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Should We 'Heed the Science and Abolish Daylight Saving Time'? (msn.com) 252

Today much of the world honors an annual tradition: setting their clocks backwards by one hour. "I hope you enjoy it," writes Boston Globe Jeff Jacoby.

In an essay titled "Heed the science and abolish daylight saving time," Jacoby writes "I also hope this is the last year we have to go through this business of shifting our clocks ahead, and that by this time next year we'll be back on standard time for good." I am not a fan of daylight saving time, and if the polls are accurate, neither are most Americans. According to a 2019 survey by the Associated Press and the National Opinion Research Center, 71 percent of the public wants to put an end to the twice-yearly practice of changing clocks... Most of the rest of the world doesn't want it either. In Asia, Africa, and South America, it's virtually nonexistent. Most of Australia and many of the nations of the South Pacific eschew it, as do Russia and most of the former Soviet republics. The European Parliament voted by a large margin to end daylight saving time across the European Union, though whether to implement that change is left up to each EU member state...

The point of "saving" daylight was to save fuel: Congress believed that by shifting the clock so daylight extended later into the evening, the law would reduce demand for electricity and thereby conserve oil. But researchers attempting to measure the effects of clock-changing on energy savings have found them pretty elusive... But daylight saving time doesn't just fail to deliver the single most important benefit expected of it. It also generates a slew of harms. In the days following the onset of daylight time each March, there is a measurable increase in suicides, atrial fibrillation, strokes, and heart attacks. Workplace injuries climb. So do fatal car crashes and emergency room visits. There is even evidence that judges hand down harsher sentences. All of which helps explain the growing chorus of scientists calling for an end to daylight saving time. The public-health problems stem not just from the loss of an hour of sleep once a year but from the ongoing disruption to the human circadian clock...

We should no longer be thinking about "springing forward" and "falling back" in terms of personal preference or convenience but should be focusing instead on the proven degradation to human well-being. Scientists now understand vastly more about the workings and importance of circadian rhythm than they did when clock-shifting was instituted decades ago. There is a growing medical consensus that what we've been doing with our clocks each spring is unhealthy.

It's time to stop doing it.

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Should We 'Heed the Science and Abolish Daylight Saving Time'?

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  • So I microwave it for 7 minutes and 30 seconds. Yes, end DST, it isn't rocket surgery.
    • Wrong solution (Score:4, Insightful)

      by Excelcia ( 906188 ) <slashdot@excelcia.ca> on Sunday March 14, 2021 @08:17AM (#61156716) Homepage Journal

      Ending DST is the wrong solution. Making it permanent is the best solution. Canadian provinces and US states can already opt out of DST. Unfortunately they aren't authorized to make it permanent. That's all we need is the federal legislation to authorize them to make the decision. Many if not most of them already want to, so authorize it and let them do the heavy lifting.

      • by cusco ( 717999 )

        I've often thought that a candidate could probably win the US presidential election simply by promising to do away with Daylight Savings Time and nothing else.

      • by big-giant-head ( 148077 ) on Sunday March 14, 2021 @12:15PM (#61157376)

        I personally agree with the keep DST and make it permanent. I think what people are sick of is the spring forward, fall back nonsense. They don't care if we make DST permanent like Sen Rubio proposes or just do away with it, It's the clock changing people don't like!

  • Much of the world? (Score:5, Insightful)

    by paulatz ( 744216 ) on Sunday March 14, 2021 @03:50AM (#61156308)

    Editor David says Today much of the world honors an annual tradition: setting their clocks backwards by one hour

    Which is only accurate, if you conflate "much of the world" with USA. As the only other territory where DST exists, Europe, does not change time today, but in two weeks.

    P.S. personally I like DST, because it is fun to stir up life routines from time to time

    • by thsths ( 31372 )

      Come on, this is slashdot. It was long ago declared a fact free zone. :-)

    • Also, it is only accurate if by backwards you mean forwards. No wonder it causes trouble.

    • by jrumney ( 197329 )

      Europe isn't the other other territory were DST exists. Paraguay and Chile still have DST in South America, 70% of Australia, New Zealand and a number of Pacific Island nations started theirs last year, and are about to end it soon. A number of Middle East and North African countries also use DST.

