvenient, and if I only did what was convenient, nothing would ever change!

I felt like such a hero, but then just before me a young man testified and his courage really put whatever inconvenience I had to shame. It was great to watch, and you can watch it now, too:

So, if you don’t like the time change, I hope that you’ll be sure to join the Facebook Group, or follow me on Twitter

And be sure to take care on Monday morning, that’s the deadly one. I suggest you observe National Turn Off Your Alarm Clock Day.

Thanks for reading!

“I’m in favor of DST!” “I’m against it!” These two views may not be different

I talk to people about Daylight Saving Time all the time, probably more than any other human on earth.

When I do, however, I always have to be careful, because everyone has an opinion about it, and they often sound conflicting, when really they aren’t.

For instance, what does it mean when someone says they are against Daylight Saving Time?

It could mean that they like it to be darker — relative to the time on the clocks — earlier in the summer. It could mean that they like the extra daylight in the summer, they just don’t like the time change where they have to Spring Forward. It could also mean that they don’t like suddenly having it be dark when they come home from work in the fall.

They are all valid points of view, but different. I’ve tried to explain it with words forever, and then the incomparable Kirk Anderson came up with this cool graphic that does it much better:

DST-terms

I think this makes it clear that if you want to take a position on DST, you’ll want to actually take two positions:

  1. Do you want to change the clocks twice a year?
  2. If not, which time zone do you want to be in, Standard or Daylight Saving Time?

If you have clarity on those two questions, then you’ll be able to figure out what you do want.

By the way, you may be asking what I want. I’ll tell you: No more clock changing, and for Colorado I think year-round DST works best. For many other states, especially ones like Nebraska and Michigan that are on the western edge of their time zones, they may opt for year-round standard time. Whatever they want is fine with me.

The best thing for all of us would be to just stop doing the thing that is deadly, and that’s changing clocks twice a year.

National Turn Off Your Alarm Clock Day – Official Information

The Monday after the “Spring Forward” Daylight Saving Time clock changing day is officially also “National Turn Off Your Alarm Clock” day.

Who says it’s official? This site does!

National turn off alarm clock day

That makes it at least as official as National Popcorn Lovers Day, which is different from National Popcorn Day.

(I love popcorn as much as anyone, but really, can’t the popcorn people and the popcorn lovers people get together?)

Official Instructions for your workplace

So, the question I know you are asking is this: “How can I convince my boss to let me sleep in on that Monday?”

The answer there is easy. It’s all about safety, and I wish I was joking around about this, but I’m not.

On the Monday after the time change, here’s what science tells us will happen for sure:

So, really, your boss would be a moron to make you get up early, only to risk that you are either going to have a heart attack, have a stroke or get in a car accident. The absolute best case scenario is that you’ll make it to work and be totally unproductive.

If your boss looks at you funny and says you must be joking, you can show him this post, or just this picture:

No-joke

So, enjoy your popcorn (lovers or otherwise) day and be safe on the Monday after Daylight Saving Time.

2017 Guide for Legislators about Daylight Saving Time

As of this morning there are now about 24 states that are considering some modification to Daylight Saving Time.

Given that two (Arizona and Hawaii) don’t participate in the clock-changing madness twice a year, that means half the states that have legislation brewing to ditch it.

That’s the good news, and it is indeed great news.

The bad news is that every single one of those bills is doomed. Every one.

I wish it wasn’t the case, but it is. (Here’s a post on the legislative tracking site, BillTrack50, about why.)

In short, no state can act on its own. The federal government controls the time, and the controlling law is that we have uniform time zones. If one state does its own thing, the time zones are no longer uniform.

Sunrise-dst

What Can Be Done?

Luckily, there is something that legislators can do! It’s actually easier than passing a bill, it’s passing a resolution. We’ve got model resolution language right here. Or you can look at the version that passed in California.

While typically resolutions don’t do much, this one will because it will give a chance for your state to join together with California and all the other states who will be passing this resolution.

Then, as the leader of this movement, I’ll make sure that all those resolutions get delivered to Washington in a way that will make it hard for the people that matter in this to ignore.

So don’t lose heart that a bill won’t work, you’ve got another tool in the toolbox!

Background

The rest of this post is an updated version of this post, updated with the latest research.

History

Rich and complicated history. Enacted first by Germany during World War One. Adopted by Great Britain and then the U.S. shortly after.

