
Eastern Ontario residents support proposal for permanent daylight saving time
CTV
An American bill has been reintroduced to keep daylight saving time (DST) permanently; a change many Canadians say they would like to see.
As people prepare to move their clocks ahead one hour this weekend, it is a change that could soon become permanent.
An American bill has been reintroduced to keep daylight saving time (DST) permanently; a change many Canadians say they would like to see.
We "spring forward" at 2 a.m. on March 12, with clocks moving ahead one hour. Daylight saving time will end on Nov. 5.
First introduced as a temporary measure during the First World War to conserve energy, it was reintroduced during the Second World War and stuck around.
On a dairy farm near Athens, changing the clocks does not have much effect on the cows as it once did.
"We have an automated milking system so the cows get to basically make their own schedule and go when they want," says Eric Baumann of Wittekind Jersey Farm. "They are not on that cyclical nature of 12 hours and 12 hours like what we would have had in the tie stall."
"In the tie stall, the time change, when you came in an hour earlier, it was noticeable for a few days that the cows were freaked out a little bit," he added.