    • Only if you conflate North America as the USA as Canada also changed today.
    • one aspect, not considered, that would be highly disruptive if they ended the change would be people forgetting to change the 9v batteries in their smoke detectors. For decades thats been the trigger. There really is not another semi-annual event that people can use. Thinking about the annual ones, they can be a but distracting. New years; well youre either getting drunk or dealing with a hangover. Much could be said about the holidays, too many other things to juggle. With DST, the only event that day was
    • by Ogive17 ( 691899 )
      Maybe it was a joke. The US didn't move clocks forward one hour, the rest of the world moved them back an hour.
    • by Ecuador ( 740021 )

      P.S. personally I like DST, because it is fun to stir up life routines from time to time

      But DST IS a routine, and a stupid and costly one.
      If you want to stir up life, you could suggest we have like a random number generator running every week, deciding a time zone for each area. And make it able to include funky time zones too, like the ones that have 30 or even 15 minute offsets. Now, that's fun!

    • P.S. personally I like DST, because it is fun to stir up life routines from time to time

      It used to matter to me, but now it doesn't. All my clocks adjust automatically. Today I didn't even notice it was DST until I read this article.

    • Which is only accurate, if you conflate "much of the world" with USA. As the only other territory where DST exists, Europe...

      ...which itself is only accurate if you ignore countries like Canada, Australia, Mongolia etc. which just by themselves make up about an eighth of the land area of the planet.

    • The US used to change clocks the same time as the rest of the world (it's more than just the EU.) Then France refused to invade Iraq with us and our POTUS started calling "French Fries" "Freedom Fries" and moved the DST transition dates by a few weeks cause fuck the Europeans and coordination.

  • "Much of the world"? (Score:5, Informative)

    by Westley ( 99238 ) on Sunday March 14, 2021 @03:51AM (#61156310) Homepage

    As far as I can tell, only North America changes clocks today. Calling that "much of the world" isn't a good look, IMO.

    Here's a list of transition dates in the first half of 2021, grouped by UTC date, listing the time zone ID - and of course, there are plenty of places that don't observe daylight saving time at all.

    2021-01-16
    Pacific/Fiji

    2021-01-31
    Africa/Juba

    2021-03-14
    America/Adak, America/Anchorage, America/Atka, America/Boise, America/Cambridge_Bay, America/Chicago, America/Denver, America/Detroit, America/Edmonton, America/Ensenada, America/Fort_Wayne, America/Glace_Bay, America/Goose_Bay, America/Grand_Turk, America/Halifax, America/Havana, America/Indiana/Indianapolis, America/Indiana/Knox, America/Indiana/Marengo, America/Indiana/Petersburg, America/Indiana/Tell_City, America/Indiana/Vevay, America/Indiana/Vincennes, America/Indiana/Winamac, America/Indianapolis, America/Inuvik, America/Iqaluit, America/Juneau, America/Kentucky/Louisville, America/Kentucky/Monticello, America/Knox_IN, America/Los_Angeles, America/Louisville, America/Matamoros, America/Menominee, America/Metlakatla, America/Miquelon, America/Moncton, America/Montreal, America/Nassau, America/New_York, America/Nipigon, America/Nome, America/North_Dakota/Beulah, America/North_Dakota/Center, America/North_Dakota/New_Salem, America/Ojinaga, America/Pangnirtung, America/Port-au-Prince, America/Rainy_River, America/Rankin_Inlet, America/Resolute, America/Santa_Isabel, America/Shiprock, America/Sitka, America/St_Johns, America/Thule, America/Thunder_Bay, America/Tijuana, America/Toronto, America/Vancouver, America/Winnipeg, America/Yakutat, America/Yellowknife, Atlantic/Bermuda, CST6CDT, Canada/Atlantic, Canada/Central, Canada/Eastern, Canada/Mountain, Canada/Newfoundland, Canada/Pacific, Cuba, EST5EDT, MST7MDT, Mexico/BajaNorte, Navajo, PST8PDT, US/Alaska, US/Aleutian, US/Central, US/East-Indiana, US/Eastern, US/Indiana-Starke, US/Michigan, US/Mountain, US/Pacific

