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United States

Everyone Was Surprised By The Senate Passing Permanent Daylight Saving Time. Especially The Senators. 302

An anonymous reader shares a report: The Senate's unanimous passage of a bill to make daylight saving time permanent stunned many Americans, not least of which the senators themselves. In a twist the Founding Fathers likely did not anticipate, quirky Senate conventions and a decision by staff in Sen. Tom Cotton's office may result in an overhaul in the nation's time zones. Reporters and politicos were caught off guard Tuesday afternoon when the Sunshine Protection Act sailed through the Senate without issue, with no senators speaking up to object to it passing by unanimous consent. Sen. Kyrsten Sinema, serving as Senate chair overseeing the motion at the time, broke composure, burst into a grin, and whispered, "Yes!"

"I was surprised that someone didn't object," she told BuzzFeed News the next day, while noting that Arizona does not change its clocks, "because we're smart." Any single senator could have blocked the daylight saving bill from passing but many didn't know it was even happening. Sen. Rick Scott, a permanent daylight saving time proponent who signed a similar bill into law when he was governor of Florida, said he would have gone to give a speech on the Senate floor if he had known. Asked to re-create his reaction to the news, Sen. Chris Coons issued a series of shocked stammers that is impossible to phonetically translate. One Senate source with knowledge of the situation said Sen. Tom Cotton vehemently opposes making daylight saving time permanent. "No comment," Cotton told BuzzFeed News when asked if he opposed the bill. The source said that Cotton would have objected to the unanimous consent request, but his staff never told him it was happening.
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Everyone Was Surprised By The Senate Passing Permanent Daylight Saving Time. Especially The Senators.

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  • Such bills get introduced twice a year every year for how long?

  • by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Friday March 18, 2022 @11:20AM (#62368737)
    Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • > I reject DST entirely. I will reside on permanent non-DST, meaning 1-hour behind everyone else. This will give me the superpower of knowing what will happen 1 hour in the future at all times.

      Welcome to Arizona [timeanddate.com]

  • It still has to get approved by the House. The House will sit on it, and not bring it up for a vote.

    • by splutty ( 43475 )

      Considering a rather significant percentage of people support this, it might not :)

      But we'll see!

      • Perhaps not once the impact is understood. We already tried this. Permanent non-DST would be fine. Permanent DST is welfare for tourist companies. It's not a coincidence this bill was co-sponsored by a FL senator.

        The reality is large parts of this country with lots of voters would absolutely hate this. Everyone I know in Michigan would support getting rid of DST. Almost no one would support getting rid of standard time because it would mean the major "morning" commutes would all take place at night during h

        • They already are. Go to work dark, come home dark. December and January. At least with DST i can see the sun on the way home.
        • by HiThere ( 15173 )

          I feel you're being silly. ANY permanent change would work. If it's DST, that's fine. Companies can choose what hours they want to be open. They can have winter and summer hours if they want.

          The only question is "How much advantage does switching between standard time and DST have? And offsetting it what are the costs? Different companies already have different hours of business, schools have hours approved of by the local parents, etc.

          FWIW, the last year I've started to get a bit inflexible, so I've

        • I love it when it's dark driving to work in the morning, it's so much easier on the eyes.

        • by jbengt ( 874751 )

          Almost no one would support getting rid of standard time because it would mean the major "morning" commutes would all take place at night during half the year.

          I prefer my morning commutes in the dark.
          But I'd still prefer year-round standard time over daylight saving time.

    • by Z00L00K ( 682162 )

      Or maybe they won't because it doesn't seem to be a strong partisan issue.

      • That's the problem. There is more incentive to waste time debating things nobody agrees on than to actually pass things that most people agree on.

    • by JeffSh ( 71237 )

      so let me get this straight, they basically have a day in the US Senate where there's like 1 senator there from each side and they're supposed to object to each others bills, but tom cotton forgot to object, so this bill became passed by the senate?

      does anyone else think thats fucked up?

      • Re:So what? (Score:5, Informative)

        by ceoyoyo ( 59147 ) on Friday March 18, 2022 @01:13PM (#62369243)

        The US federal system, especially the senate, is kind of like a Calvinball match. Lots of obscure rules you'd swear are made up, and lots of other rules that actually are made up and you don't have to follow.

