Daylight Saving Time: Return of the Light
When we “spring forward” early in the morning this Sunday,
we set our clocks ahead one hour, and as a result, gain an hour of daylight in
the evening. This event is practiced across the United States, with the
exception of most of Arizona, Hawaii, the Virgin Islands, Guam, American Samoa,
the Marianas Islands, and Puerto Rico. Daylight saving time is practiced in not
only North America, but also much of Europe, and parts of Brazil. It is not
observed in most African and Asian countries; Russia did away with the practice
in 2011.
The tradition is a based on the idea that an extra hour of
daylight in the evening will increase productivity and decrease energy use.
However, incidences of energy savings and increased activity seem to be dependent
on region, habits, and outside temperature. Some people argue that it is too
difficult for the body’s inner clock to adjust to the time shift, while others seem
to enjoy the longer days. According to Spring Forward: The Annual
Madness of Daylight Saving Time author Michael Downing, speaking to National
Geographic, “…Each year at least 10
and often as many as 30 new bills appear in various state legislatures to
advocate either permanently stopping daylight saving or going on daylight
saving time all year long.”
Daylight Saving Time has a long and controversial history. The
original concept of daylight saving time is sometimes attributed to Benjamin
Franklin, who came upon the idea during his time in Paris. The First bill
proposing the idea was presented to Parliament in 1909, but it faced a great
deal of opposition and was never drafted into law. During World War I, Germany
used daylight saving to conserve fuel and the United States and Britain soon
followed. The concept was abandoned by many after the war ended, but then
readopted during World War II. United States President Franklin D. Roosevelt
ordered a year-round daylight saving period which ran from February 1942 to
September 1945.
In America, following the war, states were free to choose if
and when they would institute daylight saving, which resulted in broadcasting
and transportation mix-ups nationwide. In order to curb the confusion, the
Uniform Time Act of 1966 was created. This act called for consistent daylight
saving times nationwide, beginning at the end of April and ending on the last
Sunday in October. However, states were still able to opt out of daylight
saving time if they chose. In the early
1970s, in response to the 1973 Oil Embargo, daylight saving periods extended to
ten and later eight months as part of an energy saving initiative.
Since the 1970s, American daylight saving time periods have
changed a few more times, but the Energy Policy Act of 2005 dictated that daylight saving begin on the second Sunday in March and end on the
first Sunday in November. The current daylight saving period has been observed
since 2007.
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