Ottawa Now - Is splitting up with Daylight Savings Time a riskier gamble than sticking with it? | Page 886 | Unpublished
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Publication Date: March 3, 2026 - 18:25

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Ottawa Now - Is splitting up with Daylight Savings Time a riskier gamble than sticking with it?

March 3, 2026

Parts of Canada will be ‘springing forward’ this coming Sunday, but it will be the final time that British Columbia will observe the time change. Once November rolls around, they won’t be moving their clocks 60 minutes backwards. They’ve officially broken up with Daylight Savings Time, and will share the same time zone as the Yukon Territories. Now, this also means that B.C. will be one hour behind Washington State, Oregon, and California once Winter arrives. However, Eby is hoping that their American neighbours will eventually join the movement. So what about here in Ontario? Recent movements have valiantly tried to exterminate Daylight Savings Time, but the province says they would only consider a ban if New York and Quebec do the same. Kristy Cameron examines both sides of the debate with Rebecca Robillard on today’s Ottawa Now. She is the Co-Chair of the Canadian Sleep Research Consortium, and she also directs clinical sleep research at UOttawa’s Institute of Mental Health.



Unpublished Newswire

 
WASHINGTON, D.C. — Spring may be right around the corner, but there has been no thawing in Canada-U.S. relations. Over the past year, Canadian patriotism has soared amid Donald Trump’s “51st state” rhetoric and his references to Prime Minister Mark Carney as the future governor of Canada. So it’s unsurprising that folks have had their elbows up about travelling south of the border. Last year, Canadian return trips to the United States were down 25.4 per cent from 2024, while overseas trips rose by just over 9 per cent, according to Statistics Canada. The biggest hits were to border...
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