• About Us
  • Advertise
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Pickem Terms and Conditions
Sunday, May 25, 2025
The Platte County Landmark Newspaper
  • Home
  • Local News
  • Opinion
  • Landmark Pickem!
    • Weekly Pickem Updates
    • Results by Week
    • The Leaderboard
    • Pickem Rules and Help
  • Landmark Live!
  • Looking Backward
  • es_MXSpanish
  • Home
  • Local News
  • Opinion
  • Landmark Pickem!
    • Weekly Pickem Updates
    • Results by Week
    • The Leaderboard
    • Pickem Rules and Help
  • Landmark Live!
  • Looking Backward
  • es_MXSpanish
No Result
View All Result
The Platte County Landmark Newspaper
No Result
View All Result

Another attempt to end daylight saving time in Missouri

Landmark Digital by Landmark Digital
March 8, 2024
in Headlines
Sunshine Law
6
SHARES
138
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on TwitterShare via Email

by Quinn S Coffman
Missouri News Network

With daylight saving time arriving March 10, a House committee heard a bill on Feb. 21 that would stop the clock once and for all.

RelatedNews

Park University notes 150 years of history

Amenities being added to Park at Platte Meadows

Police have suspect in string of Platte City burglaries

If passed, it would align Missouri with a group of 19 other states intent on making the “spring forward” section of the year, from March to November, the permanent year-round time.

On March 10, most Americans will wake an hour earlier in accordance with the shift from standard time to daylight saving time. This shift, first meant to conserve electricity during World War I, allows for more hours of sunlight after the workday.

Rep. Darin Chappell, R-Rogersville, refuted the often-quoted fact that daylight saving time is beneficial for agriculture, saying the claim was “one of the dumbest things ever.”

“The whole idea that this is for the farmers is ridiculous. We got up when it was light and we went to bed when it was dark. Doesn’t matter what the clock says, we were out working when we could,” Chappell said.

His voice was among many on the committee who shared the sentiment that no one wants to change their clock two times a year. Other legislators mentioned an increase in workplace and traffic fatalities correlated with a shift in the clock.

However, the conversation was complicated by an inevitable question. If we stop changing our clocks back and forth each year, which way do we leave them?
Spring forward or fall back?

Federal law currently allows states to opt out of daylight saving time and return to purely standard time. This would make the “fall back” section of the year, from November to March, the permanent year-round time. Arizona and Hawaii observe standard time year-round, never needing to adjust their clocks.

This federal law, signed in 1966, doesn’t allow states to make daylight saving time permanent, however. This is why the bill heard Wednesday would act as a trigger law, only going into effect if Congress allows it through a federal law.

Rep. Chris Sander, R-Lone Jack, said putting the extra hour of sunlight in the afternoon rather than the morning would be beneficial for business and recreation.

“If you had more daylight in the evening hour after work, you could walk your dog at the park, you could go find bugs on flowers, or you could enjoy other outdoor things,” Sander said.

Currently 19 states, including Missouri’s neighbors Tennessee and Kentucky, have passed similar trigger laws.

Jay Pea, the president of the Save Standard Time organization, disagrees that making daylight saving time permanent would be good for Americans.

His organization argues that standard time is “solar time,” and aligns better with our natural sleep rhythms by making high noon the hour when the sun is highest in the sky.

“Everybody needs morning light, it helps you wake up, be alert and feel good. It helps you feel ready for the day so you can drive safely to work and can perform well, (and so) your kids can do well in school,” Pea said.

He claimed that permanent daylight saving time would offset people from their natural circadian rhythms, doing damage over time. His organization believes even the status quo, where clocks change twice a year, is preferable to permanent daylight saving time.

Despite versions of this bill making progress in past sessions, members that heard the bill Wednesday are not confident that daylight saving time will be ended in Missouri this session.

Both Chappell and Rep. Michael Burton, D-Lakeshire, said there is little hope that the Senate will prioritize a bill like this during the session.

Landmark Digital

Landmark Digital

Related Posts

45 Years Ago–May 23, 1980

by Ivan Foley
May 22, 2025
0

Former President Gerald Ford, in a Platte County appearance Saturday, described President Jimmy Carter as a man who “tries to make himself a hero out of disasters he has created” and likened him to an arsonist “who starts fires and...

30 Years Ago–May 25, 1995

by Ivan Foley
May 22, 2025
0

Joseph Gates had always told his wife, Juanita, and their nine children that he would buy Juanita a new car if he won the Missouri Lottery. So when he came home from work on May 14 and announced that a...

15 Years Ago–May 26, 2010

by Ivan Foley
May 22, 2025
0

Riverside police opened a homicide investigation this week after entering an apartment to check the welfare of a man who had reportedly failed to appear at his place of employment for several days. The man was found dead in his...

Let’s get this par-tea started

Birds, weddings and such

by Guy Speckman
May 22, 2025
0

My wife has declared some type of war on birds around our house without telling me of this declaration. I walked onto our rear patio area last week and she had constructed this table on a table contraption with a...

Next Post
Republican caucus event

Trump wins Platte County delegates by wide margin

Popular News

  • Jeff Wilson

    Police have suspect in string of Platte City burglaries

    34 shares
    Share 14 Tweet 9
  • Surgery Center of Northland being built in Platte City

    51 shares
    Share 20 Tweet 13
  • KC’s curfew, backyard chickens, selfie stations

    11 shares
    Share 4 Tweet 3
  • ‘Guilt by association’ ends appointment talk

    8 shares
    Share 3 Tweet 2
  • Amenities being added to Park at Platte Meadows

    7 shares
    Share 3 Tweet 2
  • About Us
  • Advertise
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Pickem Terms and Conditions
Call us at 816-858-0363

Copyright © 2019-2020 The Platte County Landmark Newspaper - All Rights Reserved

No Result
View All Result
  • Subscribe Online
  • Home
  • Local News
  • Opinion
  • Landmark Pickem
    • Results by Week
    • The Leaderboard
    • Pickem Rules and Help
  • Landmark Live!
  • Looking Backward
  • es_MXSpanish

Copyright © 2019-2020 The Platte County Landmark Newspaper - All Rights Reserved