People Love to Hate Changing Clocks Twice a Year, but Can't Agree How to Fix It
A 2025 Gallup poll found 54% of Americans support abolishing daylight saving time for permanent standard time amid health and safety concerns.
- Clocks in most of the U.S. will skip ahead at 2 a.m. Sunday, creating a 23-hour day that disrupts sleep and prompts complaints.
- With federal law blocking unilateral state action, most Americans favor permanent DST, but 19 states have passed laws since 2018, and the 2022 bill remains stalled.
- Health data indicate a 2018 paper in Internal and Emergency Medicine found up to a 29% increase in heart attacks, and a Spanish study in Epidemiology reported a 30% rise in fatal crashes on the spring-forward day.
- At the state level, the airline industry’s opposition has stalled permanent DST legislation, broadcasters warn of schedule confusion, and a Virginia House committee recommended shelving the issue until 2027.
- U.S. Rep. Greg Steube proposes moving clocks 30 minutes as a bipartisan compromise, while a Sept. 2025 study estimates permanent Standard Time would lower obesity by 29% .
77 Articles
77 Articles
‘Spring forward’ is a problem, and there’s a deep divide on how to fix it
By GEOFF MULVIHILL Clocks will skip ahead an hour at 2 a.m. Sunday for daylight saving time in most of the U.S., creating a 23-hour day that throws off sleep schedules, plunges early-morning dog walks into darkness and inspires millions of complaints. Even though polls show most people dislike the system that has most Americans changing clocks twice a year, the political moves necessary to change the system haven’t succeeded because opinions on …
People hate changing clocks but can’t agree how to fix it
Clocks will skip ahead an hour at 2 a.m. Sunday for daylight saving time in most of the U.S., creating a 23-hour day that throws off sleep schedules, plunges early-morning dog walks into darkness and inspires millions of complaints.
People love to hate changing clocks twice a year, but can’t agree how to fix it - Boston News, Weather, Sports
Clocks will skip ahead an hour at 2 a.m. Sunday for daylight saving time in most of the U.S., creating a 23-hour day that throws off sleep schedules, plunges early-morning dog walks into darkness and inspires millions of complaints. Even though polls show most people dislike the system that has most Americans changing clocks twice a year, the political moves necessary to change the system haven’t succeeded because opinions on the issue and its p…
This weekend’s clock change causes angst for many, but there’s a deep divide on how to fix it
Want to make daylight saving time permanent? That would mean the sun rises around 9 a.m. in Detroit for a while during the winter and 4:11 a.m. for Seattle in June.
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