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The US House votes on a bill that would make daylight savings time permanent

According to an announcement posted on Thursday, the U.S. House of Representatives will vote next week on legislation to make daylight saving time permanent.

The House Energy and Commerce Committee voted 48-1 for the Sunshine Protection Act in?May. In March 2022, the U.S. Senate voted to permanently extend daylight saving time. However, the House did not take up the issue due to opposition. The House is set to vote on a proposal next week that would allow for states to opt-out.

Since the 1960s, daylight saving time has been implemented in nearly all the United States.

The measure is supported by those who believe that the time shift causes sleep disorders, more workplace injuries and car accidents. The House measure's supporters also think that brighter evenings will spur more economic activity in the winter. Donald Trump has called for an end to twice-yearly clock-switching, saying in May that "it is time that people stop worrying about 'Clock', not to mention the money and work that are spent on this ridiculous twice-yearly production."

The U.S. Senate will need to decide again if it wants to consider the measure if it is passed by the House. Senator Tom Cotton of Arkansas, a Republican, and other members are opposed to the measure.

Cotton said that it would lead to absurdly late winter dawns and force many children to attend school in the dark.

Vern Buchanan is a Florida Republican Representative who has been presenting the bill "regularly" since '2018. He proposed it again in 2018. The bill is popular among the legislator's constituents because it allows more evening hours of play on sports fields and golf courses.

Rep. Frank Pallone (a New Jersey Democrat) said that permanent daylight savings time was "better for safety" and would boost the tourism industry in New Jersey. Stop changing the clocks two times a year.

In World War II, the?United States implemented year-round daylight savings?time and did so again in 1974 as a way to reduce energy consumption. It was unpopular, and Congress repealed the law later that same year. (Reporting and editing by Franklin Paul, Matthew Lewis, and David Shepardson)

(source: Reuters)