Coalition of sleep experts calls for end to daylight saving time

Coalition of sleep experts calls for end to daylight saving time
UPI

Jan. 27 (UPI) — Experts say the political momentum is building to end the United States’ more than 70-year-old seasonal time change, according to new information.

Daylight saving time is slated to arrive this year on March 9 and switch over again on Nov. 2.

“The switch to daylight saving time in the spring may seem harmless, but the reality is far more complicated,” Jay Pea, co-chair of the Coalition for Permanent Standard Time, wrote Monday in a release.

President Donald Trump, in December when he was a presidential candidate, called for the elimination of daylight saving time, characterizing it as “inconvenient” and “costly.”

The U.S. Department of Energy found in 2008 that energy savings netted by the practice that year amounted to a minuscule 0.03% of saved electricity consumption.

According to Pea, adopting a permanent standard time would offer “a better solution for year-round well-being.”

The practice was adopted during the second World War intended to preserve energy.

The coalition leading the charge includes the American Academy of Sleep Medicine, National Sleep Foundation, Save Standard Time, Sleep Research Society and the Society for Research on Biological Rhythm.

But many experts argue that health is the driving factor, and that standard time aligns more closely with the body’s natural circadian rhythms.

A professor at Stanford Medicine advised to “consider that all the health data” that points to the benefits of trying to “lock the clock to [a single] standard time.”

“It is best for kids, adults and elderly,” Dr. Andrew D. Huberman, a professor of neurobiology and ophthalmology, posted Wednesday on social media.

“Happy to go toe-to-toe with anyone on this,” he added.

Moreover, seasonal change in time “disrupts our body clocks, affects our sleep quality, and increases risk of avoidable health and safety incidents, such as motor vehicle accidents, cardiovascular events, and even workplace errors in the days following the time change,” stated Pea, also the president of Save Standard Time.

A recent AASM survey, meanwhile, found that roughly 50% of the American public supported legislation to eliminate seasonal time changes with about 26% diametrically opposed to the idea.

“Looks like the people want to abolish the annoying time changes!” Trump adviser and billionaire Elon Musk posted on his social media platform X in November during a separate poll.

However, a YouGovAmerica Poll nearly four years ago went further than the AASM survey.

The 2021 YouGov survey suggested that 63% of the public was ready to eliminate the practice of changing clocks twice a year to account for daylight saving time.

“We’ve tried permanent daylight saving time before, and it didn’t work,” Pea noted. “This time, let’s get it right by prioritizing health and safety with permanent standard time.”

For the fourth time in five years, federal legislation was introduced in 2023 aimed to make daylight saving time permanent. Called the Sunshine Protection Act, it eventually stalled in committee like other similar efforts to address the decades-long time switches.

“The Republican Party will use its best efforts to eliminate Daylight Saving Time, which has a small but strong constituency, but shouldn’t!” Trump, 78, said in December.

Meanwhile, scores of lawmakers in recent years have advocated for the elimination of the practice although disagreement remains.

Sen. Tommy Tuberville, R-Ala., said weeks ago that “enough is enough” and it’s “time to lock the clock.”

It means “one less hour of daylight in the evenings, longer nights, and a rise in Seasonal Affective Disorder,” the Alabama Republican, a Trump ally, posted on X in December.

The Illinois-based American Academy of Sleep Medicine provided tips to the public as the March 9 daylight savings time date looms.

In order to minimize sleep disruption, the AASM suggested at least seven hours of sleep, to gradually adjust bed times and the timing of daily routines, set offline clocks ahead one hour and “head outdoors for early morning sunlight the week after the time change,” AASM officials wrote.

Authored by Upi via Breitbart January 27th 2025