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Nevada is now one step closer to doing away with daylight saving time
Nevada is now one step closer to doing away with daylight saving time

Yahoo

time21-04-2025

  • Politics
  • Yahoo

Nevada is now one step closer to doing away with daylight saving time

Nevada's state assembly has passed a bill that would do away with daylight saving time in the state. It now moves on to the Senate. If passed and signed by the governor, residents would no longer change their clocks starting in January 2026. As if time weren't difficult enough to track in Las Vegas (especially inside its many casinos), state officials in Nevada are now one step closer to passing a bill that will end the observance of daylight saving time in the state. The "Lock the Clock Act," formally known as Assembly Bill 81, has passed through the state assembly by a vote of 27-15. It now moves on to the state senate. The bill would do away with the observance of daylight saving time and keep Nevada on standard time year-round. If it passes, that would go into effect beginning in January 2026. While it passed by a wide margin, the bill did face some opposition, with some assembly members arguing they would prefer to observe daylight saving year round, as it would mean more light in the summer evenings, which would benefit the state's restaurants and golf courses. The bill's sponsor said it was against federal law to maintain daylight saving time year-round. Nevada has made progress, but it's hardly the only state to contemplate doing away with daylight saving time. Legislation is being proposed or underway in nearly two dozen states regarding daylight saving ime. Seven states— Connecticut, Illinois, Iowa, Maine, Maryland, North Carolina, and Pennsylvania—have all proposed observing daylight saving time year-round. Mississippi proposed a similar bill, but that one did not proceed beyond committee. President Donald Trump has made his thoughts on daylight saving time clear, as well, calling it 'inconvenient' and 'very costly to our Nation' in posts on Truth Social last year. He pledged previously to do away with the time change, but so far, has made no move to do so. (Elon Musk has also expressed an interest in doing away with time changes.) Congress is the only government body that can legally oversee time changes. And while there have been bipartisan efforts to make daylight saving time permanent and end the changing of clocks, none have ever gotten anywhere. The most recent came in 2024, but the one that made the most progress was a 2022 bill that was passed by the U.S. Senate, which would have made daylight saving time permanent starting in 2023. The bill died in the House, though, never coming to a vote. This story was originally featured on

As time change nears, Nevada considers opting out of daylight savings
As time change nears, Nevada considers opting out of daylight savings

Yahoo

time24-02-2025

  • Health
  • Yahoo

As time change nears, Nevada considers opting out of daylight savings

LAS VEGAS (KLAS) — Don't have a heart attack, but daylight saving time is less than two weeks away. If a Nevada lawmaker has her way, it will be the last time the state 'springs ahead.' Citing a study that suggests cardiac arrest incidents spike on the Monday following the time change, Democratic Assem. Selena La Rue Hatch is sponsoring Assembly Bill 81 (AB81). Heart attacks aren't the only reason it's an issue that's gaining national attention. Representatives hear about it often from constituents who don't see the point, and even President Donald Trump has supported the end of daylight saving time. 'These are not just folks that are upset about losing an hour of sleep or having to change their clocks,' La Rue Hatch said Monday as she presented the 'lock the clock' act to the Assembly Government Affairs Committee. She said Democrats and Republicans alike are on board. 'There are documented negative health effects that come from observing daylight savings time and changing our clocks twice a year. We know that in the weeks following the clock change there are worsened health impacts. Strokes, heart attacks go up, digestive issues increase, medical outcomes are worsened. And in fact, many health organizations endorse permanent standard time as being more natural, more in line with our circadian rhythm and healthier for our bodies,' La Rue Hatch said. The bill wouldn't stop daylight saving time from coming on Sunday, March 9, 2025, but when Nevada 'falls back' to standard time on Nov. 2, the state would remain on permanent standard time. There's national support to go permanently to daylight saving time, but federal law prohibits that. States are only allowed to opt out of daylight saving time. Several states are already fighting that fight. La Rue Hatch cited a Michigan study that found a 24% increase in cardiac events on the Monday following the time change. But there's a separate study by the Mayo Clinic that shows only minimal effects across a sample of more than 36 million people. End to daylight saving time among bills for 2025 Nevada Legislature She also cited mental health impacts — anxiety and depression. And while she sees that as a teacher, La Rue Hatch said it's also a factor on the job and on the roads, where car crashes increase. 'We have measurable productivity decreases when we change the clocks,' she said. Nevada wouldn't be the first state to opt out. Arizona did it in 1968 and Hawaii did it in 1967. There's a growing chorus in support of the change in California, Oregon and Idaho. Utah is one of the states fighting to go to daylight saving time permanently. If a patchwork of states make the change, it could confuse travelers who already have trouble keeping track of time zones. Those time zones don't adhere to straight lines on a map. Nevada is on Pacific Time along with California, Washington, most of Oregon and northern Idaho. Neighboring Utah and Arizona are on Mountain time, one hour earlier, along with Montana, Wyoming, Colorado, New Mexico, portions of five other states — and one county in eastern Oregon. When Arizona remains on standard time and Nevada observes daylight time, the clocks in the two states are the same. La Rue Hatch said old reasoning that the time change helped farmers and ranchers really isn't a factor these days. 'As someone who grew up on a ranch, let me tell you, the cows are getting up at the same time, no matter what the clock says,' she said. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

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