SALT LAKE CITY — A proposal to eliminate the yearly switch to daylight saving time didn't find support in a legislative committee Tuesday and likely will not see the light of day for the remainder of the session.
Rep. Ken Sumsion, R-American Fork, said he has fielded numerous complaints from his constituents about the time change, and he offered some esoteric statistics on the matter.
Those included a 2008 Swedish study that found a higher rate of heart attacks in the first few days following the spring transition, and a lack of worker productivity that occurs after the change, due to shortened sleep cycles.
The proposal, HB288, looked to either maintain standard time year-round like Arizona or stick with the adjusted savings time, a move that is prohibited by current federal statute.
Members of the House Government Operations Standing Committee weren't convinced there was a problem big enough to fix and defeated the bill on a 6-3 vote.
— Arthur Raymond
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