The clocks in most U.S. states jumped ahead by an hour over the weekend with the return of daylight saving time, meaning millions of people lost an hour of sleep. The time change will remain until November when standard time returns.
The bill would undo a law that passed the Legislature last year that'd require Oklahoma to adopt daylight saving time year-round if authorized.
Sen. Rick Scott and Rep. Vern Buchanan have filed bills - Sunshine Protection Act of 2025 - to make daylight saving time permanent across U.S.
On March 6, President Donald Trump said he had no immediate plans to change daylight saving time, saying it’s a “50-50 issue.”
The always-contentious issue of time change is raising questions about whether President Donald Trump could or would permanently end daylight saving time in the United States. In December he posted, "The Republican Party will use its best efforts to eliminate Daylight Saving Time,
Michigan has been observing daylight saving time each year since 1973, but one lawmaker wants to let voters decide if the practice should continue.
() - The Nevada Assembly Committee on Government Affairs heard a bill this week that would stop daylight saving time in the state. Assembly Bill 81 says Nevada would no longer have to move its clock forward on the second Sunday of March every year and back an hour on the first Sunday of every November.
Rep. Stephen Meeks of District 42 has proposed a bill with the goal to end daylight saving time reverting to standard time year around.
Researchers are discovering that "springing ahead" each March for daylight saving time is connected with serious negative health effects.
Daylight saving time in 2025, when clocks change by an hour, is starting tonight. Here's a look at when exactly we "spring forward."
Many people woke up Sunday morning, bleary-eyed, wondering why the day seemed to be so off before realizing daylight saving time 2025 had started. If you’re one of these people, perhaps you’re looking to be more vigilant of when the biannual practice occurs.
Arizonans, Hawaiians, and residents of several U.S. territories happily went about their days with no need to worry about a task that annoys most Americans; we didn't have to change our clocks to accommodate the annual switch to daylight saving time.