        This is one of each. Apparently you can just show up and ask for a unanimous vote whenever you like. You're not *supposed* to do it if you know someone is not in favour, but there's no actual rule that says you can't.

        The US senate does sometimes literally have one senator (the noob usually) show up, do the opening and closing ceremony things, and presumably be very bored in between. See, there's a rule that if the senate is recessed the president gets to appoint people without their approval, so if the senate never recesses....

    • While the house is where the real crazies are. As they represent a smaller area of the country, Where the local nuttiness of the particular area tends to shine across. Say a district with the average of a 7th grade education, will elect a rather stupid representative as well, as they stand for very simple ideas with simple steps to achieve (often ignoring the real nuance or complexity in the fact that it is difficult to get everyone to follow said rules). An other district may be a center of a College are

      • I am sure someone will pop up think of the children arguments.

        If you read the article I posted further up, the switch to DST was made in 1974 during the oil crisis. It was discontinued in October of 1974 after some well-publicized accidents involving children going to school in the morning.
  • by Megahard ( 1053072 ) on Friday March 18, 2022 @11:24AM (#62368759)

    They were all still groggy from loosing an hour.

  • I'm shocked. Shocked to find out Senators don't carefully consider each bill put before them and make an informed decision on how to vote. I would never have guessed they rely on their staff to tell them what's in a bill while they spend their time collecting donor money that lets them know how to vote.
    • Happens all the time, do you think you could read through a 1000 page bill?

    • "Senators don't carefully consider each bill put before them and make an informed decision on how to vote." members of congress never read any of the bills. The only ones who even read parts of the the bills are staff, interns and the lobbyist that write the bills for the members of congress. Members of the US congress just check with big donors and vote accordingly.
    • Well, shocked as everyone else, I assume....

      But could anyone give a bit more detailed on which conventions and staff decisions exactly led to everyone passing a bill that they would object to?

      • It was announced and passed by acclimation. The Senator running session announced it and there wasn't any other senators present(few ever are) to object or they were not paying attention and didn't object so it passed. There never was a vote.
  • Not much of any real value to citizens. Meanwhile, when is the last time congress did any of their real job. Any of the 12 bi-annual budget bills it is their real job to do? Ah but then if they passed budgets they couldn't push their pork/waste/destructive bills through using self created panics.
    • No matter how bad American politic is, you guys are still freer than those living in Russia or China. I guess that's also an excuse when your politicians corrupt - there are countries worse than mine~
      • "those living in Russia or China" true At least I can say "This is the weakest, most inept, incompetent US administration and top leadership of my lifetime(I'm 66)." in public.
        • "those living in Russia or China" true At least I can say "This is the weakest, most inept, incompetent US administration and top leadership of my lifetime(I'm 66)." in public.

          No, no, try to keep up. We replaced Trump with a boring bureaucrat.

          • by HiThere ( 15173 )

            To be fair, BIden isn't that much more competent than Trump. Possibly not even AS competent. It's just that he isn't actively trying to destroy the country.

            • And Biden listens to his advisors and generals and doens't overrules them. He has also been in the senate so long that he understands how it works, he knows what budgets look like and what they're for, he's done enough foreign affairs in his time that he knows where the countries actually are and how to pronounce their names (ha, now qanon claims Trump's "Jina!" was not bad pronunciation but a sleeper clue about bio weapons).

              Really the whole "sleepy Joe" was just an insult but people are taking it seriousl

  • One bill that I've heard pretty good support for and of course now some senators want to voice their opposition to it.
  • But if we go to permanent DST, come next winter you'll be hearing a lot of angry people in northern latitudes complaining about sending their kids to school or going to work in pitch darkness, and demanding a return to standard time for the winter months.

    Those same politicians who are celebrating now will be scrambling to distance themselves from this vote.

    • We already do that with standard time in the depth of winter.

      I mean, if it was up to me, I would just make standard time the default. But I understand why people want more daylight hours in the afternoon.

