BC got rid of Daylight Savings

2026-03-1015:314031news.gov.bc.ca

‘Spring forward’ on March 8 will be the last time change, ending twice-yearly clock changes

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BC officially ends time changes and adopts single time zone (flickr.com)

For the majority of people in B.C. there are no immediate actions. Many clocks will automatically “spring forward” an hour as usual on Sunday, March 8, 2026. On Nov. 1, 2026, when previously clocks would have been turned back an hour, no change will be made, and the adjustment will not be required.

What this means for northern B.C. and the Kootenays

Parts of northern B.C. and the Kootenays currently observe different time practices than the rest of the province, in accordance with their local charters. This does not change that. Implications for them are as follows:

  • People in northeastern B.C. (Peace River region and the northern Rocky Mountains) who currently observe mountain standard time (UTC-7) year round will continue to do so.
  • In practice, this means they will align with the rest of B.C. in the Pacific time zone, though they are not required to adopt that specific label.
  • This includes:
    • Dawson Creek
    • Fort St. John
    • Fort Nelson (and the Northern Rockies Regional Municipality)
    • Chetwynd
    • Hudson's Hope
    • Taylor
    • Tumbler Ridge
    • Note: Fort Ware (Kwadacha Nation) is an exception, using Pacific Time. 
  • People in southeastern B.C. (East Kootenay and Golden region) currently switch between mountain standard time and mountain daylight time, in line with Alberta.
  • Under the new system, people in these regions will remain aligned with Alberta and continue to switch between UTC-7 in the winter and UTC-6 in the summer.
  • This includes:
    • Golden
    • Cranbrook
    • Fernie
    • Sparwood
    • Invermere
    • Kimberley
    • Radium Hot Springs
    • Elkford
  • Just as they can today, local governments will retain the power to determine what time zone they observe. They can choose to shift to permanent daylight time and Pacific time, along with the rest of B.C., if they prefer.

The B.C. Public Service acknowledges the territories of First Nations around B.C. and is grateful to carry out our work on these lands. We acknowledge the rights, interests, priorities, and concerns of all Indigenous Peoples - First Nations, Métis, and Inuit - respecting and acknowledging their distinct cultures, histories, rights, laws, and governments.


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Comments

  • By WalterGR 2026-03-1017:51

    Previously, 561 comments: "British Columbia is permanently adopting daylight time" https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=47223620

    Related, with 45 comments: "19 [US] States approved permanent daylight saving time" https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=47290037

  • By tobadzistsini 2026-03-1018:012 reply

    BC didn't get rid of it. Now it's permanent.

    • By cwillu 2026-03-1018:102 reply

      They got rid of the biannual clock change, which is obviously what they're talking about.

      • By kixiQu 2026-03-1018:202 reply

        "Daylight Saving Time" refers to adjusting the time in a way that noon does not try to track solar noon for a timezone in order to shift daylight later in the clock-day.

        • By verall 2026-03-1020:581 reply

          Tracking solar time would mean it's equivalently light out at 5AM and at 7PM. Nearly noone is awake at 5AM. Nearly everyone is awake at 7PM. You can wave your arms around and say "well then why don't people wake up earlier", but they have jobs and stuff. The "scientific evidence" for standard time is flimsy.

          • By 1718627440 2026-03-1112:39

            People did wake up at way earlier. Working hours have shifted past by a few hours during the last century, so it seems like people actually prefer that.

        • By gonzalohm 2026-03-1018:412 reply

          If we were trying to adjust the time to track the solar time, wouldn't we need to adjust the clocks every day as days get shorter/longer? I keep seeing this in every post discussing Daylight Savings. What's the obsession with tracking solar noon?

          • By hn_throwaway_99 2026-03-1019:22

            > If we were trying to adjust the time to track the solar time, wouldn't we need to adjust the clocks every day as days get shorter/longer?

            No (not within a min or two). When days get shorter, it's not like they just lose daylight in the evening.

          • By 1718627440 2026-03-1112:41

            > If we were trying to adjust the time to track the solar time,

            No, but

            > wouldn't we need to adjust the clocks every day as days get shorter/longer

            This is how hours used to work at least in Roman times, but I think also into the Medieval Ages.

    • By dghlsakjg 2026-03-1020:11

      That’s what the actual news release and title say if you read the article you are commenting on.

      Not sure why the title got changed for this post.

  • By _spduchamp 2026-03-1117:22

    Here is the petition for Canada to standardise on standard time.

    https://www.ourcommons.ca/petitions/en/Petition/Details?Peti...

    Health research supports staying with standard time. Staying with daylight savings may be good for business, but businesses can adjust, while our bodies can't.

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