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2006-07-19 09:15:17 · 4 answers · asked by booswig 1 in Politics & Government Government

Beginning in 2007, DST will start on the second Sunday in March, and change back to standard time on the first Sunday in November.

For example Canada, time is under provincial and territorial jurisdiction, not federal. The governments of Ontario, Manitoba, Quebec, Prince Edward Island, New Brunswick, Alberta, the Northwest Territories, British Columbia and Nova Scotia have so far pledged to change their DST rules to match the new U.S. rules.

2006-07-23 10:06:56 · update #1

4 answers

And will anyone really care if the do or not?

2006-07-19 09:20:21 · answer #1 · answered by tazinator5150 4 · 0 1

To the best of my knowledge there will be no changes, that is they'll continue using Daylight Savings Time in 2007.

2006-07-23 09:55:58 · answer #2 · answered by JayPue 2 · 0 0

No, you placed your clocks lower back one hour on Sunday, Nov. 4th or do it in the previous you bypass to mattress the evening in the previous. any further, DST time will initiate the 2d Sunday in March & will end on the 1st Sunday in November, as a results of capability coverage Act President George W. Bush signed in 2005.

2016-12-10 10:22:02 · answer #3 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

I doubt it, they don't follow the USA in anything else.

2006-07-25 10:41:38 · answer #4 · answered by CottonPatch 7 · 0 2

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