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by anikom15 1323 days ago
I’m not sure what the culture is in Sweden but in America most kids get to school on their own, usually by walking. Also kids are off for the shortest days, so if they live at a high latitude they’ll only see maybe a couple weeks where they have to walk in the dark. Sure schools could start later, but it seems simpler to just get rid of DST, and if you shift start times by one hour you’re offsetting the hour head-start you were getting from DST.
2 comments

Sorry for responding so late. It's fall break here and I've been with the kids this week. - And coming home after sunset. :)

anikom15 used Russia as an example of high-latitude. Most of the US is below the 49th parallel. That's about where Paris is. Very little of Russia is below the 49th.

I'm at 58 degrees north, about level with Juneau, Alaska.

So I don't think the people in the lower 48 live in what anikom15 regards as "high-latitudes." Certainly I don't think that.

For another example to think of, Iceland uses UTC, although it's west enough that they are about 1 hour ahead of mean solar time.

> in America most kids get to school on their own, usually by walking.

Citation needed. I don't believe that is remotely true from my own experiences or kids experience.