    2021-03-21
    Asia/Tehran, Iran

    2021-03-25
    Asia/Amman, Asia/Damascus

    2021-03-26
    Asia/Gaza, Asia/Hebron, Asia/Jerusalem, Asia/Tel_Aviv, Israel

    2021-03-27
    Asia/Beirut

    2021-03-28
    Africa/Ceuta, America/Asuncion, America/Godthab, America/Nuuk, America/Scoresbysund, Antarctica/Troll, Arctic/Longyearbyen, Asia/Famagusta, Asia/Nicosia, Atlantic/Azores, Atlantic/Canary, Atlantic/Faeroe, Atlantic/Faroe, Atlantic/Jan_Mayen, Atlantic/Madeira, CET, EET, Eire, Europe/Amsterdam, Europe/Andorra, Europe/Athens, Europe/Belfast, Europe/Belgrade, Europe/Berlin, Europe/Bratislava, Europe/Brussels, Europe/Bucharest, Europe/Budapest, Europe/Busingen, Europe/Chisinau, Europe/Copenhagen, Europe/Dublin, Europe/Gibraltar, Europe/Guernsey, Europe/Helsinki, Europe/Isle_of_Man, Europe/Jersey, Europe/Kiev, Europe/Lisbon, Europe/Ljubljana, Europe/London, Europe/Luxembourg, Europe/Madrid, Europe/Malta, Europe/Mariehamn, Europe/Monaco, Europe/Nicosia, Europe/Oslo, Europe/Paris, Europe/Podgorica, Europe/Prague, Europe/Riga, Europe/Rome, Europe/San_Marino, Europe/Sarajevo, Europe/Skopje, Europe/Sofia, Europe/Stockholm, Europe/Tallinn, Europe/Tirane, Europe/Tiraspol, Europe/Uzhgorod, Europe/Vaduz, Europe/Vatican, Europe/Vienna, Europe/Vilnius, Europe/Warsaw, Europe/Zagreb, Europe/Zaporozhye, Europe/Zurich, GB, GB-Eire, MET, Poland, Portugal, WET

    2021-04-03
    Antarctica/Macquarie, Antarctica/McMurdo, Antarctica/South_Pole, Australia/ACT, Australia/Adelaide, Australia/Broken_Hill, Australia/Canberra, Australia/Currie, Australia/Hobart, Australia/LHI, Australia/Lord_Howe, Australia/Melbourne, Australia/NSW, Australia/South, Australia/Sydney, Australia/Tasmania, Australia/Victoria, Australia/Yancowinna, NZ, NZ-CHAT, Pacific/Apia, Pacific/Auckland, Pacific/Chatham, Pacific/Norfolk

    2021-04-04
    America/Bahia_Banderas, America/Chihuahua, America/Mazatlan, America/Merida, America/Mexico_City, America/Monterrey, America/Santiago, Chile/Continental, Chile/EasterIsland, Mexico/BajaSur, Mexico/General, Pacific/Easter

    2021-04-11
    Africa/Casablanca, Africa/El_Aaiun

    2021-05-16
    Africa/Casablanca, Africa/El_Aaiun

    • by jrumney ( 197329 )

      The transition for Africa/Juba was not DST. It was South Sudan shifting from East African time to Central African time, to align with Sudan, Egypt and Libya.

  • by msauve ( 701917 ) on Sunday March 14, 2021 @03:52AM (#61156314)
    >Today much of the world honors an annual tradition: setting their clocks backwards by one hour.

    It also confuses EditorDavid, who can't figure out which way clocks move, despite it being mentioned twice by the author he's quoting. Maybe he'll figure it out in a few hours when his alarm wakes him up two too late.
    • by rossdee ( 243626 )

      Maybe he lives in the southern hemisphere, where the clocks do go back an hour at this time of year.

      • This explains the impetus for DST perfectly. It allows for time correction as various localities see fit. Or not.

        It's why we have time zones, rather than setting a World clock at UTC (formerly GMT)... you know it is the middle of the night at your office in Belgium, so the email you send might not be immediately answered.

        • by tomhath ( 637240 )

          This explains the impetus for DST perfectly.

          This explains time zones, not DST. The only reason clocks are moved is to help retailers by keeping people out shopping before it gets dark.

  • DST starts only USA today courtesy of George "The Village Idiot" Shrub changes to DST.

    The rest of the worlds does it the 4th weekend of March, not the second.

    • Yea some study showed it saved some number of billions of barrels of oil by doing so. World economics are still using the barrel of oil as a unit of currency, and ironically you can compare graphs of other things and see how their graphs project similar changes. This wont always be the case, but has been since the early 1900s / late 1800s.
  • by Ronin441 ( 89631 ) on Sunday March 14, 2021 @04:11AM (#61156336) Homepage

    Most of Australia [...] eschew it

    Incorrect. NSW, Victoria, Tasmania and South Australia all do it; Western Australia, Northern Territory and Queensland do not.

    In my state, Western Australia, there have been four referendums on the question; and the people have voted "no" each time.

    There are of course people agitating for a fifth referendum.

