Time springs forward early this year

March 6, 2007
The Department of Transportation (DOT) is reminding everyone that springing forward an hour this year begins at 2 am Sunday, March 11, three weeks earlier than in recent years

The Department of Transportation (DOT) is reminding everyone that springing forward an hour this year begins at 2 am Sunday, March 11, three weeks earlier than in recent years. The change is a result of legislation enacted by Congress in 2005.

Beginning this year, daylight saving time will start the second Sunday of March and end the first Sunday of November. This year's daylight saving time will run from March 11 to November 4. Then it will be time to fall back (time wise) an hour.

DOT points out that federal law does not require any area to observe daylight saving time. But if a state chooses to observe daylight saving time, it must follow the starting and ending dates set by the law. In those parts of the country that do not observe daylight time, no resetting of clocks is required. Those states and territories include Arizona, Hawaii, Puerto Rico, the Virgin Islands, American Samoa, Guam, and the Northern Marianas.

Daylight saving time is a change in the standard time of each time zone. Time zones were first used in the United States in 1883 by the railroads to standardize their schedules. In 1918, Congress made the railroad zones official under federal law and assigned the responsibility for any changes that might be needed to the Interstate Commerce Commission. In the Uniform Time Act of 1966, Congress established uniform dates for daylight saving time and transferred responsibility for the time laws to DOT.