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Washington lawmakers discuss Daylight Saving bill

A state Senate committee will consider a bill to keep Washington on Daylight Saving Time year-round.

OLYMPIA, Wash. — On Wednesday, a state Senate committee discussed a bill that would keep Washington on Daylight Saving Time all year long. 

According to Senate Bill 5139,

The bill reads, in part:

"The legislature finds that the state of Washington would benefit from the consistency and predictability of observing a standard time throughout the calendar year. Research has shown that changing to and from daylight saving time twice per year has negative impacts on public health, increases traffic accidents and crime, disrupts agriculture scheduling, and hinders economic growth. Scientific studies have connected a number of health consequences with the act of switching between standard time and daylight saving time, including greater risks of heart attacks, more frequent workplace injuries, and increased suicide rates in the days immediately following the switch."

This is not the first time Washington senators have backed a bill to end daylight saving time. In 2017, Senate Bill 5329 proposed that the state of Washington be exempt from Daylight saving time and for year-round Pacific Standard Time to be implemented.

There are already a few states that don't observe Daylight Saving Time, including Arizona and Hawaii, which is approved on a state level. California voted in November to stay on Daylight Saving Time year-round. 

If Washington were on Standard Time the entire year, we would notice it most during the summer months – when we currently observe Daylight Saving Time. During the longest day of the year, June 21, the sun would rise at 4:11 a.m. However, the sun would set at 8:10 p.m.

If Washington were on Daylight Saving Time throughout the year, we would experience later sunsets in the summer but you would most notice the change during the winter months. On the shortest day of the year, December 21, the sun wouldn't rise until 8:54 a.m. That's almost a 9 a.m. sunrise. And the sun would set at 5:20 p.m.

Senators Jim Honeyford, Sam Hunt and Kevin Van De Wege are sponsoring the current bill.

RELATED: What would life be like without Daylight Saving Time?

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