Now that we’ve turned the clocks back and we’ve all gotten that hour’s sleep we lost in the spring, it’s fair to ask: Why do we “spring forward” in the first place?
My old pal Jon Talton, an Arizona native and blogger who writes about issues in his home state, says Arizona was right to forgo the switch to Daylight Savings Time when it was introduced back in the old days.
You know, I’m beginning to agree with that notion.
Why switch?
Well, the modern version of DST had its origin in the 1970s energy crisis. U.S. politicians thought that turning the clocks ahead in the spring would give us more late-afternoon and evening daylight, thus reducing demand for electricity in the form of street lights and such.
I guess it just stuck. People in most of the states got used to the switch to DST and then back to Standard Time in the fall.
Perhaps the older I get the less I care about having to change every clock in the house or in my vehicles.
I do like the extended periods of sunlight in the evenings in the Texas Panhandle. Given our location, just about 70 miles or so from the Mountain Time Zone, the sun sits in our huge sky for a very long time when the Summer Solstice arrives in June. It doesn’t get seriously dark until well after 9 p.m.
Now that we’ve flipped our clocks back and gained that hour of sleep, the sun goes down a whole lot earlier.
I’m still asking why the need to keep switching our clocks in the first place.