A barbershop is a good place to get the temperature of the locals. Like about this Sunday morningâs time change to daylight saving time.
Itâs not a scientific study but theyâll tell you what they know and what they believe to be correct â based on what their customers tell them.
Glen Chavez says of the 100-plus daily patrons who visit Trujilloâs Barbershop â just a five-minute walk from the Capitol in Cheyenne â the overwhelming majority want the semi-annual time change to stop.
But, it never does. Nothing ever happens, the barber laments.Â
âItâs kind of pathetic that our politicians wonât listen to us because we have wanted the time change to go away for how long now,â Chavez said. âAnd they wonât listen to us.â
He says a majority of his customers tell him they want it to stay lighter longer. Once daylight saving time is implemented, lock the clock.
Donât Move It Back
For Chavez and his colleague Rich Trujillo, something needs to be done so the clocks arenât moved back an hour in October. Pronto.
âDaylight saving time needs to be made permanent,â Chavez bellowed from across the barbershop, drowning out whatever Trujillo, a more soft-spoken barber, was attempting to say.
Donât Look To The Oval
For those looking for a presidential push to end the time change, think again.
Although President Trump was gung-ho about eliminating daylight saving time in December, he appears to have had a change of thought.
Trump told reporters on Thursday that heâs unlikely to get involved now.
âItâs a 50/50 issue, and if something is a 50/50 issue, itâs hard to get excited about it,â Trump said. âI assumed people would like to have more light later, but some people want to have more light earlier because they donât want to take their kids to school in the dark.â
âItâs something I can do, but a lot of people like it one way. A lot of people like it the other way,â he continued. âItâs very even. And usually I find when thatâs the case, what else do we have to do?â
Weeks Of Misery
News of Trumpâs decision to stand down disappointed Chavez, who immediately predicted weeks of misery ahead.
âIt takes me forever to get acclimated to it,â he said. âIâm dragging, Iâm lethargic, and Iâm like âhere we go again.ââ
Trujillo rolled his eyes while grinning at his colleagueâs exasperation.
The Sunshine Protection Act
There was movement to âlock the clockâ three years ago. The U.S. Senate passed the bill to make daylight saving time permanent by unanimous consent in 2022.
But the bill died because it was never heard in the House.
Both Wyoming Sens. John Barrasso and Cynthia Lummis supported the ill-fated bill.
One Other Barber
Marcus Gallizzi, the third barber in the shop late on Friday, said he actually âenjoysâ the time change and is an advocate for keeping things as they are.
âIâm looking forward to getting more sunshine and then I like that extra hour to sleep-in in the fall,â Gallizzi said. âI like it.â
Chavez just couldn't let that stand.
âHeâs just stirring things up,â Chavez yelled. âHe's doing it on purpose to get a rise out of me. Thereâs always gotta be one.â
Jimmy Orr can be reached at jimmy@cowboystatedaily.com.