Since 1966 controlled by federal government. Only changes allowed by the Department of Transportation have been to increase uniformity and to lengthen DST portion of the year.

Legislative Background

Many states have attempted to alter their own time zone, but the efforts typically get derailed when they learn of the control by the federal government.

Why is this effort different?

We are not asking for a law to be passed, simply a resolution. There are no binding commitments, no un-funded mandates, and no attempt to challenge the federal authority.

The resolution (full text here) simply states that it is the sentiment of that legislative body that all of the U.S. move to permanent Daylight Saving Time. Some states may want to remain in permanent standard time, and they can request that in the text of their own resolution.

Objection: “In our state the resolution is typically used just to honor citizens, etc.”

Nearly every state is like that, but that’s OK. This is an unusual problem, so it requires an unusual solution, and there are plenty of times resolutions have been used to send a message to a targeted audience. In this case the audience is the Federal Department of Transportation.

Will I face political trouble if I introduce/support this?

All of the polls (here’s one) show at least a two-to-one preference for a stop to the clock changing.

When a lawmaker in Arizona proposed that his state — one of only two that were grandfathered into the 1966 law and don’t have to change twice per year — begin changing with the rest of the country, he was so flooded with negative comments that he immediately and publicly withdrew his proposal.

Though not organized on this issue, traditional TV broadcasters have been against permanent DST because they want people to stop playing outside in the early evening and go home to watch television.

Is there any partisan angle?

No! 

The resolution that passed in California was sponsored by a Republican, but it passed both chambers controlled by the Democratic Party nearly unanimously.

If you are looking for a partisan angle, Republicans can say that they are trying to reduce government intrusion into private lives. Democrats can say that it will help the environment.

What is the science behind supporting this resolution?

Recommendation

This resolution has zero fiscal implication, wide popular support and no complicated legal consequences.

With so little risk and so high of a possible reward, I recommend that you introduce or support this resolution as soon as possible.

Hey Journalists, “Time” Is Serious. Please Treat It That Way.

It’s time for journalists to start taking Daylight Saving Time seriously.

I’ve been the leading activist on ending the clock-changing mandate for a couple of years now, and one of the things I do is monitor every story that comes out about DST.

Look, I was a journalist for a long time. I know how easy it is to think that Big Issues like the state budget deficit or entitlements or whatever are the ones that everyone SHOULD be reading because they are Important.

But if you pay any attention at all to actual readers, nobody is reading those stories. 

What they read, and what they care about, is issues that they can understand, and when it comes to politics they want to read about things that they think can actually be fixed.

Daylight Saving Time is just such an issue.

In the last couple of weeks I’ve seen two particularly egregious examples.

The first comes from Curtis Haring of Utah Political Capitol. 

It’s dripping with ugly sarcasm. Example: “… the unbearable burden of having to spring forward and then fall back every year.” 

Several points:

  1. You, Curtis, don’t get to decide what’s Important, and what’s not. 
  2. Dozens of people die because of the time change (heart attacks, traffic accidents, workplace accidents, etc.). Your words are just cruel to the surviving families.
  3. You story makes it seem that those working on this are doing it to the exclusion of all else. That’s just wrong. In all 50 states there are hundreds of bills. They all get their due. The state legislators working on this just want to fix something that the government does that’s clearly broken. That’s why they ran in the first place, to fix stuff.

Perhaps most upsetting to me is how this story chastises Rep. Norm Thurston. I haven’t met him, but looking around online it’s clear he’s an honorable guy trying to do the right thing. You point out, correctly, that previous efforts on this topic have died, but then you lay in to Rep. Thurston for the sin of trying again with a different tactic.

Trying something new is to be applauded. You, Curtis, seem only interested in gridlock.

Shame on you, Curtis Haring. Shame.

And kudos to Rep. Thurston. I look forward to the progress that your new thinking will bring to this issue!

Example two

Here is another one that is not so upsetting, but is way more pathetic. Hey, Brett Barrouquere, I know time is tight for reporters, much so more than when I was one. Still, that’s no excuse to write, “Nearly all of the United States – except Arizona and Hawaii (because they want to be different) – observe Daylight Saving Time.”

