The main issue I see is that of kids' primary school schedules: they already have to get up so ridiculously early; having to be in school when the sun isn't even up yet is brutal. But that seems to be the case in some places regardless of whether or not we do a DST change.
And of course there are plenty of people who don't have my (our) flexible schedule and lack of commute. It does suck to have to drive to work in the morning when it's dark, or come home in the evening without any daylight left to enjoy. But, again, this is going to be the case for many people even with a DST change.
I'd also pretty much be fine with year-round standard time at this point but the time shift just isn't really on my radar.
Imagine if instead the school changed the start time a few minutes each week in order to maintain a fixed offset with sunrise.
Bonus points because you don't force an abrupt change to circadian rhythm that takes two weeks to adjust.
Of course the problem is that many parents are stuck in jobs that expect fixed start times too...
you've 180° misunderstood DST, the sole purpose of which is to give you an extra hour in bed in the winter