I would prefer we stay on Daylight Savings Time with longer daylight hours in the evening. I think there are few, other than hunters and fishermen, who get up well before sunup and are outside. More people have things to do requiring sunlight after they get off work than before they go to work.
I agree. (Permanent Daylight Saving Time. This was actually proposed in FL, a while back, but I don't think it went anywhere.)
When I used to drive downtown, before the age of COVID teleworking, I found that the extra daylight in the AM was just wasted. I can drive to work in the dark as easily as I can in the light of dawn.
On the other hand (as you already said) there are things that could get done, after work, if there was one more hour of daylight.
What I find, now, is that I start looking around, wondering if it's time to go to bed, and then realize that it's only 8 PM. (It's already been dark for at least two hours, at this time of year.)
Edit - As I mentioned, I am now a permanent teleworker. Even after COVID goes away. Our management decided that they (as well as the people who we support) are happy with the job we are doing. (Not to mention all the $$$ they are saving on floor space in midtown. Right?)
That being the case (since I finish at ~3 PM, as always) I actually have two hours of daylight to get stuff done. You would think that it would help. But it doesn't. Not really.
2nd edit - We caught the Jupiter/Saturn convergence, too. Pretty cool. After this week, it will be a long while before it happens again. (Some people are describing a bunch of "astral energy"(?) associated with this. I don't necessarily subscribe to that, but it
is cool to look at.) I can appreciate how it may have been a significant/religious event, back in the day, but understanding the science of it tends to minimize that. (Has science made me cynical?)