Does anyone else struggle with this phenomenon? I believe if it weren't for the jingle we all learn about springing forward and falling back, we'd be even more befuddled than we are.
SHARE YOUR ANECDOTES
If you have a story (real, written, or read) about Daylight Saving Time, make a comment and share with the rest of us.
DAYLIGHT SAVING TIME
Note that the correct term is "Saving Time" not "Savings Time", abbreviated DST. The period runs from 2 am on the second Sunday in March to 2 am to the first Sunday of November.
I'm always taken off guard when the time comes around to change the clock. What are your thoughts on Daylight Saving Time? Do you like it or dislike it? Find it hard to adjust? Do you know the purpose and history of Daylight Saving time?
WHERE DID THIS COCKAMAMIE IDEA COME FROM?
Most of the stories (myths, legends) one hears are either incorrect or only part of the history, and the idea actually goes way back.
● In April, 1916 Austria and Germany adopted Daylight Saving Time as a wartime measure to conserve electricity. Other countries in Europe followed suit, including Britain. The US accepted the idea in March 1918, as a wartime measure, not for the benefit of farmers, as some people believe.
● After WWI ended, Woodrow Wilson ceded to popular demand and repealed Daylight Saving in the US.
● WWII brought Daylight Saving back to the fore in 1942, when FDR mandated the measure, known as "War Time" throughout the United States. This time, it stuck for most of the country.
For years, different cities and states in the U.S. started and ended their daylight saving time on different dates, creating chaos throughout the country. Congress passed a law in 1966 which set a standard for Daylight Saving Time with the period beginning on the last Sunday in April and ending on the last Sunday in October. The law gave the states the option of remaining on standard time year round.
Arizona—with the exception of the state's Navajo Nation— and Hawaii did not wish to participate. The overseas territories of Puerto Rico, American Samoa, Guam and the Northern Mariana Islands, and the US Virgin Islands didn't participate. However, some local variations persisted.
● In 2005, Bush signed a law moving the Daylight Earning Time back to the first weekend of November, a measure designed to help cut down on the number of children injured or killed in automobile accidents while trick-or-treating after dark on Halloween.
One source claims that one of the reasons for extending into November was to encourage voter participation. Proponents rationalized more voters would go to the polls if it were still light when they returned from work. I hadn't heard this one before. No doubt the law identifies the reason, but rumors live happily on.
SO, ARE WE HAPPY?
Not everyone supports Daylight Saving Time—I don't think the term "Daylight Earning Time" ever kicked in.
The biggest supporters of DST are always the commercial and retail interests, and there is no substantial body of evidence that the practice saves energy. Some suggest that more gasoline is used during this period. Since the time period coincides to a large extent with school summer vacations, it would be hard to find that conclusive. The anecdotal material on the results of daylight saving time is abundant.
● A man, born in Delaware just after midnight DST, managed to get out of being drafted into the Viet Nam war by arguing that standard time, not DST, was the official time for his state of Delaware for recording births. Under standard time, he was born the prior day and that day had a much high draft lottery number. He wasn't drafted.
● To maintain their published schedule, Amtrak does not allow trains to leave a station before the scheduled time. When the clocks are set back by one hour, Amtrak trains that are running on time have to stop and wait one hour. In the spring, the trains lose an hour and have to make up the lost time and arrive at the station on schedule.
● On the day when DST springs forward an hour, patrons of pubs become disgruntled about losing an hour of drinking time. There are been riots in bars when they have to shut down early, particularly in Athens, Ohio, home of Ohio University.
● In September 1999, with the West Bank on Daylight Saving Time while Israel had just switched back to standard time, a terrorist bomb attack was thwarted by the terrorists' lack of understanding of DST. The timing on the bombs, set to go off to kill two busloads of civilians, was misinterpreted by the terrorists planting the bombs in Israel. They went off an hour earlier than expected, killing three terrorists instead of the intended victims.
Sources
http://www.webpronews.com/daylight-saving-time-an-interesting-history-2014-10
http://highlandstoday.com/hi/local-news/daylight-saving-or-standard-time-20140928/
http://www.webpronews.com/daylight-saving-time-an-interesting-history-2014-10
Bhttp://www.webexhibits.org/daylightsaving/
http://www.history.com/news/8-things-you-may-not-know-about-daylight-saving-time|
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Daylight_saving_time_in_the_United_States