UPDATE (March 15, 2022, 4:20 p.m. ET): The Senate on Tuesday unanimously passed the Sunshine Protection Act, which would extend daylight saving time year-round. It now goes to the House of Representatives.
On Sunday, Americans get to once more take part in one of our most vexing temporal rituals: Our clocks “spring forward” by an hour to enter daylight saving time, or DST. Then begins the countdown until the fall, when, with winter’s chill creeping in and the days already shortening, we are forced to “fall back,” exchanging an extra hour of sleep for months of darkness and sadness.
But imagine a world, if you will, where this nonsense is considered a relic. A world — nay, a utopia — where the entire year is spent in daylight saving time’s warm embrace. This is a world that is possible. Congress is just getting in the way. Well, Congress and Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg. Sort of.
You see, time is a fickle, confusing mistress, prone to all sorts of distortions and complexities. It squashes and shrinks, dilates and expands, until your only indicator of how much of it has passed is Netflix asking, “Are you still watching?” in that tone that manages to imply derision despite its neutral word choice.
This malleability of time is felt especially hard in the United States, where the available daylight hours vary depending on your location and the time of year. That lack of consistency led the railroads in the U.S. and Canada to agree in the late 19th century to a standard set of time zones, adopting the four time zones that most of you reading this grew up learning via commercials for TV shows that aired at 8 p.m. Eastern/7 p.m. Central. (I assume that these commercials were for 8 p.m. Pacific/9 p.m. Mountain on the West Coast, but don’t quote me on that.)
Then, in 1918, as the U.S. was busy with World War I, Congress took over, seizing the power to regulate the hours of the clock for the federal government. In theory, the Standard Time Act was all about saving energy, giving Americans an extra hour of daylight to work with in the summer, not to give farmers more time to work, like you may have heard. (Farmers actually hate DST.)
Daylight saving time was repealed at the federal level not long after the war ended. The relative chaos that ensued led Congress to step back in 1966 with the Uniform Time Act, which made DST the law of the land. The last time Congress shifted the length of DST was within my lifetime; in 2007, it moved the start back from the first Sunday in April to the second Sunday in March and pushed the end up a week to the first Sunday in November.
States are allowed under federal law to choose whether they stay with standard time throughout the summer months. (Right now, the only mainland state that completely rejects DST is that maverick Arizona.) They just have to get it cleared through the Transportation Department.
But the reverse, choosing to stick with daylight saving time throughout the year, is totally illegal. All because those time bandits in Congress, who have apparently never heard of the 10th Amendment, refuse to grant the states the power to determine whether it’s 1 p.m. or 2 p.m. inside their borders.
That hasn’t stopped some states from passing legislation in anticipation that Congress might some day let slip its grasp on time. Per the National Council on State Legislatures, 15 states — Arkansas, Delaware, Florida, Georgia, Idaho, Louisiana, Maine, Ohio, Oregon, South Carolina, Tennessee, Utah, Washington and Wyoming — have laws or resolutions on the books that would implement year-round DST once given the congressional greenlight.
And, as with so many problems facing Congress, legislation has already been proposed to fix it. In this case, the primary advocate is Sen. Marco Rubio, R-Fla. Rubio is the primary sponsor on the Sunshine Protection Act, which would basically make DST into the new standard time. It might also be one of the most bipartisan bills in the Senate, with senators as far apart ideologically as Ron Wyden, D-Ore., and Cindy Hyde-Smith, R-Miss., serving as co-sponsors.
Now, you may ask, what is the actual effect of year-round DST? Is there anything to gain as far as energy savings? Or safety — there has to be some kind of safety issue for it to be such a big deal. Surely, there must be some reason people care about this so much. The answer is, well, not really on any of those fronts!









