[OC] In the past four years, 19 states have enacted legislation or passed resolutions, awaiting approval by Congress, to make daylight saving permanent.
Submitted by gridnews t3_11oo0fh in dataisbeautiful
Reply to comment by scheav in [OC] In the past four years, 19 states have enacted legislation or passed resolutions, awaiting approval by Congress, to make daylight saving permanent. by gridnews
There's a lot of differences. With permanent "Daylight Time", you can work a 9-5 job, get home, eat, get dressed, and still have 2 hours to enjoy the sunlight and get outside.
With permanent Standard Time, it's dark when you wake up, dark when you get home. No sunlight for you.
Standard time makes the mornings brighter from October to March. 6am sunrise today, 7am tomorrow when DST starts.
Businesses are going to open an hour later if it gets light an hour later. You’re going to be working later. There’s nothing special about 5pm that makes it quitting time.
But business hours don't change when DST starts or ends
Yes, because it’s just temporary. That’s the point. If it were permanent then business hours would be set appropriately. If you decided to shift the clock by 4 hours in your state do you think businesses would open up 4 hours before sunrise?
My working hours have never changed due to DST. In fact I've never seen the business hours of any business change due to DST.
DST is temporary. If businesses were willing to change their hours multiple times a year you wouldn’t need DST. If you made a permanent change to your time zones businesses would change hours accordingly - permanently. It’s not rocket science.
Alright we'll see if permanent DST results in the entire country shifting from 9-5 to 10-6 hours.
We sure will. Hopefully I get my start time shifted from 7am to 8am.
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