    • by robbak ( 775424 )
      NSW, Victoria, South Australia and Tasmania make up the majority of the population of Australia, which is probably a more reasonable way to think of 'most of Australia' than by going by land area.
    • Funny how the minority are absolutely convinced they are the majority and there must be some other explanation why they lose. It happens here too, and not even when its as close as a percent or two. There are measures where politicians lose their positions over a vote that they were misled that 58-65% of the us agreed on. I can think of one topic that has cost them control at least 5 times now, and they still do the same thing, expect a different result, and then assume some lobby just paid politicians to
  • We should stop (Score:3, Insightful)

    by WaffleMonster ( 969671 ) on Sunday March 14, 2021 @04:26AM (#61156352)

    With the DST articles. Twice a year every year the same question and the same comments.

    Thinking about it this a bit more.. perhaps this is too harsh. After all this time around there is an obvious error included just to provoke pedants.

    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      The repeated discussion is important. It reveals all the "progressive" people who don't understand why things are the way they are. It's also a good showcase of the kind of fallacious arguments that people use to get what they want.

      • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

        The EU will probably do away with DST in the next few years. So repeated discussion and long term pressure does seem to have the desired effect.

        As for this dismissive, arrogant attitude that opposition to DST is just because people don't understand it, well no wonder you are losing the argument. In fact I'd go so far as to say that there has been a majority in favour of doing away with DST for a while now, it's just politically a difficult thing to make happen and a fairly low priority.

    • Re: (Score:3, Funny)

      by Black Parrot ( 19622 )

      With the DST articles. Twice a year every year the same question and the same comments.

      All the more reason to abolish it!

    • by hey! ( 33014 )

      How else are we supposed to remember to change our clocks?

  • In Asia, Africa, and South America, it's virtually nonexistent.

    There is a reason for that: at low latitudes, near the equator, daylight hours remain pretty constant throughout the year. Only countries in far northern, or southern, latitudes have a large seasonal variation in daylight which, as the name suggests, is the argument behind "daylight-saving" - although of course, it does not really save any at all it just shifts it to a different local time.

    • In Asia, Africa, and South America, it's virtually nonexistent.

      There is a reason for that: at low latitudes, near the equator, daylight hours remain pretty constant throughout the year. Only countries in far northern, or southern, latitudes have a large seasonal variation in daylight which, as the name suggests, is the argument behind "daylight-saving" - although of course, it does not really save any at all it just shifts it to a different local time.

      There is no need for it here at halfway to the north pole either.

      The whole thing reminds me of my friend that used to set his alarm clock's time a couple of minutes ahead so he'd get up on time. Of course, he knew it was ahead a little so he'd just hit snooze, and then set the alarm clock a few more minutes ahead the next day. This did not help him get up on time at all, but he kept doing it until it was like 30 minutes off.

  • I'm not going to invoke Betteridge here, because whether to keep or end DST can depend on **which part** of the science one listens to:

    https://enddaylightsavingtime.... [enddayligh...ngtime.org]
    https://www.livescience.com/60... [livescience.com]
    https://enddaylightsavingtime.... [enddayligh...ngtime.org]
    https://www.metro.us/daylight-... [metro.us]

  • Depends on who's science.
  • One day is 10 dours of 100 dinutes each, each dinute divided into 100 deconds.
    When we arrange zoom meetings, all use the same date and time, globally.

    • Or you could just use UTC time?
      • by jopet ( 538074 )

        Everyone using UTC time (or whatever other common time) would already be huge progress, yes.

  • Yes, no one, absolutely no one likes to re-set the clocks twice per year. Even people who like DST. So this is a non-argument.

    But people who say the don't like DST because they don't like setting their clocks, usually don't fully grasp the consequences of DST. And I'm sure they wouldn't like the sun coming up at 3am either. And I'd rather set my clocks twice per year than that.

    DST does NOT make the sun shine longer. Just later. That's also a hint to everyone suggesting DST all year round.

  • It is amazing that we can attribute all those negative occurrences to DST and not to the fact that we are sdentering the end of a period of prolonged gloom aka winter.

  • Yes, you already had me at "Heed the science".

  • Western Australia has rejected daylight savings 4 times in state referendums. But there is always pressure to accept it. Seems like the public was right all along.

  • Slashdot is obsessed with this topic and I love you all for it.
    • Slashdot is obsessed with this topic and I love you all for it.

      It's not just slashdot though. It's twice a year on all these kind of sites. It's bad enough we have to keep fucking with the clocks for no good reason.

  • The days are naturally short in the winter and long in the summer. People are going to die today and tomorrow from driving while sleep deprived, and heart attacks so a few others can call it 8 PM when there is still light out. Standard time is true time. Daylight savings time is a collective lie about what time it is.
    • Daylight savings time is a collective lie about what time it is.

      Time is a collective truth. It doesn't matter what we call it as long as we agree. Just like driving on the right.

  • ...having this same discussion twice a year, every year, for 22 years, right on schedule, acting as if we've never had this discussion before?

    Seriously. 45 times now. To coin a bad allusion, "like clockwork".

    And it hasn't managed to change anybody's opinion.

    Those who want sunlight say DST-365. Those who want normality say turn it off at the normal hour. Those who actually work with IT say "stop changing it because it is a pain in the arse to test the changes in my somewhat fragile scheduling software I inherited and I'd rather be writing real features than going through yet another DST testing change thank you very much (like when Russia went DST-365 for 4 years...and then switched back to flipping it every year).

    Seriously. This isn't 'news'. The arguments aren't new. The counter-arguments aren't new. The fact that it is an emotional issue for everybody involved and not a logical one, but everybody claims their arguments are logical (well, they are reasonable, but irrational because we aren't agreeing on the premises), isn't new.

    So how about this coming November there not be yet another one of these posts?

  • >"I am not a fan of daylight saving time, and if the polls are accurate, neither are most Americans."

    Most Americans are against time changing, not against daylight saving time (summer time). What they rarely ask in these polls is if we want to stay on standard (winter time) or on summer time.

    So, like most, I want time changing to stop, no matter what. So that is not the issue. Almost all the annoyance and bad effects are do to changing time, not which time we keep. There are almost no positives.

    My pr

  • My state was the last one to adopt it, mostly because of the complaints of trucking companies, IIRC. I remember making fun of the other states that had to change their clocks. Now we have to do it too. Nature doesn't care about your arbitrary abstraction inflicted only on the self-conscious. Pick a time and stick to it, this is fucking stupid.

  • ...to identify odious people who can't disregard trivial things.

    Now that the "21st century didn't really start until 2001" is fairly irrelevant, they have little to talk about, so it's harder to recognize them.

  • Most Americans hate changing the clock.

    But how many Americans want to drive to work in the dark in winter? Or to use the other choice, have an hour less of daylight for summer evenings?

    That's the main reason we aren't changing. We'll complain about the twice-yearly clock changes, but we can't agree on what tradeoffs to make.

  • How about we treat the clock as an instrument to indicate the rotation of the Earth in relation to the sun. You, know, with the sun at its highest point in the sky at, on average, 12:00PM?

    Timezone's are still useful though, otherwise train timetables get a bit funky. Daylight saving? Just change the work hours to 8AM to 4PM and we won't feel such a need to faff about so much with the numbers on the clocks.
  • Normally, under Betteridge's Law, the answer would be "no". But in this case, it is "yes".

  • I look forward to the upcoming chaos in the next two weeks where all US/EU meetings will be off by one hour.

  • Should We 'Heed the Science and Abolish Daylight Saving Time'?

    No.

    Should We Just Abolish Daylight Saving Time?

    Yes.
  • by Ungrounded Lightning ( 62228 ) on Sunday March 14, 2021 @02:03PM (#61157728) Journal

    The point of "saving" daylight was to save fuel: Congress believed that by shifting the clock so daylight extended later into the evening, the law would reduce demand for electricity and thereby conserve oil. But researchers attempting to measure the effects of clock-changing on energy savings have found them pretty elusive...

    They found it not just elusive but somewhat counter-effective even back in the '60s. Maybe it saved a little lighting. But it cost more in air conditioning, with people home more in the hotter part of the day.

    But with the change from predominantly incandescent and fluorescent lighting to LEDs (about 10x savings over incandescent, 2.5x over fluorescent), lighting has become a much smaller part of the load. Meanwhile air conditioning and other energy-intensive loads have increased - with improvements in efficiency swamped by increased adoption. So loads and fuel costs now rise, rather than fall, with DST.

    Meanwhile the low cost (even unsubsidized) of photovoltaic generation and the rapid improvements in time-shifting energy storage technology are driving a shift from fuel-powered to renewable energy sources. The storage technology improvements are largely driven by the development of electric vehicles - which also enables a shift away from fuel-driven vehicles to battery powered or hybrid, charged by a mix of fuel-produced and renewable energy and/or with regenerative braking rather than pure fuel/brake propulsion.

    So fuel and its costs are becoming less of an issue - and will become even less as time goes on.

    So why are we bothering with this all-downside clock tweaking?

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