SENATE MEMORIAL 27
55th legislature - STATE OF NEW MEXICO - first session, 2021
INTRODUCED BY
Cliff R. Pirtle
A MEMORIAL
URGING THE UNITED STATES CONGRESS TO SUPPORT PERMANENT DAYLIGHT SAVING TIME.
WHEREAS, since 2007, daylight saving time has begun on the second Sunday in March and has ended on the first Sunday in November; and
WHEREAS, the United States first introduced daylight saving time in 1918, two years after Germany and other European countries started advancing the clocks to conserve fuel and energy during World War I; and
WHEREAS, after World War II ended, communities and states had the option to decide whether they wanted to observe daylight saving time; and
WHEREAS, the federal Uniform Time Act of 1966 made daylight saving time standard across the country, and states are not allowed to choose daylight saving time year-round without congressional approval; and
WHEREAS, changing clocks twice each year has a negative impact on the quality of life; and
WHEREAS, fatal car accidents in the United States spike by six percent during the workweek following the "spring forward" to daylight saving time, according to university of Colorado Boulder research; and
WHEREAS, mounting research has shown that spikes in heart attacks, strokes, seasonal depression and workplace injuries also occur in the days following the time change; and
WHEREAS, changing the clocks upsets circadian sleep rhythms, intruding on the natural cycle that human bodies need for adequate rest; and
WHEREAS, positive benefits of more daylight if daylight saving time were year round would mean more time for youth sports programs, family outings and finishing chores on farms and ranches; and
WHEREAS, numerous states, including Oregon, Washington, California and Florida, are considering doing away with changing clocks twice each year entirely; and
WHEREAS, a proposal for year-round daylight saving time would require the approval of the United States congress; and
WHEREAS, congressional support to make daylight saving time permanent would end unnecessary confusion that harms Americans' health and the nation's economy;
NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED BY THE SENATE OF THE STATE OF NEW MEXICO that the United States congress be urged to support permanent daylight saving time nationwide; and
BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that copies of this memorial be transmitted to members of the United States congress.
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