But The Sunshine Protection Act called for the opposite switch – moving permanently to DST rather than eliminating it – to usher in brighter evenings, and fewer journeys home in the dark for school children and office workers.
The bill never made it to President Joe Biden’s desk, as it was not taken up in the Republican-led House.
It had been introduced in 2021 by a Republican, Florida Senator Marco Rubio, who is about to join the incoming Trump administration as Secretary of State. He said studies had shown a permanent DST could benefit the economy.
Either way, changing to one permanent time would put an end to Americans pushing their clocks forward in the spring and then setting them back an hour in the autumn.
Colloquially the practice is referred to as “springing” forward and “falling” back.
The clamour has increased in recent years to make DST permanent, especially among politicians and lobbyists from the Northeast, where frigid conditions are normal in the early winter mornings.
“It’s really straightforward. Cutting back on the sun during the fall and winter is a drain on the American people and does little to nothing to help them,” Rubio said in a statement ahead of the vote.
“It’s time we retire this tired tradition.”
Rubio said the United States sees an increase in heart attacks and road accidents in the week that follows the changing of the clocks.
Any changes would be unlikely to affect Hawaii and most of Arizona, the Navajo Nation, American Samoa, Guam, the Northern Mariana Islands, Puerto Rico and the US Virgin Islands, which do not spring forward in summer.
-Agence France-Presse