BILL ANALYSIS ------------------------------------------------------------ |SENATE RULES COMMITTEE | AJR 56| |Office of Senate Floor Analyses | | |1020 N Street, Suite 524 | | |(916) 445-6614 Fax: (916) | | |327-4478 | | ------------------------------------------------------------ THIRD READING Bill No: AJR 56 Author: Longville (D) Amended: As introduced Vote: 21 SENATE ENERGY, U.&C. COMMITTEE : 7-0, 6/13/00 AYES: Bowen, Brulte, Kelley, Mountjoy, Murray, Peace, Solis ASSEMBLY FLOOR : 67-6, 5/22/00 - See last page for vote SUBJECT : Daylight saving time SOURCE : Author DIGEST : This resolution outlines the history of daylight savings time and memorializes the President and Congress to allow states to operate on daylight savings time on a year-round basis. ANALYSIS : Current federal law allows states to operate on standard time year-round or to operate for part of the year on standard time and part of the year (the first Sunday in April through the last Sunday in October) on Daylight Saving Time (DST). Current state law doesn't require California to operate on standard time on a year-round basis, so the State therefore operates on DST for seven months of the year. This resolution outlines the history of DST and CONTINUED AJR 56 Page 2 memorializes the President and Congress to allow states to operate on DST on a year-round basis. Background DST was first suggested by Benjamin Franklin in 1784 as a way of saving on candles. It was first seriously advocated by William Willit, a British builder, in his pamphlet "Waste of Daylight" in 1907, but it didn't "officially" begin in the U.S. until World War I, when it was enacted primarily to extend the length of the production day and save fuel by reducing the need to use artificial lighting. Although some states and communities observed daylight saving time after the war's end, DST wasn't officially observed nationally again until 1942, when it was re-enacted for World War II, then repealed after the war. The Uniform Time Act of 1966 established a standardized system of operating DST throughout the U.S. and its territories, exempting only those states and territories that enacted laws to keep their entire state or territory on standard time. One of the driving forces behind the creation of the act was Fred Ackerman, the chairman of the Greyhound Bus Lines board. In the early 1960's, Greyhound couldn't print bus schedules fast enough to keep up with the time changes throughout the country. Bus schedules were obsolete in two weeks and so complicated that the average passenger couldn't decode them - then when the passenger missed the bus, he or she would generally blame the bus company. The entire country went on year-round DST during the 1974 energy crisis in an effort to save energy. While some savings were realized, a number of people - in particular those in the farming community - complained being on year-round DST made them work an extra hour in the dark in the early morning winter months and getting an extra hour of light at the end of the day wasn't worth the trade-off. The plug was pulled on the year-round DST experiment in April 1975 and the current system of beginning DST at 2:00 a.m. on first Sunday in April and ending it at 2:00 a.m. on the last Sunday in October was standardized in 1986. Today, DST begins at 2 a.m. on the first Sunday in April, AJR 56 Page 3 when clocks "spring" forward one hour, and ends at 2 a.m. on the last Sunday of October when clocks "fall back" one hour to standard time. Hawaii, the eastern time zone portion of Indiana, Arizona (except for the area of the Navajo Indian Reservation), American Samoa, Guam, Puerto Rico, and the Virgin Islands don't observe DST. Comments 1. Got A Light? Whether the country operates full-time on standard time, on split time, or on DST year-round as it did in 1974, no "new" light is created. Rather, it's question of when light is provided - in the early morning or the late afternoon/early evening. The following is a look at when the sun would rise and set in Sacramento under the various time zone options that would be available if the federal government acted on AJR 56 and gave California the ability to move to DST on a year-round basis: ------------------------------------------------------------- | |Current ST/DST |Full-Time ST |Full-Time DST | ------------------------------------------------------------- |----------+-------+-------+-------+--------+--------+--------| | |Sunrise|Sunset |Sunrise|Sunset |Sunrise |Sunset | | | | | | | | | |----------+-------+-------+-------+--------+--------+--------| |March 21 |6:08 |6:19 |6:08 |6:19 |7:08 |7:19 | | |a.m. |p.m. |a.m. |p.m. |a.m. |p.m. | |----------+-------+-------+-------+--------+--------+--------| |June 21 |5:42 |8:33 |4:40 |7:21 |5:42 |8:33 | | |a.m. |p.m. |a.m. |p.m. |a.m. |p.m. | |----------+-------+-------+-------+--------+--------+--------| |December |7:20 |4:48 |7:20 |4:48 |8:20 |5:48 | |21 |a.m. |p.m. |a.m. |p.m. |a.m. |p.m. | | | | | | | | | ------------------------------------------------------------- (Data obtained from the U.S. Naval Observatory Website on Sun and Moon Data) AJR 56 Page 4 1. Light Evenings Mean Dark Mornings . In the summer time, when the period between sunrise and sunset is about 15 hours long, the effect of moving one hour of light between morning and evening isn't very pronounced. As noted in the above example, sunrise shifts from 4:40 a.m. to 5:42 a.m. in Sacramento as a result of going to DST. However, moving an hour of light from the morning to the evening in the winter months when the period between sunrise and sunset is just over nine hours will arguably have a much greater impact on people's lives when, for example, the sun wouldn't rise in Sacramento until 8:20 a.m. 2. Safety Issues . Some believe that going to DST on a year-round basis will reduce the number of traffic accidents because there will more light at the end of the day. Others believe that there won't be any net safety benefit because a move to year-round DST doesn't "create" more daylight, it just moves it from the morning to the evening, which may only have the effect of moving the frequency of accidents from the evening to the morning. Some have noted that when year-round DST was adopted during the 1974 energy crisis, one of the reasons it was repealed was an increased number of bus accidents in the morning. A University of British Columbia study of traffic accidents throughout Canada in 1991 and 1992 found an eight percent increase in traffic accidents on the Monday after the April "spring forward" to DST. Whether the accidents stem primarily from people being forced to drive in darker conditions or from people driving with an hour less of sleep isn't clear from the study. 4. Another Step Away From Uniformity . The purpose of the Uniform Time Act of 1966 was to put states on a relatively uniform time schedule within their specific times zones. Granted, the fact that Hawaii, most of Arizona, and the eastern portion of Indiana have exercised the option under the Uniform Time Act not to move to DST during the summer means that states already aren't operating on a uniform time system. However, this proposal, if enacted by the federal government, gives AJR 56 Page 5 states the option to move even further away from the notion of a uniform time system by going to DST on a year-round basis. 5. More Than A Resolution ? While this measure urges the federal government to give California and other states the option of going to DST on a year-round basis, it doesn't have the force and effect of law, nor does it obligate the State to make such a move should Congress and the President carry out the request of this AJR. On the other hand, if the committee doesn't feel moving to DST on a year-round basis is a good idea, it may wish to consider whether or not the California Legislature should ask the federal government for permission to make such a move. FISCAL EFFECT : Fiscal Com.: No ASSEMBLY FLOOR : AYES: Aanestad, Ackerman, Alquist, Aroner, Baldwin, Bates, Battin, Baugh, Bock, Briggs, Calderon, Cardenas, Cardoza, Cedillo, Corbett, Correa, Cox, Cunneen, Davis, Dutra, Firebaugh, Floyd, Frusetta, Gallegos, Granlund, Havice, Honda, House, Jackson, Kaloogian, Keeley, Knox, Kuehl, Leach, Lempert, Leonard, Longville, Lowenthal, Machado, Maldonado, Margett, Mazzoni, McClintock, Migden, Nakano, Olberg, Oller, Robert Pacheco, Papan, Romero, Scott, Shelley, Steinberg, Strickland, Strom-Martin, Thompson, Thomson, Torlakson, Vincent, Washington, Wayne, Wesson, Wiggins, Wildman, Wright, Zettel, Hertzberg NOES: Ashburn, Brewer, Campbell, Dickerson, Rod Pacheco, Pescetti NC:kb 6/14/00 Senate Floor Analyses SUPPORT/OPPOSITION: NONE RECEIVED **** END ****