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The End of Daylight Saving in BC: What This Weekend's Clock Change Means for You

Regional News ✍️ James Miller 🕒 2026-03-08 01:12 🔥 Views: 2

Clock spring forward

If you're in British Columbia, get set to lose an hour of sleep this weekend—but here's the catch: you might never have to do it again. While most of Canada winds its clocks forward on Sunday, March 8, BC is officially calling it quits on the twice-yearly time change ritual. After this weekend's shift to daylight saving, the province will keep those long summer evenings for good, joining Saskatchewan in the "no-more-switching" club—just on the opposite side of the dial.

BC's Permanent Spring Forward

The decision, years in the making, finally locks BC into permanent daylight saving time. That means after Sunday, the clocks won't go back in November. You'll still get that extra hour of evening sun through the winter, but mornings will stay darker for longer. It's a move that's stirred plenty of debate—just ask any local, and they'll tell you whether we've nailed the right permanent time or backed the wrong horse. Saskatchewan, after all, has stuck with standard time year-round for decades, and some argue that's the healthier, more natural option. But the province has made its call, and this weekend marks the final spring forward for BC residents.

What About the Rest of Canada and the US?

For everyone else east of the Rockies, the twice-yearly shuffle isn't over yet. Alberta, Ontario, Quebec—they'll still be resetting alarms and microwaves twice a year. And while daylight saving time in the United States has been a hot topic—with the Sunshine Protection Act bouncing around Congress—nothing's changed nationwide. A few states have passed bills to go permanent, but they're stuck waiting for federal approval. So for now, most North Americans will keep springing forward and falling back, at least for a while longer.

Books to Help You Rethink Time

All this talk about shifting hours and frozen clocks got me thinking about how we experience time—and what happens when we imagine it differently. Lately, I've been dipping into a few novels that play with time in ways that stay with you long after you turn the last page.

  • If He Had Been with Me by Laura Nowlin: A heart-wrenching story about friendship, love, and the "what ifs" that haunt us. It's the kind of book that makes you wonder how different things might be if time had taken another turn.
  • Heart Bones by Colleen Hoover: Set over one transformative summer, this one's about the moments that define us and the people who walk into our lives just when we need them—proof that time can heal, even when it feels broken.
  • The Four Winds by Kristin Hannah: A Dust Bowl epic that follows a woman's fight for survival through the toughest years of the Great Depression. It's a powerful reminder of how time tests us, and how we endure.

These stories might not help you adjust your circadian rhythm, but they'll give you something to think about while you're waiting for that coffee to kick in on Monday morning.

One Last Reminder

So tonight, before you head to bed, put those clocks forward one hour. If you're in BC, take a moment to appreciate the ritual—it's the last time you'll do it. And if you're anywhere else, well, at least you've got some good reading material to get you through the groggy days ahead.