From NBC News, news that the Senate today approved legislation to make daylight-savings time permanent:
The bill, called The Sunshine Protection Act, was passed by unanimous consent, meaning no senators opposed it. If enacted, the measure would mean Americans no longer need to change their clocks twice a year.My first thought: moving on this legislation in mid-March gives everyone plenty of time to get ready not to change their clocks in November.
And then I learned that the bill would not take effect until 2023. So there’s at least one more falling back to come.
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March 17: “Sleep experts say Senate has it wrong: Standard time, not daylight saving, should be permanent” (The Washington Post ). An excerpt, quoting David Neubauer, an associate professor of psychiatry and behavioral sciences at Johns Hopkins University:
The current enthusiasm for permanent daylight saving time is “grossly misguided,” said Neubauer, who predicted a return to “the extremely unpopular 1970s dark winter mornings with commuters going to work and children going to school long before sunrise, inevitably leading to injuries and fatalities.”In a comment on this post, Joe DiBiase recalls going to school carrying a flashlight.