Having people adjust their schedules is absolutely the saner option, but it's likely an infeasible coordination problem. Daycare depends on work, work depends on daycare, and a zillion other interdependencies. The friction against change is really high. Compare that to the coordination problem of having everyone (essentially) keep doing what they're doing, but adjusting the clock. You can impose a clock change, but you can't impose a schedule change.
It's the difference between
- Your office deciding to ignore daylight savings (starting November 1st, ending March 8, we expect employees to reschedule all recurring meetings/work hours/events to an hour earlier, changing 9-5 to 8-4). I can just imagine the shitshow of complaining and bikeshedding.
- Your state asking or requiring offices to change schedules like above. I can't see asking working, and I can't see requiring being a feasible law.
- Your state just saying that 2am is now 1am for a few months.
It's all the same thing from one perspective, but very different from a coordination perspective :(
You don't need to impose a schedule change. People work all sorts of odd hours already. Just stop imposing a schedule change twice a year and people would happily work out any adjustments to hours. Those that truly need to adjust hours for sunlight will do so.
The EU is already planning to do this. The sky will not fall, and life will continue on but without the awkward twice-yearly clock change.
It's the difference between
- Your office deciding to ignore daylight savings (starting November 1st, ending March 8, we expect employees to reschedule all recurring meetings/work hours/events to an hour earlier, changing 9-5 to 8-4). I can just imagine the shitshow of complaining and bikeshedding.
- Your state asking or requiring offices to change schedules like above. I can't see asking working, and I can't see requiring being a feasible law.
- Your state just saying that 2am is now 1am for a few months.
It's all the same thing from one perspective, but very different from a coordination perspective :(