In fact, Arizona and Hawaii want much more than to just be different, what they want is to not have to change the clocks twice per year without a good reason to do so, and so they were able to keep their time zones because they were in place before the Uniform Time Act of 1966. Also your flip “yes, that’s a real thing” about that act is unbecoming of a reporter talking about federal law. It makes sense that the government is involved in the setting of time. Would you rather that we go back to a time when every town in the world set the clock how it wanted?

If people in the 1800s could figure out that uniform time is needed for transportation by train, certainly you could figure that out, too, Brett, here in the 21st century.

Message to reporters

In short, if you are a reporter thinking about covering this, you should know that this is a serious policy issue.

It certainly has its fun and funny sides, and I celebrate those as much as anyone, but I do it with respect for the policy implications that simmer under the surface.

Fixing the time does not have big-money interests behind it, so it’s left to us — a band of citizens, part-time legislators, and other activists —  to make the case. If this was a good or bad thing for Monsanto or the Trial Lawyers, etc., you better believe that it would have lots of great lobbying being done and you would not be so flip or so dismissive.

The future, the old saying goes, does not have a lobbyist.

In this case, however, it does. It has me, and it has the will of the people.

I’ll be watching and calling you out by name if you don’t treat Daylight Saving Time like the serious issue that it is.

Great DST Progress, But How To Coach Friends?

I just looked around, and can say these seven things very clearly:

  1. I have been blogging about Daylight Saving Time for more than two years, and am now pretty much the leading voice on this admittedly very niche issue.
  2. In October of 2014 when I did a piece for CNN, I was seen of something of an oddity.
  3. In the years since, I’ve seen a ton of research come out about how bad the clock changing is.
  4. I’ve also seen a lot more bills proposed around the country. (All but one died, see item 6, below, on that.)
  5. There’s also been a noticeable shift in public opinion, based on Fall Back memes, Spring Forward memes, and just the media coverage in general.  
  6. One state (a big one) had a Republican sponsor pass a resolution that I promoted in a very Democratic legislature, showing how bipartisan this issue is.
  7. Now I’m seeing a bunch more state legislators trying to get something done. I’ll list some of them below, but it’s very encouraging.

The problem I have is this: Legislators keep trying to do a thing that I totally support in the underlying spirit, but that I’m quite certain is doomed to failure. That leaves me with two questions:

  1. How do I tell people that I support them, but that they should try something different?
  2. How do I get the word out to legislators before they introduce a (doomed) bill that there’s a better way?

I really need help on both those points. If you have suggestions, please contact me.

DST-sun-setting

Is the sun setting on Daylight Saving Time clock changing? These Canada Geese think so!

 

In the meantime, here’s what I’ve seen in terms of bills being introduced for the 2017 legislative session:

  • Wyoming. From the one story about this bill, it’s clear that the main sponsor, Rep. Dan Laursen, agrees with the overwhelming majority of Americans that the time we are in doesn’t matter as much as it’s important to stop changing the clocks twice per year. He apparently first proposed that Wyoming stay in Standard Time all year long, but ran into a buzz saw of opposition. Where year-round Standard Time might be good for some states (like Nevada), for Wyoming year-round DST seems to be best, and will certainly have the least opposition.
  • New Jersey. This one is kind of inspired, tragic, and wonderful all at once. The sponsor, Shirley Turner, is proposing a resolution calling for extending Daylight Saving Time by a week or two in the fall, making sure that it comes after the election, and not before. The fact that the time change came just before the last election was hard to miss this year. Her resolution says that in more dignified tones. It’s a wonderful resolution, avoiding the trap of thinking a bill or law that applies only to New Jersey would do any good. But it’s tragic — I think — because it just takes something terrible (the time change) and nudges it forward a small bit rather than  just eliminating it. Still, good for Sen. Turner for proposing something, rather than just doing nothing. And good for her for proposing a resolution that can get passed without much opposition.
     
