Oh, There Are Problems With Trump's Surgeon General Pick
If California Was a Swing State, This Would Never Be Tolerated
Keystone XL Pipeline Is Back Once Trump Retakes Office, But There's a Problem
The Capitol Hill GOP Is – As Usual – The Weakest Link
The Harris And Walz Team Keep The Grift Going
Republicans Should Absolutely Nuke The Filibuster
Resistance Is Futile...and Stupid
The Perfect Revenge
As Trump 47 Looms, Biden Brings World to Brink of War
Don’t Let the Left Destroy Trump’s Picks with Hypocritical Accusations and Unrealistic Sta...
When the Right Goes Wrong
Blinken In Deep Water After State Dept. Hosts Therapy Sessions Post-Trump Win
Democrats Ramp Up Their Criticism of Tulsi Gabbard
Why We Should Be Concerned Over the Philippine VP’s Comments
These Democratic Senators Could Sure Be in Trouble After Voting for Sanders' Anti-Israel...
Tipsheet
Premium

It Looks Like Congress Finally Found a Non-Partisan Issue to Unite Around

AP Photo/Mark Tenally

We live in some rather partisan, divided times. It doesn't happen often, if it happens at all, that both parties find something to agree on, and agree on so strongly. On Tuesday, though, the U.S. Senate voted by unanimous consent in favor of the Sunshine Protection Act of 2021, proposed by Sen. Marco Rubio (R-FL), which would make Daylight Savings Time permanent. 

The United States just recently went through a clocks change, by moving ahead an hour early on Sunday morning. As a result, we all lost an hour of precious sleep, and have had to adjust our week accordingly, though we do enjoy an extra hour of daylight.

When moving the clocks back again, in November, we'll get an extra hour of sleep, but it will get much darker, much earlier, as early as in the four or five o'clock hour. 

"There's some strong science behind it that is now showing and making people aware of the harm that clock switching has. We see an increase in heart attacks and car accidents and pedestrian accidents in the week[s] that follow the changes," Sen. Rubio mentioned during floor remarks. 

Meilan Solly, writing for Smithsonian Magazine, had even more:

Supporters of adopting a fixed, year-round schedule point to the well-documented health and safety risks associated with changing the clocks. As the American Academy of Sleep Medicine noted in a 2020 statement, the spring shift to DST incurs “increased risk of adverse cardiovascular events, mood disorders and motor vehicle crashes.” On the Monday after the shift, reported Hilary Brueck for Insider last March, hospitals see a 24 percent jump in patients experiencing heart attacks. The Monday after the clock turns back in the fall, meanwhile, hospital heart attack visits drop 21 percent.

“That’s how fragile and susceptible your body is to even just one hour of lost sleep,” sleep expert Matthew Walker told Insider.

And, while it may be nice for the sun to come up earlier, a piece from Saffeya Ahmed for CNN noted it's "debated" as to if DST actually works:

While the practice can help reduce some energy consumption, critics have raised concerns of whether the amount of energy saved is worth the hassle of implementing the system around the world. 

In 2008, the US Department of Energy found that the four-week extension of DST from April-October to March-November saved about 0.5 percent in total electricity every day. While that seems like almost nothing, it totals 1.3 billion kilowatt-hours and the DOE says that adds up to "the amount of electricity used by more than 100,000 households for an entire year." 

But a study that same year by the National Bureau of Economic Research concluded that DST increases the demand for electricity -- even though lighting usage reduced, demand for heating and cooling increased, so electricity consumption was about the same. 

Other studies have found that benefits of DST may be location-specific. One found electricity reductions in Norway and Sweden, while another saw increased electricity demand in Indiana.

The legislation would also mean those states that have seen the benefits of doing away with daylight savings time wouldn't be restricted by the federal government any longer. 

As a press release from Sen. Rubio's office lays out: 

In 2018, Florida legislature’s enacted year-round DST. However, for Florida’s change to apply, a change in the federal statute is required. Nineteen other states — Alabama, Arkansas, California, Delaware, Georgia, Idaho, Louisiana, Maine, Massachusetts, Minnesota, Mississippi, Montana, Ohio, Oregon, South Carolina, Tennessee, Utah, Washington, and Wyoming — have passed similar laws, resolutions, or voter initiatives, and dozens more are looking to do so.
 
If passed by the House and signed into law by President Joe Biden, the Sunshine Protection Act would apply to those states that currently participate in DST, which most states observe for eight months out of the year. States and territories that currently remain on Standard Time year-around would continue to do so. Many studies have shown that making DST permanent could benefit the economy and the country. A one-pager of the bill is available here.

In addition to the support from the U.S. Senate, making DST permanent also has support from a majority of the American people.

As Solly also added:

[Senator Patty] Murray’s words echo sentiments shared by a broad swath of Americans. A 2019 poll conducted by the Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research found that 70 percent of people surveyed wanted to end the practice of changing the clocks. Approximately 40 percent advocated for staying on standard time year-round, while 30 percent preferred sticking to daylight saving time. Beth Ann Malow, a neurologist at Vanderbilt University Medical Center, outlines the case for standard time in the Conversation, writing that it more “closely approximates natural light, with the sun directly overhead at or near noon. In contrast, during [DST] from March until November, the natural light is shifted unnaturally by one hour later.”

History may be repeating itself from the 1970s in even more ways than one. "Year-round daylight saving time (DST), signed into law by President Richard Nixon in January 1974, sought to maximize evening sunlight and, in doing so, help mitigate an ongoing national gas crisis," Solly also noted.

It appears the country went back to the change, and became less popular, because students were going to school while it was still dark out, which even resulted in deaths. Such was not just a question in the 1970s, but today, over Twitter, as well.

Sen. Rubio had a response to that too.

If the legislation passes the U.S. House of Representatives and is signed into law by President Joe Biden, it won't take effect until November 2023. This is to give the transportation industry the time it's requested to make adjustments.

Sen. Rubio also acknowledged in his floor remarks that "I know this is not the most important issue confronting America, but it's one of those issues where there's a lot of agreement."

Jeff Crouere's Monday column for Townhall opposing Daylight Savings Time generated quite a bit of discussion as well. 

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement