
This Sunday morning, most people in the U.S. will be setting their clocks back an hour at 2 a.m. in a useless ritual that has modern America asking WTF?
No one is sure why we still subject ourselves to this disruptive time-shifting. Established more than 100 years ago, daylight saving time was designed to reduce energy consumption and add more daylight hours.
Actual science, however, has found the energy-saving claim to be bogus. Even worse, medical studies says screwing with the clock twice a year not only messes up sleep schedules, but it can affect heart rhythms, spike car crashes and lower test results.
Assemblymember Angelo Morinello, a Republican from Niagara Falls, is sponsoring a bill that would put an end to daylight saving time forever in New York State.
“Studies show more accidents, heart incidents and work-related injuries” on the Monday following the annual loss of an hour of sleep, Morinello told the Brooklyn Eagle on Friday. “When you disrupt that sleep rhythm it throws everything off.”
About the claim that resetting the clock creates more daylight hours, he said, “There’s an old Native American saying: The only one who believes that cutting a foot off the top of a blanket and sewing it to the bottom makes it longer is a fool.”
His colleagues chuckled about his bill when he first introduced it, he said, but they’re starting to take it more seriously after hearing about the medical studies. “It’s getting some traction,” he said.
“One of my colleagues [State Sen. Jim Seward] has proposed a bill to at least study the effects of the state opting out of daylight saving time,” he added.
Morinello’s bill, introduced in March 2018, has been referred to committee. If it isn’t passed during the second year of the Assembly’s two-year cycle, he intends to reintroduce it, he said.
Hawaii and most of Arizona have opted to stay on Standard Time the whole year. Legislation in other states is also being proposed. The Florida legislature passed a bill in 2018 that would allow Florida to stay in daylight saving time. That option requires federal approval, however.
This issue could be something that brings America back together again. Morinello, a Republican, is working with Queens Democrat Clyde Vanel on a related bill establishing a daylight saving time task force.
“The majority of the public would just prefer we stay on Standard Time,” Morinello said.












SUNSET PARK — “As a resident of Marine Park, one of the great surprises I found biking around Industry City and visiting Japan Village was to discover Bush Terminal Park. I continue to be amazed at the serene hideaways that the city offers in some of the busiest places — and, still, with an iconic view.”

BROOKLYN HEIGHTS — ‘A miracle that no one was killed …’ That’s what neighbors are saying about the collapse of the Hotel St. George marquee. Shown in this photograph are workmen beginning the removal and repair of the historic, old neon sign at the corner, referencing a relic of Brooklyn Heights’ past: the St. George Hotel.

ATLANTIC AVENUE — Exhausted shopper with cluster of bags and goods from mall at Boerum Place stops to look at huge construction site across the street. “Is that REALLY going to be a jail??” Her male companion is reassuring, “Nothing like Rikers … this is 21st Century.”
BROOKLYN HEIGHTS — Overheard in line at one of most popular pastry outlets on Montague Street: “Hope I can get them into a camp …” A mother with two pre-schoolers in tow was showing a friend the Dodge Y flyer for Healthy Kids Day on Saturday, April 18.
2 Responses
Early risers, including but not limited to those who exercise in the morning, are delighted when “Daylight Savings Time” is over, but others would prefer to have that extra hour of light in the afternoon, 12 months a year.
It would be better to have daylight savings time year round in NYC. Getting dark at 4pm in the winter is a drag.