Standard time could become permanent in US under new bill, with some exceptions
Source: The Hill
07/13/26 11:14 AM ET
(NEXSTAR) A new bill introduced in Congress could drastically change how we observe the twice-a-year practice of changing the clocks, even as a move to make daylight saving time permanent gains traction. For the last few years, there have been several attempts to make daylight saving time the time we are currently observing permanent. The Sunshine Protection Act passed through the Senate in 2022, but subsequent versions of the legislation havent been as lucky.
The House could vote on its version of the Sunshine Protection Act this week in a move that could end the twice-a-year changing of the clocks. The U.S. has long had a back-and-forth relationship with daylight saving time, with each attempt at making it permanent being rolled back a short time later.
But a bill introduced in the House last week could take a largely different approach. The bipartisan Sunshine for Our Kids Act of 2026 was introduced by Reps. Mary Gay Scanlon (D-Penn.) and Pat Harrigan (R-NC). It calls for permanent standard time the time we observe from November through March in the U.S., with some exceptions.
While health experts agree that standard time is better for our health, most efforts in Congress and throughout the U.S. have focused on making daylight saving time permanent. Nearly 20 states have passed legislation to observe daylight saving time year-round, should Congress approve it. Only Hawaii and parts of Arizona observe standard time year-round.
Read more: https://thehill.com/policy/energy-environment/5965517-standard-time-could-become-permanent-in-us-under-new-bill-with-some-exceptions/
Link to draft BILL - H.R.9638 - Sunshine for Our Kids Act of 2026
RELATED - https://www.democraticunderground.com/10143693290
Blues Heron
(9,236 posts)dem4decades
(14,762 posts)Blues Heron
(9,236 posts)FoxNewsSucks
(12,037 posts)gay texan
(3,309 posts)The older i get the more the time change messes with me
appmanga
(1,609 posts)...and in this age of digital clocks, many of which updated themselves, is this really something we need? Having a couple of after-work hours of daylight (at least in my time zone) in October and early-November counts as a good thing to me.
tanyev
(50,045 posts)and blame Democrats for forcing it on the country.
😒
Tumbulu
(6,641 posts)totally unnecessary stress.
Polybius
(22,392 posts)It was so unpopular they had to switch it back.
muriel_volestrangler
(107,086 posts)Certainly, if the US (sorry, the GOTHS) decides to abolish the change, then allow each state to decide which of their current time zones they'll remain in; northern and southern states may well have different preferences. But why not allow states to remain changing, if they want to? Changing makes more sense in northern states (maybe except Alaska, which is so far north that sunrise and sunset vary far more than an hour change can take advantage of),
RockCreek
(1,677 posts)(with Canada's Maritime Provinces) of this were to happen. It is relatively far North with greater changes in daylight hours from season to season. On rainy days, it is dark by just after 4 PM in the winter. In the summer, it gets light out just after 4 AM.
FadedMullet
(1,172 posts)......will cause our fragile social structure to collapse.
Fiendish Thingy
(24,774 posts)BC just switched to permanent Dailight time.
That means, there would be a permanent 1 hour difference between BC and the Pacific zone in the US.
FadedMullet
(1,172 posts)......your mind, one way or another. If we standardize the bi-annual switch (my choice) and people bitch about school kids going to school in the dark in Arizona, just tell them to change the school hours. And even go so far as to tell them that they can change the school hours again, in the middle of the school year, if their parents would just shut up.
eppur_se_muova
(43,025 posts)Better to pick standard time and stick with it.
PS: When I went to school in FL we had to get out of bed at 6:00 to catch our bus at 6:25. It was dark as night, and as cold as it ever got in FL. Jr. High and High School started at 7:00 and ended at 3:00. We hated it -- but local pols had decided that letting teens out of school at 3:00 provided lots of cheap labor for the local tourist industry, and that's what counted. Parents have no chance to change the hours in such a situation.
