Texas legislators look to give voters final decision on Daylight Saving Time

Texas lawyers introduced two bills to the state Senate that would allow Texans to vote on whether to keep or eliminate daylight savings.

Texas Sen. Paul Bettencourt, a Republican, filed both the Senate Bill 2329 and Senate Joint Resolution 86 on March 10.

This illustration photo shows a clock in the background of a smartphone showing the time after daylight saving time was implemented in Los Angeles, California, on March 15, 2022. (CHRIS DELMAS/AFP via Getty Images)

The bill reads that, if approved, “this state shall observe daylight saving time year-round. This subsection applies to both the portion of this state using Central Standard Time as the official standard time and the portion of this state using mountain standard time as the official standard time.”

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If the act is approved by the Senate, the decision to abolish daylight savings time would be put into the hands of Texas voters on Nov. 7, 2023.

Companion bills authored by State House Representative Mike Schofield were also introduced.

Neither Schofield nor Bettencourt could be reached for comment on Sunday.

Daylight saving time.  Clock with spring blooms

Daylight saving time. Clock with spring blooms (iStock)

FOX 26 in Houston reported that Bettencourt spoke on the importance and timeliness of the bill.

DAYLIGHT SAVING TIME: THERE MUST BE A LAW

“When you think of hot-button public policy issues, what usually comes to mind are things such as property tax relief and school finance and pension reform. However, the issue of Daylight Saving Time has roused passions on both sides of the debate for over 100 years,” Bettencourt said. “Texans like me want to be on one time, and the Federal government doesn’t give us the option to vote to remain on standard time. SJR 86 gives Texans the opportunity to vote on the issue and settle the debate once and for all in the Lone Star State.”

In March 2022, the US Senate unanimously passed the Sunshine Protection Act, which was introduced by Sen. Marco Rubio, R-Fla. The act would have ended the practice of springing the clocks forward in the spring and falling back an hour in the fall.

Although the bill passed the Senate, then House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif, never put the legislation up for a vote.

Earlier this month, Rubio reintroduced the Sunshine Protection Act.

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“This ritual of changing time twice a year is stupid,” he said in a press release. “Locking the clock has overwhelming bipartisan and popular support. This Congress, I hope that we can finally get this done.”

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