logo
Lawmakers advance competing bills to end Nebraska's twice-yearly clock changing

Lawmakers advance competing bills to end Nebraska's twice-yearly clock changing

Yahoo21-02-2025
The Nebraska Legislature is debating an end to twice-a-year clock switching. A pair of competing bills advanced Thursday. (Photo by)
LINCOLN — The full Nebraska Legislature again signaled majority support Thursday for ending the twice-a-year practice of changing the clocks.
However, nearly 30 state senators chose to advance both bills before the Legislature this year that would do so differently, delaying a final decision on whether permanent daylight saving time or permanent standard time should be the path forward for the Cornhusker State.
Most lawmakers said they could be swayed in either direction.
Legislative Bill 34, from State Sen. Megan Hunt of Omaha, advanced 29-13 to establish year-round daylight saving time. That's the period between March and November when much of the country 'springs forward' one hour and offers later sunsets in the summer.
LB 302, from State Sen. Dave Murman of Glenvil, advanced 28-9 for year-round standard time. That's the current position of clocks after 'falling back' one hour for earlier sunrises in the winter.
Hunt led the charge on permanent daylight saving time from an economics position, arguing it could be better for parents to attend children's games later at night in the sun, play golf and go to restaurants or shops.
'It's a better thing for the economy,' Hunt said. 'It's a better thing for things like seasonal depression and just kind of the winter blues that you get when you don't have any sunlight.'
Murman and State Sen. Kathleen Kauth of the Millard area led the charge on permanent standard time from a health standpoint. Murman said it offered 'superior benefits' that have been endorsed by major medical organizations.
Kauth pointed to many of those medical societies, including the American Academy of Sleep Medicine, American Medical Association, Nebraska Medical Association and British Sleep Society.
She said Murman's bill is best to end a 'tug of war' between biological and alarm clocks.
'Daylight saving time increases the risk to our physical health, mental well-being and public safety,' Kauth said. 'Permanent standard time is the optimal choice for health and safety.'
Both bills would not go into effect until other surrounding states adopt similar laws:
For Hunt's bill, three adjacent states to Nebraska would need to adopt a single year-round standard of time.
For Murman's bill, Iowa, Kansas, South Dakota and Wyoming would all need to adopt legislation for year-round standard time. Some senators have said the list should include Colorado, to prevent a 'time-zone island' in southwest Nebraska.
Federal law currently prohibits year-round daylight saving time but does allow year-round standard time, which Hawaii and Arizona (excluding the Navajo Nation) observe.
President Donald Trump has voiced support for ending the twice-a-year clock changing.
Of Nebraska's neighboring states:
Colorado and Wyoming have already adopted year-round daylight saving time, and Iowa is considering the same, like Hunt's LB 34.
South Dakota and Kansas are considering year-round standard time, like Murman's LB 302.
Missouri, like Nebraska, is considering either approach.
Hunt and Murman found common ground in wanting to end the clock-changing practice, which research indicates leads to increases in seizures, heart attacks, strokes, car accidents and workplace injuries shortly after each twice-yearly change.
State Sen. John Cavanaugh of Omaha, one of 19 senators to advance both bills, said Hunt's bill might be good for recreation, but he also pointed to his children complaining about going to sleep in the summer while the sun is out and that an earlier sunset could allow fireworks sooner.
He said it's nice to wake up in the morning alongside the sun, in standard time, to make breakfast for his children, which 'makes the morning more pleasant.'
'When we make a decision, we are saying what time it is going to be, which is a huge responsibility,' Cavanaugh said.
In a light-hearted moment of the debate, his older sister, State Sen. Machaela Cavanaugh of Omaha, joked that her brother needed to be 'more responsible' about expanded fireworks use.
'I genuinely hate fireworks,' she said. 'I know that makes me a killjoy, possibly unpatriotic, but I hate fireworks, and therefore I cannot in good conscience support a bill that would enable extra hours of fireworks.'
State Sen. Myron Dorn of Adams, first elected alongside Hunt and Murman in 2018, said his wife told him after he won that she didn't care what he did up in Lincoln or what he passed, except one issue: 'Pass something about not changing the clocks,' he recounted.
Freshman State Sen. Tanya Storer of Whitman was among those who praised the issue for being nonpartisan and widespread, not limited to urban-rural splits.
She ultimately supported permanent standard time, from Murman, from an agricultural perspective. Storer represents 11 counties in north-central Nebraska where she noted some farmers wait to put out hay or begin harvesting until the sun is out.
Permanent standard time, she said, could also be better for students who are waiting on the bus in the winter, sometimes over an hour in rural parts of the state.
'I just think we have to be aware of what life looks like for our kiddos in terms of just getting on the bus, returning from schools and trying to provide a natural setting in hours of daylight during those hours for them as well,' Storer said.
State Sen. Dunixi Guereca of Omaha noted later permanent daylight saving time might help the Nebraska Huskers football team bring back a national championship with later practices.
State Sen. Rick Holdcroft of Bellevue, a retired U.S. Navy officer, said he is no stranger to time changes while slowly transiting the Pacific Ocean, with clocks changing about once every three days.
'I think we're fine the way we are,' Holdcroft, one of four senators to oppose both bills, said.
Hunt, who had originally said this year she'd be fine with ending the clock change through either her bill or the approach from Murman, told her colleagues she had changed her mind.
She told her colleagues if they didn't want permanent daylight time to leave the twice-a-year clock change in place.
'At least the status quo, at least how it is right now, when we have these dark, depressing winters, we can at least look forward to the late nights in the summer when we have sunshine, we can sit on our patios,' Hunt said. 'If we take that away, I don't know what I'm going to do.'
Advance BOTH permanent daylight saving AND standard time (19): Bob Andersen, John Arch, Christy Armendariz, John Cavanaugh, Danielle Conrad, Wendy DeBoer, Barry DeKay, George Dungan, Bob Hallstrom, Teresa Ibach, Mike Jacobson, Loren Lippincott, Jason Prokop, Jane Raybould, Merv Riepe, Victor Rountree, Rita Sanders, Ashlei Spivey, Dave Wordekemper
OPPOSE both bills (4): Carolyn Bosn, Rob Clements, Rob Dover, Rick Holdcroft
Advance ONLY permanent DAYLIGHT SAVING time (10): Beau Ballard, Stan Clouse, Myron Dorn, John Fredrickson, Jana Hughes, Megan Hunt, Margo Juarez, Dan Quick, Tony Sorrentino, Paul Strommen
Advance ONLY permanent STANDARD time (9): Tom Brandt, Ben Hansen, Kathleen Kauth, Dan McKeon, Glen Meyer, Mike Moser, Dave Murman, Jared Storm, Tanya Storer
DID NOT VOTE on both bills (7): Eliot Bostar, Machaela Cavanaugh, Dunixi Guereca, Brian Hardin, Dan Lonowski, Terrell McKinney, Brad von Gillern
SUBSCRIBE: GET THE MORNING HEADLINES DELIVERED TO YOUR INBOX
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

