SubHuman
Active Member
It's not really as complicated as some seem to want to make it.
It's just the pointless twice-a-year clock-changing nuisance that needs to be dropped, and most people would prefer to stay year-round on the time we now already use eight months a year through the summer, and in winter have the sunlight later in the day rather than the morning. If that causes a problem for schools who don't want kids travelling in darkness, it should be up to them to set their hours to avoid it, not make everyone else ridiculously move their clocks back and forth.
The European Union will stop changing their clocks in 2021. North American jurisdictions should get together now and also plan to do it for 2021, which should still give enough warning.
The term "Daylight Saving" confuses people as to whether it means the practice of changing our clocks or the time designation used in summer. And it has always sounded silly to me. Daylight can't be 'saved' -- maybe shifted might have been a more appropriate term, or "Summer Time" as in Britain.
It's just the pointless twice-a-year clock-changing nuisance that needs to be dropped, and most people would prefer to stay year-round on the time we now already use eight months a year through the summer, and in winter have the sunlight later in the day rather than the morning. If that causes a problem for schools who don't want kids travelling in darkness, it should be up to them to set their hours to avoid it, not make everyone else ridiculously move their clocks back and forth.
The European Union will stop changing their clocks in 2021. North American jurisdictions should get together now and also plan to do it for 2021, which should still give enough warning.
Saskatchewan is already there. As can be seen in the map in another post above, most of the province lines up geographically with the Mountain Time Zone, but as far as I know no one has ever wanted to call it something like "Permanent Mountain Daylight Saving Time" -- It's just Central Standard Time. I suppose we (in Toronto and presumably most of eastern Canada and U.S.) could be on Atlantic Standard Time, if that's what people want to call it.Wouldn't that make two abutting time zones (likely somewhere in the Atlantic) the same time? I guess that doesn't *REALLY* matter, but just a thought.
The term "Daylight Saving" confuses people as to whether it means the practice of changing our clocks or the time designation used in summer. And it has always sounded silly to me. Daylight can't be 'saved' -- maybe shifted might have been a more appropriate term, or "Summer Time" as in Britain.
Last edited: