Title: 'Time has come': Vote to make daylight saving time permanent passes US Senate Source:
Sky News Australia URL Source:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-kAJJL1K5LU&t=244s Published:Mar 16, 2022 Author:Sky News Australia Post Date:2022-03-16 08:33:15 by Esso Keywords:None Views:114 Comments:3
Poster Comment:
Where I'm at, 85°08′21"W longitude, Eastern time zone, High Noon occurs at 12:45 during standard time. During daylight savings time, noon occurs at 13:45, meaning it stays dark really late in the morning and it stays light way too late. If I was in the central time zone, where it should be, this wouldn't be so bad but being on the Western edge of the wrong time zone sucks. It's like working 2nd shift.
The dividing line between Eastern time and central time should be near the Indiana/Ohio border, not the Illinois/Indiana border.
High noon, when the sun's at its highest point, should occur at 12:00 +/-30 minutes on your clock, not at 13:45.
Granted, they need to set it and leave it alone. It'd be nice if they set noon at High Noon +/-30 min though.
There is a few places where time zones have a 30 minute offset. I think parts of Australia and maybe some Pacific islands. I'm not much of a jetsetter anymore.
#3. To: Lod, history buffs, time travelers, 4um (#2)
A funny and interesting take on my morning rant today about DST, I guess Matt reads 4um or he thinks like me. His idea about the school children was one of my first thoughts, but that may be a moot point because I'm not sure if children walk anymore, let alone go to school. His take on sunrise and sunset is valid, but they are variable depending on what time of year it is, whereas High Noon is a constant, within the limits of orbital dynamics. The Earth follows an elliptical path, so there are slight variations depending on exactly where the earth is at. The distances are so vast that the effects are negligible.