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B.C. adopts permanent daylight time starting March 8.
Summary
British Columbia will permanently adopt daylight time starting March 8, ending the twice-yearly clock changes; the government said residents and businesses will have eight months to prepare for the usual November change in 2026.
Content
British Columbia will stop changing its clocks after March 8, the provincial government announced. Premier David Eby said the province will permanently adopt daylight time, to be called "Pacific Time" or PT. The March 8 switch will be the last "spring forward," and the November 1 "fall back" will not occur. Officials cited disruptions to families and businesses and referenced a 2019 public consultation in which 93 percent of respondents supported ending the twice-yearly change.
Key details:
- The permanent change begins on Sunday, March 8; the usual November 1 clock rollback will not occur.
- The province says the new time zone will be called "Pacific Time" (PT).
- Government references include a 2019 public consultation that reported 93 percent support for ending the seasonal time change.
- B.C. passed a bill in 2019 to end the change but had conditioned implementation on neighbouring jurisdictions doing the same; Ontario passed a similar measure in 2020 but has not ended the practice as of the report.
- The government said people and businesses will have eight months to prepare for November 1, 2026, when clocks would normally turn back.
Summary:
The provincial decision ends the twice-yearly clock changes in British Columbia and is framed as a step to reduce disruptions for families and businesses. Officials also noted hopes that neighbouring U.S. jurisdictions will adopt similar changes. Residents and businesses were told they have eight months to prepare before the next scheduled November change in 2026.