Scubamatt
(356 posts)erronis
(25,254 posts)I'm being silly. But it would be fun to watch.
mdbl
(9,121 posts)valleyrogue
(2,846 posts)Fuck any attempt to make it permanent year-round.
It just goes to show you these bums in Congress don't appreciate how millions of us enjoy the extra hour at the end of the day. They don't do an honest day's work to begin with.
eppur_se_muova
(43,025 posts)their hours -- why shouldn't the same apply to people like you who prefer an earlier day ??? Sauce for the goose, sauce for the gander.
Try waiting for a school bus in the cold and dark between 6 & 7 AM in N. Florida and you'll grasp the objections a little better. Especially if you get hit by a car, which is so much more easily accomplished in the dark. FL loses a few students that way every year.
Polybius
(22,392 posts)Majority (usually) rules.
eppur_se_muova
(43,025 posts)The differences from one poll to another are substantial, but never is the majority "overwhelming".
https://www.google.com/search?q=do+americans+prefer+standard+time+or+daylight+saving+time&udm=14
I would have thought that kids getting hit by cars in the dark would trump a moderate majority, but apparently I live in a different world from you.
Polybius
(22,392 posts)I think you should try wording it like this: Do Americans prefer it to get dark later or earlier?
Not everything revolves around kids, I could care less about them going to school in the dark. They already do in parts of late Fall and Winter, and I like morning darkness anyway.
The only ones I've ever met to prefer DST are old folks that are proud of being early birds. Fair enough, they are entitled to their opinions.
Now with all that being said, I don't prefer either. I like the way it is now, just change it twice a year.
FoxNewsSucks
(12,037 posts)No one worries about my dogs.
And here, every morning, I see cars at every cross street idling with their kids inside waiting for the bus to get to that corner. Being light outside will make no difference.
FoxNewsSucks
(12,037 posts)No one needs that at 4 am. We need it at 4 PM.
slightlv
(8,306 posts)but I'm one of those who votes for Standard Time as the norm. For millennia, our bodies have adjusted to the rising and setting of the sun. Many of us, some of us in particular, are truly thrown for loops by these time changes. My circadian rhythm has been thrown off for decades now, and I blame it at least partly on trying to adjust to what society says, rather than what the sun and moon tell me. Maybe I'm crazy... yeah, I am (at least a bit!)... but I feel the changes for weeks afterwards, even now that I'm retired and it doesn't really matter anymore. But my whole body, physically and emotionally, feels "off" for weeks. I find myself more unbalanced and tripping over the least little things, and concentration and memory is even harder than it normally is.
Like I said, I love the extra hour at night for daylight... but I think our bodies should be heeded with the caution warnings they give at each time change... like more heart attacks, more car accidents, etc.
Having said all that, I figure they're not going to do a damn thing about it this time, either. If it ain't good for business, it ain't gonna happen, IMO.
maxsolomon
(39,561 posts)If I lived in San Diego or Brownsville, DST does nothing for me. Constant amounts of daylight with little seasonal shift.
But where I live at 47 degrees North, its 8.5 hours of daylight on the Winter Solstice, 16 on the Summer Solstice. I think DST is great. Even with DST, it starts to get light here before 5 this time of year. It's light nearly till 10.
twodogsbarking
(20,085 posts)I don't know if that is
or not but I am ashamed to have had the impulse to write it.
Cheezoholic
(4,225 posts)Golfers became the enemy of the state, literally. Everyone to this day is convinced that was the single reason it was changed lol.
PatrickforB
(15,571 posts)Buddyzbuddy
(3,141 posts)Start time 1-2 hours later. I imagine, they would like to "sleep in" during the winter. The amount of time in school would be the same with just a later start time. They might be more productive. At Spring break they can use the week to adjust to the new schedule.
Just a thought.
Polybius
(22,392 posts)While I prefer that we stay like we do now, even permanent DST is better than permanent Standard.
PSPS
(15,431 posts)The only question is how high the pile of kids' corpses will be this time around.