    • This is the problem. On permanent DST, where I live, the sun will rise after 8 AM in the winter. And I don't live in the northern part of the country. DST isn't difficult if you manage it well. My normal sleep schedule is 10 PM to 6 AM. On the night of the switch to DST I go to bed at 9:30 PM and get up at 6:30 AM (which is 5:30 standard time). On the night of the switch to standard time, I go to bed at 10:30 PM and wake up at 5:30 AM. Voila, I always get eight hours of sleep and I've broken the hour

    • The solution to that is starting school an hour later. To the extent it's even a problem, plenty of kids go to school in the dark part of the year anyway. It starts ridiculously early as it is. Why should everyone lose an hour of light at a time when they're actually doing something in exchange for it being light while they're doing nothing besides getting ready for the day, just to maintain this ridiculous tradition of starting school super early, when that's well studied to be terrible for kids anyway?
      • by godrik ( 1287354 )

        Exactly. I never understood why changing the clock time was the solution to the problem of changing daytime throughout the year. If it is too early in winter, then shift your activities by an hour.

        That what most of us already do. In summer, we eat later because there is more sun time. And that works just fine. We don't need to adjust the clock.

  • by Goatbot ( 7614062 ) on Friday March 18, 2022 @11:41AM (#62368821)
    Let's just roll back 30mins in the fall. I know a programmer and a sysadmin that need the extra workload.
  • by wakeboarder ( 2695839 ) on Friday March 18, 2022 @11:43AM (#62368831)

    Get this through the house.

    • Get this through the house.

      I don't know if it will stick, even if it's fully enacted. If it is, it won't be the first time we've tried it. We did this in the early 70s and it only lasted a couple of years before it was repealed. People didn't like it.

  • by waspleg ( 316038 ) on Friday March 18, 2022 @11:48AM (#62368855) Journal

    The source said that Cotton would have objected to the unanimous consent request, but his staff never told him it was happening.

    There is no way that was by accident. Fucking hilarious.

    • Or, it was just a convenient excuse to explain his abstention which allows him to say that he is opposed to it, while conceding to the majority.

  • by ebonum ( 830686 ) on Friday March 18, 2022 @12:01PM (#62368911)

    Will make sunrise crazy late in a lot of places.

    We should drop daylight savings time and stay on standard time. This will seek solar noon and wall clock noon roughly lined up. DST can lead to solar noon happening at 1pm to 2pm. Please keep our clocks and the sun in sync (I know, there are lots of perturbations in the movement of the heavenly bodies. Without some crazy complicated scheme, the best you can do is have solar noon drift between about 11:30am and 12:30pm).

    If you need to change your business hours, school start time, yoga class, whatever you are free to do so.

    • But that does nothing to enrich the coffers of FL tourism. That's the actual purpose of the bill.

      • You think this has the huge support it does because the majority of the population cares deeply for the tourism industry profits in a single state?
        • No. I think not changing clocks has widespread support. But I think half the country expects we'll do this by getting rid of DST (the sane thing to do) while the other half expects we'll do this by making DST permanent (the retarded approach suggested by this bill). When reality hits in the house, New York and the Midwest will stop it dead.

        • Oh, and I think the bill was introduced to enrich FL tourism. That's not the source of popular support, but it is the source pushing this now via a senator in their pocket.

    • Will make sunrise crazy late in a lot of places.

      It won't affect when the sun rises at all. Sunrise is determined by your latitude and longitude combined with the rotation and axial tilt of the earth.

      Today there will be 12 hours, 3 minutes and 21 seconds between sunrise and sunset in New York City but Miami will get 12 hours, 4 minutes and 18 seconds. Tomorrow NYC will get 12:06:04 while Miami only gets 12:05:50. A month ago Miami got 11 hours 22 minutes and 36 seconds but poor NYC only got 10 hours, 48 minutes and 39 seconds.

      There's nothing congress or y

  • I don't disagree in principle. DST is a stupid, Stupid, STUPID idea that should never have been a thing. Also, night time is the best time, and it's obnoxious AF to still have that baleful eye of Ra up there when it's time to go out to to the bars, clubs, shows, restaurants, and the like to socialize. And it's simply ludicrous to have actual noon be over an hour off from 12:00pm. What's even the point of time zones with that garbage? Oh, if I had a time machine and a pistol...

    BUT: Even year-round DST

  • Tom Cotton was asleep at the wheel and is now lobbying the house to defeat the bill.

    If you live in AK, you should reach out to him.

  • Getting rid of time zones and everyone simply using GMT.

What is wanted is not the will to believe, but the will to find out, which is the exact opposite. -- Bertrand Russell, "Skeptical Essays", 1928

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