Want to Get Rid of Daylight Saving Time in Texas? It May Happen
I am not a fan of Daylight Saving time. I never have been. I suffer in the spring, and look forward to fall every year.
The struggle is real, y'all.
It got worse in 2007, when the Energy Policy Act of 2005 extended daylight saving time by four weeks.
Now the United States Senate has approved a proposal to make daylight saving time permanent. If passed in the House and signed by President Biden, we would never have to set our clocks back an hour again in Texas, or any other state.
However, there is some divide on whether we should keep standard time or get rid of it and stick with DST.
(Picture of my inner child in March after I lose an hour of sleep)
Difference Between Daylight Saving and Standard Time
I don't like going back and forth every six months, and I'm not alone. Most Americans want to stop switching between daylight saving and standard time, but disagree on which should be used all year long, according to an Associated Press poll.
States That Do Not Observe Daylight Saving Time
The bill would allow Arizona and Hawaii to remain on standard time, as well as American Samoa, Guam, the Northern Mariana Islands, Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands, according to Reuters.