
First of all, Daylight Savings Time doesn’t save any daylight; it just moves it. For one day. What’s the big deal? If you don’t want to change your clocks twice a year, from Standard to Daylight Time and back again, there is the option of relocating to Quito, Ecuador, 14 miles from the equator. There, from early November to early March—and all year, really—the time of sunrise and sunset varies by roughly one minute. Up a bit after 6 a.m., down shortly after 6 p.m.
On the other hand, think of this: Residents of Utqiagvik, on the northern tip of Alaska, have sunshine all day at the beginning of Summer, and darkness all day when Winter commences. Clocks’ impact on behavior becomes sort of academic. (No wonder the Alaskan Senate has introduced a bill to exempt the state, hardly in need of more sunshine in summer months, from Daylight Savings Time altogether.)
All the bi-annual weeping and rending of clothes over turning clocks back one hour in the Fall then ahead one hour in the Spring, seemingly worthy of some Great Debate between Lincoln and Douglas, has been going on a long time. A passionately partisan dispute, so pervasive that a few years ago, there was a New Yorker cartoon of a fellow on display as a circus “oddity” with the invitation, “COME SEE THE MAN WHO HAS NO OPINIONS ABOUT DAYLIGHT SAVINGS TIME.”
So it’s an old, old story. But there is a body of thought that, when Ben Franklin proposed in a letter to the Journal of Paris in 1784 that clocks in France be re-set—calling out the Parisians’ perceived laziness by suggesting the locals wake up an hour earlier—he was kidding!
Clocks were changed in World War I, first in Europe and then the U.S., with the intention of saving energy. The practice was reinstated during World War II and institutionalized in the United States by the Uniform Time Act of 1966, which set specific dates for beginning Daylight Savings Time on the last Sunday in April and ending on the last Sunday in October—though individual states could pass laws not to participate. (Two states, Hawaii and Arizona, still stick to Standard Time year-round and, just to complicate matters, several states are split by time zones, leaving some people forever an hour ahead or behind their neighbors, all year.)
In 1974, during the energy crisis, clock-changing was suspended but soon reinstated. In 2005, the Energy Policy Act extended Daylight Savings Time from the second Sunday of March to the first Sunday of November. And in 2022, the Senate passed legislation to make Daylight Savings Time permanent, calling it the Sunshine Protection Act—which sounds as if the opposite of sun block is being applied.
But that never was approved by the House and, since then, there have been rumblings for a law to instead stick fulltime to Standard Time, a theoretical Keep-Your-Hands-Out-of-My-Pocket(watch) Bill. There have been studies contending that year-round Daylight Savings Time would make people more productive, well-rested and happier, but also opposite claims by sleep scientists that it would be better never to venture from Standard Time. (Which would have benefited Lewis Carroll’s forever tardy White Rabbit.)
It was Supreme Court Justice Louis Brandeis, in the previous century, who declared that “sunlight is the best disinfectant.” But that was advocating for transparency and accountability—a belief that making government actions more public would help stamp out corruption, (and which might be applied to a certain so-called “efficiency” movement afoot now). It wasn’t about what time the sun should rise and set.
More appropriate to this discussion could be the 1969 rock group Chicago song: Does anybody really know what time it is.