Supporters of daylight saving ban fall back
SALEM — A ballot initiative to end daylight-saving time in Oregon is on hold until 2017.
Medford resident David Miles launched a petition drive in November to abolish the tradition by 2018.
Miles said his force of about 20 volunteers was insufficient to gather the required 117,578 signatures to place the measure on the ballot in November. As of Sunday, the group had collected about 1,000 signatures, Miles said.
“We have our sights set on next year,” Miles said.
“I had to look at it realistically, as much as I would have loved to have it on the ballot this year,” he added.
Miles said he plans to start a Go Fund Me page to raise money to hire paid petitioners next year.
The community service officer with Jackson County Sheriff’s Office said he started the initiative after feeling tired of complaining every year about losing sleep and adjusting clocks and deciding he should do something about it.
Adjusting the clock forward in the spring may cause spikes in workplace accidents and traffic crashes, according to multiple bodies of research, including one by the University of Colorado.
A University of California Berkeley study found that a two-month extension of daylight-saving time in Australia during the Sydney Olympic Games in 2000 failed to curtail electricity demand.
Lawmakers in several states, including California, have proposed alternatives to daylight saving changes or asked that voters decide on whether to keep the practice.
“What I would really like to see the country say is enough is enough and end daylight saving nationally,” Miles said.
He said if more states opt to abolish the practice, there may be more momentum for a national change.
Oregon Sen. Kim Thatcher, R-Keizer, introduced a bill in January 2015 that would have let voters to decide whether to abolish daylight saving in 2021.
Dozens of Oregonians testified in favor of the measure.
The legislation stalled in the Senate Rules Committee because some lawmakers were concerned about being out of sync with Washington and California, according to Thatcher’s office.
The country had an on-and-off-again relationship with daylight-saving time until 1966 when Congress codified it to try to simplify a confusing patchwork of different time zones across the country. Individual states were allowed to opt out. Arizona, Hawaii and some U.S. territories have chosen to remain on standard time.
The No More Daylight Saving Time in Oregon initiative was the first that Miles sponsored.
“I’m not upset it didn’t get on the ballot,” he said. “I learned a lot. I understand that some of my goals were unrealistic. It’ll give me more of an ability to be successful next time.”
In the meantime, he maintains a Facebook page where he’ll give supporters updates on the effort.
https://www.facebook.com/nomoredstinoregon/