Brooks Harris wrote:

> "Permanent Standard Time" would be the least technically disruptive,
> most natural, and consistent with the vast majority of time zones
> which do not observe DST. However this also upsets the current status
> quo practices.

Permanent standard time is both your preference and mine, but polls 
consistently show it is not even the plurality preference in the US, let alone 
the majority preference. Permanent DST invariably leads in polls (but well 
under 50% of the total), followed by permanent standard time, then the status 
quo.

> Most people don't like DST, but they often don't like a change in
> tradition either.

Which partly explains the diversity of opinions.

> "Permanent DST" was tried in 1976 [recte: 1974] and reversed in eight
> months. I'm guessing any change would meet a similar fate.

I was there, and still remember (even at 33-some degrees north latitude) the 
unusually and disruptively late sunrises. It’s important to note that the main 
argument that succeeded in cancelling the year-round DST experiment was the 
deaths of eight children in Florida — Florida! — who were struck by cars while 
walking to school in the dark. Everyone who argues for permanent DST today 
either wasn’t there or has conveniently forgotten history.

Americans who argue for permanent DST tend not to commute to work during the 
affected morning hours, and tend not to have young children who walk to school 
during the affected hours, so the argument becomes “this would be good for ME; 
I don’t care what’s good for you.” Furthermore, they seem to have an 
unrealistic sense of how much evening daylight would be recovered. We all love 
8:30 pm sunsets in early summer, but that is simply not going to happen in 
winter, unless one moves somewhere that is both near the equator and 
significantly skewed from sun time (say, Casablanca).

I don’t think the half-hour proposal is ideal. I think it has a better chance 
of being adopted than the others, while not being as bad as permanent DST.

--
Doug Ewell, CC, ALB | Lakewood, CO, US | ewellic.org

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