HOMEPAGE > NEWSROOM
Press Release
For Immediate Release Contact: Sean C. Bonyun
July 21, 2005 (202) 225-3761
Seize the Daylight!
Upton Daylight Saving Amendment Adopted
in Sweeping Energy Package
Starting in 2007, Spring forward
2nd Sunday in March, Fall back 1st Sunday in November
WASHINGTON, DC - The
Energy Conference Committee that is finalizing sweeping
energy legislation today adopted Congressman Fred Upton's
(R-St. Joseph) amendment to extend Daylight Saving
Time by four weeks. Upton first introduced his amendment
to lengthen DST by two months in April. The four week
extension was a compromise reached by Upton and members
from the United States Senate during today's conference
meeting. Upton expects the Energy package to be finalized
early next week and will be considered by the House
and Senate prior to the August recess. Upon House and
Senate approval, the President is expected to sign
the sweeping energy bill into law shortly thereafter.
"Today, we shed some additional light on the
need for conservation with our daylight saving extension," said
Upton, a senior member of the Energy and Commerce Committee. "Not
only will Americans have more daylight at their disposal
for an additional four weeks of the year, we will also
be keeping our energy consumption as a nation down.
Kids across the nation will soon rejoice with the extended
daylight on Halloween night that will allow for an
additional hour of trick or treating. Studies by a
leading auto safety group have also shown that extending
daylight saving will save dozens of lives on the roads
each year."
Upton's bipartisan amendment, co-sponsored by Ed Markey
(D-MA) would extend daylight saving by four weeks,
starting the second Sunday of March and lasting through
the first Sunday of November. The extension of daylight
saving would become effective one year after the enactment
of the Energy bill, likely March of 2007. The bill
also calls for a study on the impact of daylight saving
on energy consumption to be conducted no later than
nine months after the enactment of the bill.
"Extending daylight saving time makes sense,
especially with skyrocketing energy costs. My daylight
saving amendment is one small piece of the overall
energy package, and with oil at $60 a barrel and gas
at $2.50 a gallon, every bit of conservation helps," concluded
Upton.
Extending daylight in the 1970's saved the equivalent
of 100,000 barrels of oil a day, or one percent of
the nation's energy consumption. Taking the savings
figure from the mid 1970s - 100,000 barrels of oil
a day - and multiplying that by $60 a barrel for 30
days, the savings amounts to at least $180 million
for the extended weeks.
The Upton-Markey amendment is supported
by studies which show that early daylight saving
time and longer
days decrease the number of fatal traffic accidents,
reduce crime rates, and provide relief for individuals
suffering from "night blindness." A broad
coalition of groups including organizations like the
Sporting Goods Manufacturers Association, the National
Association of Convenience Stores and the Retinitis
Pigmentosa Foundation Fighting Blindness, and an array
of small businesses which support American pastimes,
from barbecues to baseball to boating support the legislation
to extend daylight saving.
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