
The European Union bureaucracy has edged a step closer to a 7th Directive on summer-time arrangements. I have the text of a Common Position ((EC No 9/94) and a statement of the Council's reasons dated 4 March 94, reported in the Official Journal of the EC, No. C 137/38--41. Since I reported on the draft directive in March, 1998 has been removed from the scope of the 7th directive and the introduction of a common end date at the end of October has been brought forward to 1996 from 1997. No actual dates have changed. The dates again: Year Start End End (UK & Eire, 1995 only) (rule) (last Sun) (last Sun) (4th Sun) 1995 26 March 24 September 22 October 1996 31 March 27 October 1997 30 March 26 October In the statement of reasons it said the Council had rejected an amendment from the European Parliament relating to having a single timezone for the whole EU, noting that the Commission had said it was beyond the scope of the directive. It still looks unlikely to me that this idea, put forward in the UK from time to time, will ever come to pass. Normally each directive includes a provision that a new directive will be in place on 1 Jan of the last year covered by the preceeding one. This is always ignored, here we are in June and we still don't have the directive promised for January. This Common Position breaks new ground in that it tells the Commission to have proposals ready by 1 Jan 96, so a new directive can be adopted by 1 Jan 97. We will have to wait and see if this makes any difference. I think this is the final step before the directive is adopted but the Edinburgh EC Information Office could still give no guess as to when that might be. Peter Ilieve peter@memex.co.uk
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Peter Ilieve