February is more than halfway through. And despite what that groundhog said — or the recent bout of snow many areas have received — there’s a hint of spring as the sun stays out a little bit longer.
Is it time to stop changing our clocks twice a year? Here's a state-by-state look at efforts to make daylight saving time ...
By it, we mean the twice-annual time change, and the one coming up in a few weeks is the tough one, when almost every ...
Daylight saving time occurs between March and November, when most Americans adjust their clocks ahead by one hour.
Daylight saving time causes clocks to shift an hour forward. Beginning the second Sunday in March, an extra hour of daylight ...
Most of the U.S. begins daylight saving time on the second Sunday in March and reverts back to standard time on the first ...
A state senator introduced a bill to adopt standard time year-round in Texas. In the state house, a constitutional amendment would keep DST.
Several members of the Texas House and Senate have filed legislation meant to put an end to the seasonal tradition of losing ...
Hunt Legislative Bill 34, introduced by State Sen. Megan Hunt of Omaha, would signal Nebraska’s support for a year-round daylight saving time, the time system that now jumps one hour forward ...
Two state lawmakers have filed bills that would officially “lock the clock” by making daylight saving time permanent. This would end the decades-long practice of Illinois residents setting ...