  • Missouri. The Show Me state has a track record of trying to do something about DST. This bill modifies the tactic I’ve seen from Rep. Mike Kelley before of saying that Missouri will only go to permanent DST if two adjacent states also pass a law saying that they will also go to permanent DST. Similar bills have failed in the past, but maybe this year? The problem, as always, is that even a group of three states will almost certainly not be allowed to switch by the federal government. 
  • Texas. This bill is like so many other doomed bills that have gone before. It will fail, unfortunately, and even if it did pass, the Feds won’t let one state act alone under the Uniform Time Act. Hey, Sen. Menendez, I’m happy to jump on a call with you to help talk about what can work!
  • Connecticut. (No bill filed yet, but news here.) This is the first time I’ve seen any action from the Nutmeg state, so welcome to the fight, Kurt Vail! As you’ve already seen, this is a great way to get press and get your constituents talking. If one report is true, even you don’t think you’ll be able to get your bill out of committee. You are probably right. But there is a DST resolution you can get passed that will help a great deal. If California can pass it, you can, too! If I can help, just contact me.

A few other states have some early indication of action, including a reprise of past failed efforts in New Mexico and Massachusetts.

In Utah, where bills have failed for years, one state representative is proposing an official statewide vote that would allow people in Utah to voice an opinion. Sounds great! Go, Norm Thurston, go!

Good News on DST

Overall, this may seem like a lot of bad news, but really just the fact that there’s so much news is good news. There’s also been more research that I’ll be updating soon, and a LOT more press coverage, some good and some stinky, but all interesting. I’ll be covering it all.

In short, the momentum is swinging in the direction of fixing the killing aspects of the time change. With a bit more effort, I know we’ll get there.

Fall Back DST memes

Hey, welcome readers! This post is from 2016, and while it’s still funny, there’s lot’s more fun stuff. The easiest way to see it all may be just to use this DST Memes tag.

In the spring I presented a collection of memes about the “spring forward” DST clock changing insanity.

I know we get an extra hour of sleep this time, but it doesn’t feel like it. I’m all goofed up already, and I’m really dreading the sun going down before I get out of work on Monday. 

Turns out, I’m not alone. I need to go update all my research posts, and probably write a couple of new posts. Just a bit of the new reports out this year:

But to help you get through the day, especially an extra long day waiting for the election to be over, I present to you these memes that you can use however you like.

Good luck getting through the next few days and weeks.

 Trump-clock-changing.009

Dst-car-clock-meme

 

On-sunday-set-your-clock-back-one-hour-on-tuesday-be-careful-that-you-dont-set-the-country-back-50-years-132ba

Kids-Daylight-Savings-660

Daylight-savings-memes-5_1446487316913_26107815_ver1.0_640_480

Its-pitch-black-out-what-time-is-it-is-it-midnight-its-5-27-pm-1446435185

Much-worse

Screen Shot 2016-11-06 at 6.12.09 PM

Reasons to Keep Changing The Clocks Back and Forth for #DST?

This election year in the U.S. has been rough, and as I mentioned, the “fall back” change comes in the middle of the last days of the election, meaning it will be one hour longer than it needs to be.

It’s only an hour, but even an hour is an eternity this year.

One of the reasons this year has been so hard is that the two presidential candidates are so different. People really can’t understand how anybody could support the other side.

That’s why I thought this article in the HBR was so helpful. It provides ways of helping people who support Trump an exit-ramp so that they can avoid supporting him without being “wrong” for supporting him in the first place.

I was thinking about that this morning when a friend posted a picture from an annual tradition that he has.

Lakeview

Every year on the last day of Daylight Saving Time, he and some other faithful go for the last sunrise that comes at a reasonable-enough hour, and take in the sunrise, and then they head into the Lakeview Lounge. This is a throwback drinking establishment that opens at 7 a.m.

So I suggested to my friend that this tradition will have to change, or at least evolve, if we can get rid of changing the clocks back and forth for #DST.

He said only, “Don’t do it.” (The guy was busy drinking at 7 a.m., so I didn’t expect a long answer. 😉

But he’s got a legitimate point of view. Taking away the clock changing would take away a fun annual event for him.

Are there other arguments in favor of changing the clocks twice per year? I really haven’t heard any. I’ve heard from lots of people that like either year-round DST or year-round standard time.

But other than my friend and his desire to have a once-a-year cocktail at 7 a.m., I haven’t heard of anyone who likes the clock-changing aspect of DST.

Have you?

Let me know on on our Facebook page, on Twitter by tagging me.  

 

Fixing DST Just Took A Huge Step, Even If The Media Missed It

Look, I was a reporter for a long time, I get it. It’s hard to do a story substantially different than what everyone else is doing.

So let me make it really easy for everyone:

The cause of fixing Daylight Saving Time clock changing just took a ginormous step forward with the passage of a resolution in California calling for an end to changing the clocks twice per year. The California resolution is based on the model DST resolution I first published in February of 2015. 

If you look at the coverage of the work of the state legislature, the resolution passing may seem like something of a footnote to the news that a bill failed.

But the bill, as readers of this site know, was doomed long, long ago. That it died last week is not news. It was dead before it was introduced, it’s just that the people who saw the body moving around thought that it had a chance at life. It never did. 

The big news is that the resolution passed when the bill failed.

Now typically a resolution has no power, it’s just an honorary thing. That’s what makes it powerful! We now have proof of what I’ve been advocating for a long time on this blog: Legislators are going to have a tough time passing a bill that will probably violate Federal Law, but they’ll have no problem voting for a resolution because they think it will have no power.

But this resolution is special. It has a hidden superpower. This resolution is The Little Train That Could.

Just look at the votes this resolution got from the very handy Bill Track 50.

DST-vote-history

It was essentially unanimous in every single vote. Here is an issue that nearly everyone agrees on, regardless of party. Any legislator who has ever asked constituents about it will tell you that it is a huge issue that brings up great passions.

There was only one vote against the resolution in the California Senate from a guy named Jim Nielsen, who is the senator from the agricultural community of Gerber, in the north-central part of the state. Lots of agriculture there, and good for Nielsen for standing up for the farmers, even if he may be a bit off on the facts.

“Our crops have gotten accustomed to that. They’ve in fact been bred to deal with that longer harvest season,” Nielsen said while arguing against the bill. “Don’t fix something that’s not broken.”

He said that in his arguments against the bill, and his side won the day and they did kill that doomed bill.

Crops, meanwhile, may have been bred for a longer season, but DST doesn’t have anything to do with seasons, only with the hours in a given day.

But, while Nielsen’s arguments against the bill may have worked on the bill, they didn’t carry over to the resolution. There were 17 “no” votes on the bill, but only one “no” vote on the resolution, from Nielsen.

(Sen. Nielsen, if you are reading this… Most people think that DST was put in place to help the farmers, but that’s never been true. In the excellent book, Seize The Daylight, the author, David Prerau, dug up the history that farmers were against the change when DST was first proposed, but the big business interests in Boston claimed that the farmers liked it. I see here that you come from agriculture, so you know better than others that real farmers work from before sunrise until after sunset, no matter what the clock says. I understand your desire to represent agriculture, but you’ll do it best by helping the sons and daughters of farmers to have more daylight after school to be able to help out on the family farm while there’s still some daylight.)

(Oh, one other thing, Sen. Nielsen… DST is — in fact — “broken.” It was started by the Germans during WWI and it’s bad for kids, victims of crime, people with bad hearts, productivity, the environment… the list goes on and on. DST is broken, indeed.)

 

What’s Next for the DST Resolution?

So, now that this historic resolution has passed in California, what happens next?

Well, the only official thing that happens is that this resolution will get sent to Congress and the President.

Unfortunately, getting Congress to do anything right now is pretty much impossible.

So, I will personally make sure that the other state legislatures are aware of this.

But to win this fight, I may need some help.

  • If you are a citizen concerned about this, contact your local legislators and let them know that if they want to pass a resolution that can really help fix things — a resolution that already passed in California with huge bipartisan support — they can do that.
  • If you are a teacher, consider doing a unit on DST, and deliver the results of your students’ research and this model resolution to your legislature if you visit the state capitol, or if you have a legislator visit your class.
  • If you are a journalist, consider doing a story about this movement. Your readers care about this issue, and are interested in real solutions.

The legislators can write the resolution however they want, but they are certainly welcome to copy the model DST resolution from this site, or the California resolution, or they can start from scratch. As long as the intent of the resolution is that the legislature and the state express a desire to end DST clock-changing, it will do the trick. If you think the people of your state for one reason or another want standard time year-round, you are welcome to advocate for that, but for nearly every state you’ll find that year round Daylight Saving Time will always be the most popular. Looking at the maps as much as I have, I really think only Michigan could potentially make the case that they’d be better off staying in Standard Time, which would essentially mean they’d join the same time zone as Wisconsin when the country switches to permanent Daylight Saving Time.

