Daylight Saving Time 2018 - what you need to know
It's time to change our clocks again and batteries in our smoke detectors.
While it may seem we’re getting an extra hour of sleep (we’re not really) it’s interesting to note that the whole country doesn't actually participate, and that it's not even called "daylight savings time?"
Read on as we separate fact from fiction:
What is Daylight Saving Time?
Daylight Saving Time, beginning in 2018 on March 11th at 2:00 AM, is when we set our clocks forward one hour. It typically starts on the second Sunday in March, and ends on the first Sunday in November and this year, that’s Sunday, November 4th.
So while you think you’re getting an extra hour of sleep, it’s not the case. It’s being given back to you since it was taken away in March.
Who came up with this ridiculous idea?
It's hard to say. The idea has been credited to everyone from Benjamin Franklin in 1784 to George Vernon Hudson, a New Zealand scientist, in 1895. It really took off around WWI, when Germany became the first to institute it country-wide.
Why do we arbitrarily change our clocks twice a year?
Here's where some of the myths come in. People think that it's to give farmers more time in the field, but farmers actually hated it and came out against it whenever it tried to get widespread adoption. The reality is that it's supposed to be an energy-saving measure - that's where the word "saving" in "Daylight Saving Time" comes from (and why the phrase "Daylight Savings Time" is wrong) - because an extra hour of daylight means one less hour that you'll be using energy to keep the lights on.
Saving energy sounds good, doesn't it?
It would, except it actually doesn't. That's because a lot of our energy use, especially in the summer, comes from things like air conditioning, not light bulbs. Also, with an extra hour of daylight, people tend to go out more, meaning more energy wasted on transportation and higher gasoline consumption.
So if there are no energy savings, there must be some other benefits, right?
Actually, it seems like there are a whole lot of downsides. In addition to not really saving energy - the whole reason it was invented in the first place - studies show that it's bad for your health, bad for worker productivity, and bad for traffic accidents.
Okay, I get it. Changing our clocks isn't great. But everyone does it, so there's nothing we can do!
Not true! Saskatchewan keeps one time all year round, and legislators in California are taking a serious look at getting rid of Daylight Saving Time there, too.
Given all this, how is Daylight Saving Time still a thing?
Great question. I'll let John Oliver summarize in the video below: