Orlando Sentinel

Summer hours vs. standard time Changing clocks is bad for your health, but which time to choose?

-

Conference of State Legislatur­es.

The measures getting the most traction right now are for permanent daylight saving time, which makes more sun available for after-work activities. In 2018, Florida passed a bill and California voters backed a ballot measure to do so. Maine, Delaware, Tennessee, Oregon and Washington joined in 2019, passing permanent daylight saving bills. President Donald Trump even joined the conversati­on last March, tweeting: “Making Daylight Saving Time permanent is O.K. with me!”

But none of those efforts can become reality without the blessing of Congress. States have always been able to opt out of summer hours and adopt standard time permanentl­y, as Arizona and Hawaii have done. But making daylight saving time year-round is another story.

Still, Scott Yates, whose #Lock the Clock website has become a resource for lawmakers pushing for change, believes this year will be another big year. Yates is particular­ly encouraged by the attitude he saw from state legislator­s in August when he presented on the issue at the legislator­s’ annual national summit in Nashville, Tennessee.

“I wasn’t the court jester and it wasn’t entertainm­ent,” he said. “It was like, ‘What are the practical ways we can get this thing passed?’ ”

Yates, a tech startup CEO based in Denver, has been promoting an end to clock switching for six years. He doesn’t pick a side. It’s the switching itself that he wants to end. At first, it was just about the grogginess and annoyance of being off schedule, he said. But then he began to see scientific studies that showed the changes were doing actual harm.

A German study of autopsies from 2006 to 2015, for instance, showed a significan­t uptick just after the spring switch in deaths caused by cardiac disease, traffic accidents and suicides. Researcher­s have also noted a significan­t increased risk for heart attacks and strokes.

Three measures pending in Congress would allow states to make daylight saving time permanent. But, in the meantime, state lawmakers who want the extra evening sunlight are preparing resolution­s and bills, some of which would be triggered by congressio­nal approval and the adoption of daylight time in surroundin­g states.

The Illinois Senate passed such a bill, and Kansas is considerin­g one after a bill to end daylight saving time died there last year.

Efforts have been particular­ly strong in California, where 60% of voters passed a ballot issue for permanent daylight time in 2018. A bill is pending in the state Assembly.

All of this alarms scientists who study human biological rhythms.

Researcher­s in the U.S. and the European Union have taken strong positions about permanent summer hours. The Society for Research on Biological Rhythms posts its opposition prominentl­y at the top of its website.

Messing with the body’s relationsh­ip to the sun can negatively affect not only sleep but also cardiac function, weight and cancer risk, the society’s members wrote. According to one often-quoted study on different health outcomes within the same time zones, each 20 minutes of later sunrise correspond­ed to an increase in certain cancers by 4% to 12%.

“Having light in the morning actually not only makes you feel more alert but helps you go to bed at the right time at night,” said Dr. Beth Malow, director of the sleep division of Vanderbilt University School of Medicine. Malow has seen a lot of anecdotal evidence to back that up at the sleep clinic. Parents report their children with autism have a particular­ly hard time adjusting to the time change, she said.

Jay Pea, a freelance software engineer in San Francisco, was unhappy enough about California’s proposed permanent daylight time that he started the Save Standard Time website to promote the health arguments for keeping it permanent. He said he doesn’t think the scientific community is being heard.

“Essentiall­y it’s like science denial,” he said. “It’s bizarre to me that politician­s are not hearing the experts on this.”

At the very least, lawmakers ought to consider history, he said. Daylight saving time was originally a plan to save energy during the two world wars but wasn’t popular enough to be uniformly embraced after the conflicts were over. In 1974, the federal government decided to make it temporaril­y yearround as a way to deal with the energy crisis (although energy savings were later found to be underwhelm­ing).

Its popularity fell off a cliff after the first winter, when people discovered the sun didn’t rise until 8 a.m. or later and parents worried for the safety of kids waiting in the dark for school buses.

The AP-NORC poll found 40% of its respondent­s support permanent standard time, with 31% opting for permanent daylight saving time.

Ward said people have gotten comfortabl­e with daylight saving time since its duration has been lengthened to eight months by extensions in 1986 and 2007. (Before 1986, it lasted six months.)

In any case, changing the clocks is a rare issue in that it isn’t partisan, Ward said. “If the government can’t respond to people when they want something and it’s not even a partisan issue, that’s just a sad commentary,” he said. “Can’t we please fix something that doesn’t make sense anymore?”

 ?? ALVAREZ/GETTY ??
ALVAREZ/GETTY

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States