What to know about redistricting fights as Texas Democrats return and California starts work

time36 minutes ago

What to know about redistricting fights as Texas Democrats return and California starts work

Republicans can move ahead with redrawing Texas' congressional districts now that Democratic lawmakers have returned to the state. Efforts to thwart President Donald Trump's push to tilt the political map for next year's midterm elections in his favor shifted to California. Dozens of Texas Democrats ended a two-week walkout Monday after Democrats in California heeded Gov. Gavin Newsom's call to counter the GOP effort in Texas. In California, the Democratic-supermajority Legislature faces tight deadlines, and a plan would have to be approved by voters in November. Republicans have more options for mid-decade redistricting than Democrats because they control more statehouses, and they've talked about redrawing districts in Florida, Indiana and Missouri. Here's what to know. Both Trump and the Democrats are looking ahead to the 2026 midterms knowing that they often go against the president's party, as they did during Trump's first term in 2018. Republicans currently have a seven-seat majority in the 435-member House. State legislatures draw the lines after each U.S. census in most states — including Texas — and only a few dozen House districts are competitive. In Texas, Republicans hold 25 of 38 seats, and they're trying to increase that to 30. In California, Democrats have 43 of the 52 seats, and they're trying to boost that to 48, to wipe out the advantage the GOP would gain from redrawing lines in Texas. In some ways, the nation's most-populous state, California, is a reverse-mirror image of the nation's second most-populous state, Texas. Democrats are even more firmly in control of state government there than Republicans are in Texas, with Democratic supermajorities in both California legislative chambers. But California's districts were drawn by an independent commission created by a statewide vote in 2008 after years of intense partisan battles over redistricting. Democrats are trying to avoid legal challenges to a new map by asking voters to approve it as an exception to the normal process, which would require a special election in November. Texas has no such commission, so its Legislature doesn't have to seek voters' approval for its maps. California lawmakers were returning Monday to the state capital from a summer break. They are scheduled to remain in session through Sept. 12. Republicans have solid majorities in both chambers of the Texas Legislature, and a Democrat hasn't won statewide office there since 1994. But Texas is among a handful of states where two-thirds of each chamber must be present to conduct business, and the GOP majorities are not that large. Republican Gov. Greg Abbott already had called a special legislative session when Trump began pushing for a new congressional map, but GOP lawmakers could not conduct business after most Democratic lawmakers left for blue states, including California, Illinois and Massachusetts. But there were pressures on Democrats against holding out longer. They were away from their families and nonlegislative jobs, and their walkout also prevented lawmakers from providing relief to the Texas Hill Country ravaged by deadly flash flooding in July. They also faced fines of $500 per day, as well as efforts to oust some of them from office.

A look at Texas' redistricting walkout and California's response, by the numbers

time2 hours ago

A look at Texas' redistricting walkout and California's response, by the numbers

A walkout by Democratic legislators in Texas has ended and Republicans arranged to push a plan for redrawing the state's congressional districts through the GOP-controlled Legislature and give President Donald Trump a better political landscape. Democrats' boycott of daily sessions kept the House from passing a new map because the state constitution requires 100 of the chamber's 150 members to be present to do business. Democrats hold 62 seats. A national, partisan brawl over redistricting has now started to shift to California, where Democrats are hoping to impose a new map that offsets any advantage Trump and his fellow Republicans might gain in Texas. Here's a breakdown by the numbers. Texas is the nation's second most-populous state and has 38 congressional seats. Republicans hold 25 of them but are hoping to boost that number to 30. Their goal is to make it easier for the GOP to hold on to its slim U.S. House majority in the 2026 midterm elections, so that Democrats have little ability to thwart Trump's agenda and can't initiate investigations of his administration. Democrats hold 43 of 52 congressional seats in California, the nation's most populous state. At Gov. Gavin Newsom's urging, they've drafted a proposal to increase the number to 48. However, the current map was drawn by an independent commission created though a voter-approved ballot initiative in 2008. To avoid legal challenges, Democrats want to put their proposal on the ballot in a special election in November. Redistricting usually happens after the once-a-decade population count by the U.S. Census Bureau and sometimes in response to a court ruling. Changes are required to keep a state's congressional districts equal in population after people move into or out of an area. Trump is pushing for a rare mid-decade redistricting in Texas, and Republicans are also considering it in other states including Missouri, Florida and Indiana. Republicans currently hold 219 seats in the U.S. House, seven more than the 212 held by Democrats. Four of the chamber's 435 seats are vacant, three of them previously held by Democrats. Midterm elections most often go against the president's party. In 2018, during Trump's first term, Democrats had a net gain of 41 seats to capture the House majority. Most House Democrats left Texas on Aug. 3 and stayed outside the state for 15 days. They fled to blue states like Illinois, California and Massachusetts to stay out of the reach of the Texas law enforcement officers trying to bring them back. Many of the same lawmakers also walked out in 2021 for 38 days to protest GOP proposals for new voting restrictions. Once they returned, Republicans passed them into law. The Democrats who bolted for other states and returned now have an around-the-clock escort from Texas Department of Public Safety officers to make sure they return to the Capitol, House Speaker Dustin Burrows' office said. Burrows' office did not provide more details, calling it an ongoing law enforcement operation. Plainclothes officers escorted them from the chamber after Monday's session.

