On 2018-02-17 14:22, John M. Harris, Jr. wrote:
On February 17, 2018 4:15:47 PM EST, Steve Jones wrote:>> On Thu, Feb 15, 2018 at 7:09 AM, Frank Vance wrote:>> http://wfla.com/2018/02/14/florida-house-oks-bill-asking-to-skip-daylight-sa...
“The [Florida] House voted 103-11 to approve the bill to ask Congress to let Florida remain in Daylight Saving Time all year, meaning while the rest of the Eastern United States sets their clocks back in the fall, Florida wouldn’t.” So, if I understand this, the portion of the panhandle currently in the Central time zone would be permanently on CDT (=EST), while the remainder of the state would be on permanent EDT (=AST)?> That essentially adds a brand new border all the way around the state of Florida, which would involve being an hour out of sync with every foreign neighbor (e.g. the Bahamas & Cuba, as well as with every US State and Canadian Province in the Central and Eastern time zones. So during standard time, if traveling from Miami to Nassau, you'd actually go BACK an hour.> This sounds certain to cause great confusion, not to mention the disruption of commerce. I wonder what the odds are that the US Feds will approve it. I would question disruption to commerce, but it would definitely cause confusion. Given AZ, HI, PR, VI have no DST, PR and VI are on AST, the DoC may not be able to block it if the state wants it, it may encourage the few other Caribbean nations who still use it to drop it, and some to switch to AST.
-- Take care. Thanks, Brian Inglis, Calgary, Alberta, Canada