5 myths about daylight saving time
By Rachel Feltman, Reporter
March 6 - The Washington Post
Daylight saving time strikes again Sunday at 2 a.m., at least for every state
outside Hawaii and Arizona. Though DST has been part of life in the United
States since World War I, its origin and effects remain misunderstood, even by
some of the lawmakers responsible for it. Here are some common myths.
1. Daylight saving time was meant to help farmers.
Many of us heard, at some point in elementary school, that DST was developed
because of farming. The idea that more daylight means more time in the field for
farmers continues to get airtime on the occasional local
news report and in state legislatures — gFarmers wanted it because it
extends hours of working in the field,h Texas state Rep. Dan Flynn offered
after filing a bill that would abolish DST. Even Michael Downing, who wrote a
book about DST, has said
that before researching the subject, gI always thought we did it for the
farmers.h
In fact, the inverse is true. gThe farmers were the reason we never had a
peacetime daylight saving time until 1966,h Downing told
National Geographic. gThey had a powerful lobby and were against it
vociferously.h The lost hour of morning light meant they had to rush to get
their crops to market. Dairy farmers were particularly flummoxed: Cows adjust to
schedule shifts rather
poorly, apparently.
Daylight saving time, in this or any other country, was never adopted to
benefit farmers; it was first proposed by William Willett to the British
Parliament in 1907 as a way to take full advantage of the dayfs light. Germany
was the first country to implement it, and the United States took up the
practice upon entering World War I, hypothetically to save energy. How did
farmers end up being the mythical source of DST? Downing suggests that because
they were such vocal opponents, gthey became associated into the popular image
of daylight-saving and it got inverted on them. It was just bad luck.h
2. The extra daylight makes us healthier and
happier.
That additional vitamin D is good for us, right? Sen. Ed Markey (D-Mass.) thinks
so. gIn addition to the benefits of energy savings, fewer traffic
fatalities, more recreation time and increased economic activity, Daylight
Saving Time helps clear away the winter blues a little earlier,h he said in a
statement last year. gGovernment analysis has proven that extra sunshine
provides more than just smiles. . . . We all just feel sunnier after we set the
clocks ahead.h Gwyneth Paltrow agrees,
opining to British Cosmopolitan in 2013: gWefre human beings and the sun is the
sun — how can it be bad for you? I think we should all get sun and fresh
air.h
A little more vitamin D might be healthy, but the way DST provides it is not
so beneficial to our well-being. Experts have warned about spikes in workplace
accidents, suicide and headaches — just to name a few health risks — when DST
starts and ends. One 2009
study of mine workers found a 5.7 percent increase in injuries in the week
after the start of DST, which researchers thought was most likely due to
disruption in the workersf sleep cycles. An examination of Australian data found
a slight uptick in male
suicides in the weeks following time shifts, to the effect of half an excess
death per day, which the researchers blamed on the destabilizing effect of sleep
disruption on people with mental health problems. And some physicians warn that
changes in circadian rhythm can trigger
cluster headaches, leading to days or weeks of discomfort.
The literature on these health effects is far from conclusive, but spring
sunshine does not outweigh the downsides of sleep disruption across the
board.
3. It helps us conserve energy.
Congress passed the Energy Policy Act — which extended DST by a month — in
2005, ostensibly to save four more weeksf worth of energy. gAn annual rite of
spring, daylight saving time is also a matter of energy conservation. By having
a little more natural daylight at our disposal, we can help keep daily energy
costs down for families and businesses,h Rep. Fred Upton (R-Mich.), who
co-sponsored the legislation along with then-Rep. Markey, said
in a 2013 statement.
But in a follow-up
study on the effects of the extension, the California Energy Commission
found the energy savings to be a paltry 0.18 percent at best. Other studies have
indicated that people may use less of some kinds of energy, such as electric
lights, but more of others. More productive daylight hours might be meant to get
you off the couch and recreating outside, but theyfre just as likely to lead to
increased air-conditioner use if you stay home and gas guzzling if you
donft.
A
study in Indiana actually found a slight increase in energy use after the
entire state adopted DST (for years, only some counties followed it), costing
the statefs residents about $9 million; the researchers believed that more air
conditioning in the evening was largely to blame. Thatfs a far cry from the
$7 million that Indiana state representatives had hoped residents would
save in electricity costs.
4. DST benefits businesses.
We know that businesses think daylight saving time is good for the economy —
just look at who lobbied for increased DST in 2005: chambers of commerce. The
grill and charcoal industries, which successfully campaigned to extend DST from
six to seven months in 1986, say they gain $200 million in sales
with an extra month of daylight saving. When the increase to eight months came
up for a vote in 2005, it was the National Association of Convenience Stores
that lobbied hardest — more time for kids to be out trick-or-treating meant more
candy sales.
But not all industries love daylight saving time. Television ratings tend to
suffer during DST, and networks hate it. gCome March, when daylight savings time
and the HUT [households using television] level goes down in the early evening,
it really takes its toll on the 8 ofclock hour, particularly for comedies,h
Kevin Reilly, then chairman of Fox Entertainment, said
in 2014, explaining his decision to cut the networkfs 8 p.m. comedy hour.
Airlines have also complained
loudly about increased DST. When DST was lengthened, the Air Transport
Association estimated that the schedule-juggling necessary to keep U.S. flights
lined up with international travel would cost the industry $147 million.
DST hurts other transportation interests, too: Amtrak is known to halt its
overnight trains for an hour when clocks change in November so they donft show
up and leave from their 3 a.m. destinations early. In the spring, trains have to
try to make up lost time so they can stick to the schedule.
DST might also cost employers in the form of lost productivity. A 2012 study
found that workers were more likely to cyberloaf
— doing non-work-related things on their computers during the day — on the
Monday after a DST switch. Study participants who lost an hour of sleep ended up
wasting 20 percent of their time.
5. Standard time is standard.
Guess what time wefre on for eight months of the year? Daylight saving time.
In what universe is something that happens for only one-third of the time the
gstandardh? Even before the 2007 change, DST ran for seven months out of 12.
In fact, some opponents of DST arenft against daylight saving time per se:
They think it should be adopted as the year-round standard time. Because it
basically already is.