The only thing that I think is off about the California proposal is that it lacks an instruction to send the approved copy to the other states who have yet to pass such a resolution. Right now that’s all of them, except for Arizona and Hawaii, which are grandfathered in to staying on the same time year-round. But as I said, I’ll be doing all I can to make sure the other states all know about this resolution.

 

Change is hard. It takes a time and work, but thanks to Representative Jay Obernolte, the Assembly and Senate of California, it will be just a bit easier to push for change that can make a difference for the entire country.

Is this the beginning of the end for DST clock-changing?

The California legislature took a huge step toward fixing Daylight Saving Time Monday, and nobody really understood it.

Well, with the exception of readers of this blog.

A committee of the California Senate heard two proposals related to DST. Both passed, but only one of the proposals got any press.

That one is a bill, a well-meaning bill I’ve written about before. It passed out of the Senate committee, but from there it heads to another committee, and from there maybe to another committee and maybe to the floor of the Senate, where it will need two-thirds to pass. If it gets that, it will need to do the whole thing again in the California Assembly and then it will go to a vote of the people.

There’s almost no chance that will happen because of the business interests who want to keep more daylight in the summer evenings.

And, even if all that did happen and the voters of California passed it, there’s a non-trivial chance that the Federal DoT would overrule the will of the people and not allow the change because it takes away from the uniformity called for in the Uniform Time Act of 1967.

That’s why the bill from Kansen Chu is doomed.

The good news, and the news that’s so misunderstood because it is, admittedly, more complex, is that a joint resolution from Jay Obernolte also passed the same Senate committee.

This is the resolution that was already approved by a committee in the Assembly (that’s what California calls the lower body, what most states call the House) and by a vote of the full Assembly. It then went on to the Senate committee, where it passed unanimously on Monday. The bill from Sen. Chu had some “no” votes; it still passed but the fact that it had “no” votes is a sign of the problems it will face down the road.

Obernolte’s resolution, however passed unanimously, and has sailed through every vote it’s faced.

And the interesting thing is that the Senate committee did not decide to send it to yet another committee, it decided to send it to the floor of the Senate for a final vote.

Resolutions, you see, are the voice of the legislature, and so they do not require a vote from Governor Jerry Brown.

So this resolution that passed the committee Monday, a version of the one first introduced on this site, is one vote away from passage.

Now, it would be easy to say that this resolution won’t go anywhere even if it does pass, but I think this one will be different.

Why?

California is California. It’s the largest state in the union and people pay attention. Similar efforts to this have been attempted in smaller states, and didn’t get much traction. I think part of the reason is that smaller states didn’t want to appear… well… weird. This is a new idea, a new strategy, a new way of thinking. For a state like Arkansas or Missouri to be the leader, well, it’s understandable why they wouldn’t want to be on the tip edge of the sword. 

Now a state legislator in any of the other states can stand up and say that he or she wants to do something to stick it to the feds, protect the health of the people of the state, and do it in a way that’s consistent with what other, larger, states are doing.

Also, because California is California, the Federal DoT may pay a little more attention when this falls into their laps.

So join me in congratulating Assemblyman Jay Obernolte on getting this resolution thisclose to victory. If and when that victory comes we’ll be that much closer to fixing this dumb DST clock-changing once and for all.

DST Videos and Memes – A Select Collection

Here’s every worthwhile Daylight Saving Time video and meme photo, all in one handy place:

This is probably the funniest video, and it wraps up so many of the great points. Excellent.

The sequel, as they say, is never as good, but this is still excellent:

John Oliver’s take is spot-on:

Here’s a good explainer video:

 And as for Daylight Saving Time memes… There are hundreds. First, here’s my contribution:

Hamilton-DST-Meme

 Here are some classics, adapted for DST, even if some of them erroneously put an “s” at the end of “Saving” Time:

Count_rugen_dst_sucks

DST-aint-meme

DST_way-early-meme

DST clock in car meme

DST-poop-meme

Ron-burgundy-daylight-savings

Daylight-savings-time-y-u-no-save-time

Starbucks-DST-meme

Ee-cards-dst-meme

Office-space-dst-meme

DST-cher-meme

Daylight-Savings-Time-Monday-Meme

Monday-after-daylight-savings-meme

Hope you enjoy these, and if you want to take the time to share a meme photo, maybe you want to take just a moment to try to fix all this crazy clock-changing?

