Er, by "waking up to the light" do you mean "increasing egg production"?
If your issue is that you're not seeing increased egg production, then my first question would be, have they molted or are they starting to molt? If they are going into, in the midst of, or coming out of a molt, then no they will not be laying much if at all. Light won't change that, you have to wait for the molt to finish.
Another possible explanation is you've added light too late in the year, if it's only been on for a few weeks. You can try bumping it up to 16 hrs (from 14) and see if that helps any but no guarantees at all. If you are serious about keeping up egg production, you need to start adding light when natural day length falls below 13-14 hrs (which may be in August or September, depending where you live)
And mind you, what counts is day length *in the coop* -- dark-painted or poorly-windowed coops, or coops in very dim shaded locations, may give the chickens an effective daylength that is markedly shorter than time-between-sunup-and-sundown.
Even if you are doing the exact same thing with lights that you did last year, all of the above still applies. Reason being, pullets in their first year of laying often experience much less winter 'dip' than older hens do. In fact for some production lines/breeds you may see little if ANY reduction in winter laying the first winter, even with no supplemental lights and even here north of Toronto
But it changes when they get older.
If on the other hand you just mean that the chickens are not getting off the roost when your light comes on in the morning, I dunno, does it matter? The light has the same effect on reproductive hormones whether or not they're sitting there or down bopping around.
Good luck, have fun,
Pat