Hey, what's the point of daylight-savings time? It's so hard to remember when it happens, and everyone's an hour late to everything when it does. I'll bet it costs this country billions of dollars.
--Jeremy, Seattle
Jeremy, you ask a good question. But you need to know a little something: It's daylight-saving time--not savings. Daylight savings makes it sound like a department-store sale. Prices WILL go up when the sun goes down. Hurry! Who needs that? Not me, not you.
Don't feel bad, though. Before I started researching the answer to your question, I also said "daylight savings."
I don't really care how time is reckoned so long as there is some agreement about it, but I object to being told that I am saving daylight when my reason tells me that I am doing nothing of the kind.... At the back of the Daylight Saving scheme I detect the bony, blue-fingered hand of Puritanism, eager to push people into bed earlier, and get them up earlier, to make them healthy, wealthy and wise in spite of themselves.
The Diary of Samuel Marchbanks, 1947, XIX, Sunday
So, while daylight-saving time has been an utter failure in actually saving any daylight (for a rainy night, perhaps?), it does accomplish three things, according to the U.S. Department of Transportation:
OK, so we've uncovered some good reasons for daylight-saving time. But who came up with the idea, and what were the reasons? When I got your question, I had no idea how interesting it would be to find the answer. Before starting my research, I asked my mom and my husband why they thought we messed with our clocks twice yearly.
"It has something to do with farmers and cows," my mom said.
"It was about Richard Nixon," my husband said.
And I'd always thought it was Ben Franklin's idea.
It turns out, we were all a little bit right.
I looked up daylight-saving time in Encarta Encyclopedia and confirmed right off the bat that it was an idea first suggested by Benjamin Franklin. The Encarta article also included a link to an in-depth essay from the California Energy Commission that explained how daylight-saving time cuts down on our energy use and improves safety.
The idea didn't get anywhere until 1916, however, when England figured out during World War I that the country could save energy by changing the clock. The United States followed suit in 1918--but people hated it and the law was repealed. Until World War II, that is. (Nothing like a war to get your priorities straight, I guess.)
But the tweaking didn't stop there. In 1973, when Nixon was president and during the OPEC oil embargo, Congress enacted a special, two-year daylight-saving period. It wasn't continued in 1975 because agricultural states didn't like it.
Finally, in 1986, Ronald Reagan made one last change--moving the start of daylight saving to the first Sunday in April. It used to start on the last Sunday in April, but moving it up lets us save even more oil.
So, I did a Web search on "daylight-saving time." Here are the holdout states: Hawaii, Indiana, and Arizona. The strangest is Indiana, which has THREE different time arrangements. Most counties (77 in all) stay on Eastern Standard Time all year. Another 10 counties use Eastern Standard Time and Central Standard Time. And five use a combination of Eastern Standard Time and Eastern Daylight Time.
Yes, this is totally confusing. Can you imagine crossing the county line and losing an hour? The full explanation, including a map, can be found on a really excellent site called Web Exhibits. Leave it to Hoosiers to do things their own way, I guess.
I hope that answers your question, Jeremy. As for the rest of you, send in your tough questions!