Spring ahead March 8: Daylight Savings Time strikes again (at 2 a.m.)

Philip Dโ€™Avanza was conducting his annual duties as โ€œFather Timeโ€ back in 2011 in Derry. He has served as keeper of many of the stateโ€™s clock towers and operates D’Avanza Clock Repair in Goffstown. File Photo/Carol Robidoux

MANCHESTER, NH โ€“ In the circle of life, we’re rounding that familiar bend that leads directly to the time warp. Again. Daylight Savings Time begins this weekend โ€“ officially Sunday March 8 at 2 a.m.

Adding more daylight to the evening is certainly good for retailers, outdoor sports enthusiasts and kids who are allowed to play outside until dusk (if kids still play outside, that is). Morning people will adjust better than night owls. Zombies, vampires and farmersย are screwed.

Anyway, as you prepare your body for the jolt, take a moment to educate yourself on the reasons why we do this to ourselves. Sure, turning your clock ahead an hour may seem like a small gesture in exchange for more daylight, but history tells us there are consequences.

But why do we fall back every year, only to spring ahead four months later?

A brief history

Ben Franklin was only kidding when he suggested 236 years ago that towns should employ the use of church bells or cannon blasts, if necessary, to wake citizens at sunrise so they could take full advantage of sunlight โ€“ a thrifty alternative to pricy candle power.

More than two centuries later, the jokeโ€™s still on us.

Daylight-saving time is no longer just an amusing idea; itโ€™s taken hold with a vengeance.

Twice a year weโ€™re forced to adjust our sleep habits, synchronizing our biological and digital clocks in order to squeeze more sunlight into our waking hours.

Meanwhile, sleep researchers insist we should be cutting back on our waking hours if we really want to live long and prosper.

So here we are, caught somewhere between popping sleep aids and chugging Red Bull, not sure how to feel about our collective changing of the clocks.

Another bright idea from Ben Franklin: Daylight Savings Time. Image/TimeAndDate.com

David Prerau, recognized as one of the countryโ€™s leading experts on our human quest for saving time, has devoted much of his life to chronicling the history and science of DST.

He served as a consultant to theย U.S. Congress back in 2005ย when they enacted a law extending daylight saving time as an energy saving measure, and he also has been a consultant on DST to the United Kingdom Parliament. He holds a Ph.D. from M.I.T.

Although Franklin certainly gets a historical nod for his amusing social commentary about our waste of perfectly good sunlight, Prerau points to British early riser and golf fanaticย William Willettย as the godfather of daylight-saving time.

โ€œHe used to go for early-morning horseback rides and wondered why nobody else was up enjoying this beautiful time of day,โ€ Prerau said.

Willett detailed his time-wise idea in a pamphlet, โ€œThe Waste of Daylight,โ€ and spent years lobbying Parliament in vain to adopt daylight-saving time โ€“ he died in 1915 before that would happen, Prerau said.

Germany was right on time, however. Seeing merit in Willettโ€™s bright idea, they adopted it in 1916 to conserve energy and resources during World War I. That launched a daylight-saving domino effect in countries around Europe.

Britain was finally shamed into adopting the policy three weeks after Germany.

Not to be left in the dark by our European counterparts, the U.S. officially adopted daylight-saving time for the first time during WW I, and again during World War II.

But it was not without controversy, even then.

By the end of WW I, city dwellers learned to love daylight saving, Prerau said. But country folk, still in tune with natureโ€™s clock, became disgruntled once they realized theyโ€™d actually have to rise before the sun if they were to get their goods on outbound trains that, under daylightย saving, left town an hour earlier.

โ€œRural people bombarded Congress with requests to repeal daylightย saving time,โ€ Prerau said.

NH Gov. John Bartlett tried to make DST go away.

Among them, New Hampshireย Gov. John H. Bartlett, who in April of 1920 went right to the top, urging President Woodrow Wilson by telegram to inform senators and congressmen โ€œthat New Hampshire demanded prompt action to remedy the injustice being done the rural communities through changes in railroad schedules to conform to daylight saving hours.โ€

Bartlett didnโ€™t know Wilson was a big fan of daylight saving.

When Congress voted to repeal daylight-saving legislation, Wilson vetoed it. And when Congress voted a second time to repeal it, Wilson vetoed, again.

โ€œIt was an interesting time in history,โ€ Prerau said. โ€œBecause then Congress voted to override Wilsonโ€™s veto โ€“ thatโ€™s how contentious it was,โ€ Prerau said. โ€œIf you look back in history, not many things are passed by overriding a presidential veto.โ€

In his 2005 book,ย โ€œSeize the Daylight,โ€ย Prerau includes all kinds of historical anecdotes about the chaos that ensued over the random nature of daylight saving until federal legislation finally standardized it in 1966.

One of his favorites is the one about the bus ride that spanned 35 miles and seven time zones between Ohio and West Virginia.

โ€œIt became nationally famous as a sort of curiosity. People rode the bus just to change their watches seven times,โ€ he said.

Prerau believes the upside of daylight-saving time isnโ€™t economic; itโ€™s the lifestyle benefit. People have more time to mingle and recreate.

โ€œPeople donโ€™t like driving in the dark, and daylight savings reduces traffic accidents. Crime is reduced also, because of that extra hour of daylight,โ€ he said.

Savings in electricalย energyย is only about 1 percent, said Prerau. โ€œWhich may sound low, but if you think of it as something you get for free, itโ€™s a good side benefit.โ€

The Energy Policy Act of 2005 went into effect as of 2007, extending Daylight Saving in the U.S. by three-to-four weeks in the spring and one week in the fall. Since then, more studies are in the works to see if increased use of air conditioning may actually negate whatever savings were originally calculated, Prerau said.

โ€œThereโ€™s going to be more studies, and if they end up being negative, Congress may want to reconsider,โ€ Prerau said.

โ€œBut I doubt it. Thereโ€™s the other problem, of having to reprogramย computers and clocks. It was a big deal for companies last March. And having gone through that once, people may be reluctant to change back,โ€ Prerau said.

Time will tell.

In 2017 NHย lawmakers voted in favor of abandoning Daylight Savingsย after Massachusetts made a similar proposal, to adoptย Atlantic Standard Time. But alas,ย HB 209ย died an untimely death.

Either way, looks like daylight-saving time is here to stay. Prerau, for one, isnโ€™t losing sleep over it except, perhaps, on March 14, 2021, when we spring ahead once again.


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