Check out this site for ways that you can pitch in.

Thanks!

An Open Letter to Kansen Chu — Re: Daylight Saving Time

An open letter to Kansen Chu, member of the California Assembly.

Dear Kansen,

(I hope you don’t mind me calling you Kansen. As you are an engineer, so I’m assuming like other engineers you don’t stand on formality, and besides, “Dear Assemblymember” just sounds odd for people who don’t hang around Sacramento.)

First: Let me say congratulations. On behalf of those of us who’ve been laboring on this issue for a while, it’s wonderful to see the concerns about Daylight Saving Time get the kind of attention that only comes when an elected official from our most populous state gets involved. It’s fantastic.

And by the way, I don’t mean that flippantly. This is an issue that a huge swath of the population cares deeply about, and yet nobody seems to talk about it in any meaningful way. You are, and it’s just fantastic. (Twelve other states are looking into it so far this year, which is also great.)

Second: Be sure to thank your dentist. I read that he’s the one that suggested that you champion this topic. 

Third: Your dentist is right on the facts: Switching in and out of DST is not healthy. I’ve got a list of most of the research about DST here.

Fourth: I hope you don’t mind me numbering all the points. My hunch is that as an engineer, you’ll appreciate it, just as all your constituents will appreciate the time not jumping around so they can enjoy the moon behind the clouds on a spring evening without losing an hour of sleep.

Daylight saving time night time

Fifth: You told a reporter that your interpretation of the federal law is that California could switch to Standard Time, and not go to year-round DST. That is certainly a reasonable interpretation, but it may not be right. Nobody has ever formally asked the Feds to move into permanent DST since the passage of The Uniform Time Act of 1966. All the approved changes have been to make time more uniform across the four time zones.

I understand why you have the interpretation that you do, and you may be right, but it is far from settled. I wrote about this a year before you knew it was even an issue.

The legality seems to be tied up not in which time zone you are in, but if that time zone is uniform with the rest of the country. California essentially being in its own time zone decreases uniformity, so will probably be denied, even if the people vote for it.

Sixth: Even if it wasn’t doomed by the Feds, your effort in its current form will be doomed by big business.

In short, all the money in this fight does not want Standard Time year round. The farmers did not want DST after World War II, it was the golf industry, and that industry will certainly fight you on this. Also, the lawn care industry, those who sell patio furniture, the recreation industry, major league and little league baseball — all of these and plenty more have a lot of money tied up in longer summer evenings.

Don’t be surprised if some of your old “friends” from the restaurant industry contact you soon and urge you to drop this, as earlier darkness means fewer trips out to eat.

Pretty much the only industry I’ve been able to find that supports year-round Standard Time is broadcast TV, which wants it dark early so people will go inside and watch television.

Seventh: Do NOT take points five and six as evidence that I’m against you. I’m not. I’m totally in favor of doing anything that shakes things up. If you can get this passed, I’ll be cheering more loudly than anyone. I want this, it’s just that the path of getting a proposal passed by both houses of the legislature, signed by the governor and then approved in a statewide ballot is a long and difficult path, especially given that you’ll have business and the federal government against you.

Eighth: If you call the federal DoT, and if the people there tell you what they’ve told other state legislators I’ve talked to, you’ll maybe be sad. Or if all the business interests tell you that you need to back off, maybe you’ll be sad. Or maybe if people start calling your proposal “depressing,” you will be depressed yourself.

Do not lose heart!!! You are fighting the good fight.

Ninth and final point (with its own numbered list): There is a way that you can turn this into a winning issue for you, for California, and for the whole country. Here’s how:

  1. Instead of a bill, with it’s long odds of success, offer instead a resolution. Now, you know better than most that resolutions don’t typically do very much, but this one would be different.
  2. This resolution would simply say that it is the wish of California that it would move to year-round DST, and that you want all other states to join you.
  3. That resolution would go to the other states, and the Feds.
  4. If two-thirds of the states pass the same resolution, the Feds could solve this with one ruling of the DoT, no Act of Congress needed because this will make the country more uniform under the current law.
  5. If you don’t like the wording of that resolution, which is a bit hyperbolic, I’ll write you a new one that’s more toned down, or you can write one yourself.

In short, Kansen, and to paraphrase Casablanca… Welcome to the fight. With you on board, I know our side will win!