Daylight saving time begins this weekend in Canada.
That means time will “spring forward” on Sunday, March 9 and we’ll lose an hour of sleep.
Clocks “spring forward” on Sunday, March 9.
The clocks “spring forward” Sunday, March 9 as we enter daylight saving time in Canada.
Dreamstime photoDaylight saving time begins this weekend in Canada.
That means time will “spring forward” on Sunday, March 9 and we’ll lose an hour of sleep.
At 2 a.m., our clocks will move forward to 3 a.m.
The general idea of adjusting time twice a year is to allow for better use of natural light, both in winter and summer. However, there’s been a lot of chatter over the years about scrapping the practice.
Ontario passed a law in 2020 to stop observing daylight saving time — however, nothing has happened with that because the Ontario plan is dependent on Quebec and New York state also scrapping the practice.
There are areas of Canada that don’t observe daylight saving time. Saskatchewan and Yukon don’t observe it, and certain communities in several provinces, including in northwestern Ontario, also skip the twice-yearly time change.
Also, not all countries make the time change on the same dates. Canada’s spring-forward and fall-back dates coincide with those of the United States.
Canada, as a nation, first began using daylight saving time in 1918 during the First World War. Canada, the United States and much of Europe picked up the practice shortly after the Germans started it.
The German government needed ways to conserve energy for battle and needed its citizens to reduce the use of electric light and conserve fossil fuels, according to . The idea was that by pushing clocks forward by an hour in the spring, it gave people more daylight hours during working hours and then people would also use less energy to light their homes.
In Canada, the idea was that daylight saving time could help increase production during the war.
After the First World War, Canada dropped the practice, but then brought it back during the Second World War.
While Canada as a nation started utilizing daylight saving time in 1918, the first instance of it happening in Canada is said to have happened a decade earlier.
According to , Port Arthur, now Thunder Bay, turned its clocks forward by an hour on July 1, 1908, and turned them back on Sept. 1, 1908, but the community did not continue the practice in successive years.
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