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Changement d'heure 2026: Quebec's Annual Time Change Debate Heats Up as Clocks Spring Forward

News ✍️ Marc Leblanc 🕒 2026-03-07 07:21 🔥 Views: 2
A close-up of a clock face, symbolizing the upcoming time change

If you're like me and you've lived through a few Montreal winters, you know the drill: just when you've gotten used to the darkness at 4:30 p.m., here comes the changement d'heure 2026 to mess with your internal clock again. Tomorrow morning—Sunday, March 8, at 2 a.m.—we officially spring forward. That means one less hour of sleep, but also the glorious return of evening sunlight. And, as always, it reignites the same old question: why are we still doing this?

Walk into any depanneur this weekend and you'll hear the grumbling. Quebec has been flirting with the idea of scrapping the twice-a-year switch for years, but like a bad habit, we just can't seem to quit it. Across the country, British Columbia passed legislation back in 2019 to stay on daylight time permanently—but they're waiting for Washington, Oregon and California to do the same before pulling the trigger. Ontario and Quebec have both floated similar ideas, but without coordination with our neighbours (and especially the U.S.), we're stuck in time-change limbo. So for now, at least, we keep turning the clocks.

Time, of course, isn't just about the clock on your microwave. It's also a measure of how we're doing as a species. Back in January, the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists updated the Doomsday Clock, and let's just say it wasn't good news. The hands now stand at 89 seconds to midnight—the closest they've ever been—thanks to climate change, nuclear tensions and the general state of the world. It's a stark reminder that while we quibble over an hour of daylight, bigger time-related threats loom.

On a lighter note, time also frames our cultural moments. The same week the Doomsday Clock was adjusted, Montreal photographers braved the cold for the Photowalk Montréal - 24 janvier 2026. Armed with cameras, they fanned out through the Plateau and Old Montreal to capture the low winter sun—a perfect example of how we chase light during the darkest months. And if you're more into stage lighting, the touring production of Les Misérables has been drawing crowds at Place des Arts. It's a show literally about time—set against decades of French history—and it makes you grateful we no longer live in 19th-century Paris, where the only time change was between revolution and repose.

Sports fans will remember that the 2026 Rose Bowl kicked off the year on January 1 with a classic college football showdown. Out in Pasadena, the sun was shining, and for a few hours we could pretend winter was almost over. Meanwhile, in the music world, Atlanta rapper Gunna dropped a surprise single last month that's been on heavy rotation in my headphones during those long commutes home. His flow is all about living on his own schedule—something we could all use a little more of when the clocks betray us.

So what do you need to know for the changement d'heure 2026?

  • When to change: Before bed Saturday night, move your clocks ahead one hour. (Your phone will do it for you, but the oven and car? That's on you.)
  • Why it still exists: Originally a wartime measure to save fuel, it's now a perennial debate between those who love long summer evenings and those who hate dark March mornings.
  • One upside: It's a great reminder to change the batteries in your smoke detectors. Public safety messages come free with your lost hour.

Will 2026 be the year Quebec finally breaks free from the time-change cycle? Don't bet on it. But as we spring forward, at least we can look forward to patio season creeping closer. And if you're feeling the loss of that 60 minutes, just remember: the extra sunlight is nature's way of apologizing. Now, if you'll excuse me, I need to go find the instruction manual for my stove.