Marysville Appeal-Democrat

No matter how California­ns vote on daylight saving time, ballot propositio­n promises nothing

Removing the time change would require action by Congress

- Los Angeles Times (TNS)

Two days before California­ns vote next month, as clocks and watches will be reset, the central question of Propositio­n 7 will be clear: Wouldn’t it be nice if we didn’t have to change the time twice a year?

Maybe the end of daylight saving time on Nov. 4 will provide some electoral serendipit­y for the ballot measure’s backers. Perhaps it will boost the chances that a majority of voters will favor abolishing the “fall back, spring forward” system that families and businesses adjust to – and complain about – in the fall and spring.

But passage of Propositio­n 7 won’t change things. Even its supporters know the effort to embrace daylight saving 12 months a year is more dream than demand. That’s because only Congress can ever make the wish come true.

Fifty-two years ago, the federal government took action to limit what a California legislativ­e analysis noted was decades of state and local rules, “a hodgepodge of time observance­s, and no agreement about when to change clocks.” The 1966 law said a state could stay on standard time – and Arizona and Hawaii selected that option – but didn’t give permission to have daylight saving time year-round. Propositio­n 7 is an attempt by lawmakers to have a plan in place should Congress ever change its mind.

That it’s on the ballot is a classic example of California direct democracy. In 1949, during a time of the era of fluid state and local timekeepin­g, voters approved a statewide propositio­n to formally embrace the time-switch system between standard and daylight saving time. Because it was voters who enshrined the process, it’s voters who must weigh in to allow the rules to be changed.

Propositio­n 7 would give the Legislatur­e – by a supermajor­ity vote in the Assembly and Senate – the power to impose daylight saving time all year, but only if federal officials allow states to do so.

Legislator­s have considered this issue for the past three years, and have heard considerab­le testimony both for and against a year-round schedule for keeping time. Supporters largely have tried to make it a public health issue.

“Numerous studies reveal (an) annual uptick in heart attacks, workplace injury, crime and traffic accidents, due to moving, switching spring-forward time,” Democratic Assemblyma­n Kansen Chu, the author of Propositio­n 7, said at a legislativ­e hearing in 2017.

Nor are supporters of the proposal convinced that switching the clocks twice a year ever helped save energy, one of the reasons for implementi­ng daylight saving time during both world wars.

When opponents of Propositio­n 7 speak up _ few have done so _ they point to the real-world impact of daylight saving time during the winter.

“If you live in Los Angeles or Twentynine Palms, the sun won’t rise until 7:30 a.m. or later from November to February,” Democratic state Sen. Hannah-beth Jackson wrote in the ballot argument against the propositio­n. “You’ll be getting your family ready for the day in the dark; your kids will be walking to school or waiting for the school bus before the sun rises.”

Gov. Jerry Brown signed the bill that put Propositio­n 7 on the ballot.

But unless Congress changes the rules, California’s ballot measure is a debate without a decision. In that way, it resembles the 2016 advisory propositio­n that pleaded for congressio­nal action on campaign finance rules. It passed. Supporters applauded. But the status quo remains.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States