13-03-2025
Bill to eliminate daylight savings time in Arkansas fails in committee
LITTLE ROCK, Ark. – Arkansas legislators debated the impact of no longer adhering to daylight saving time on Wednesday.
The bill failed but after much debate between legislators in a House State Agencies and Governmental Affairs Committee on how it could impact things like our health or farming.
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Rep. Stephen Meeks (R-Greenbrier) sponsored a bill to eliminate daylight saving time in Arkansas and keep the state on standard time year-round.
'What daylight-saving time does is force us to get up an hour early each day, but we all don't go to bed an hour early every night, so we've got an already sleep-deprived society and we're making ourselves even more sleep-deprived,' Meeks said.
He said there are health effects on our bodies when the clock springs forward.
'Studies after studies have shown that by staying on daylight saving time, it's like being jet-lagged all the time, we never fully get used to it, because that daylight sun in the evening is always trying to drag our bodies back to standard time,' Meeks said.
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He said there are negative health, work productivity and economic impacts to daylight saving time.
Rep. Mark McElroy, who represents areas near the Mississippi border, told the committee it might be confusing for people in that area when the time changes as they cross a state line.
'We have some cross, and you touched on it, and a lot of them work in Mississippi and Memphis, and they go back and forth,' McElroy said. 'It's really going to cause confusion in Helena with people working back and forth.'
McElroy and other legislators said this would be handled better at the federal level so that it is done across the county all at once.
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Meeks said he has no plans to try again because he is term-limited.
'I do have colleagues in the chamber who have expressed continued support for this and so my hope is the next generation of lawmakers will pick up the mantle and continue to work forward on this issue,' Meeks said.
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