Texas State Rep. Refuses To Leave Capitol Amid Democrat And Republican Showdown
Texas State Rep. Refuses To Leave Capitol Amid Democrat And Republican Showdown

Yahoo

time3 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Texas State Rep. Refuses To Leave Capitol Amid Democrat And Republican Showdown

A Texas state representative has refused to leave the state capitol amid a contentious battle between Republicans and Democrats. State Rep. Nicole Collier of Fort Worth (D) told news outlets she was protesting the Republican House speaker's insistence that she and other Democratic lawmakers be under surveillance by state troopers ahead of Wednesday's meeting of the legislature. Related: 'I don't know how long I will be here,' Collier wrote in a statement to the Fort Worth Report on Monday. 'Instead of DPS officers looking for pedophiles, they have been assigned to follow Democratic state representatives around only to ensure their return to the Capitol on Wednesday (when the House reconvenes). I sure hope the public feels safe without those officers on beat.' Related: Collier's insistence on remaining in the state capitol, located in Austin, comes after Texas House Speaker Dustin Burrows (R) threatened to arrest Democrats who attempted to block Republicans from their racially biased redistricting efforts by leaving the state for two weeks. The redistricting effort, unsurprisingly pushed by President Donald Trump, would allow Republicans to gain an extra five congressional seats ahead of the midterm elections. After many of the Democratic lawmakers returned to the state, the Texas House of Representatives reached a quorum on Monday, meaning it had enough members present to conduct business. The end of their walkout followed California Democrats' decision to move forward with a vote in November on temporarily redrawing maps to neutralize Republican efforts to gerrymander. It also comes after Texas Gov. Greg Abbott's (R) special session was canceled on Friday. Upon the Texas Democrats' return to the House on Monday, Burrows then reportedly required them to be escorted by Department of Public Safety officers until Wednesday, when the House reconvenes. 'Members who have not been present until today, for whom arrest warrants were issued, will be granted written permission to leave only after agreeing to be released into the custody of a designated [Department of Public Safety] officer appointment under the rules of the house,' he said, also explaining that the officers would then 'ensure' that the members would return Wednesday morning, according to NBC News. Related: 'For those still absent, civil arrest warrants remain in force,' he added. In a statement to NBC News, Collier said she was a 'political prisoner' for not falling in line with Republican 'surveillance protocol.' 'I refuse to sign away my dignity as a duly elected representative just so Republicans can control my movements and monitor me with police escorts,' she said. Related: U.S. Rep. Jasmine Crockett (D-Texas) weighed in on the matter in an online post: 'As a former Texas State Rep, let me be clear: LOCKING Rep. Nicole Collier inside the chamber is beyond outrageous. Forcing elected officials to sign 'permission slips' & take police escorts to leave? That's not procedure. That's some old Jim Crow playbook.' 'Texas Republicans have lost their damn minds,' she added. HuffPost reached out to representatives for Collier and Burrows for comment but did not immediately hear back. Related... Texas Dems Throw In The Towel Gavin Newsom Launches Plan To Offset Texas Gerrymander Texas State Rep. Isn't Backing Down From Fighting 'Overtly Racist' Redistricting Map Newsom Warns Trump California Can 'Neutralize' His Texas Redistricting EffortsSolve the daily Crossword

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store