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I think it's THIS weekend!
ttt
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It is.....
and BOOOO and HISSSS to the person that thought it was ok to TAKE an hour away |
Bad enough I don't get enough sleep normally, now I'm losing another hour. :mad:
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I'm SOOOO glad that it happens this weekend, I'll be at work! :D
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Boo HISS @ the time change. At least I'm on Spring Break this week. No students for 5 days! Great times.
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I was at a party last night and we were all staring at our Sprint phones waiting for the time to change. LOL.
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REMINDER:
Fall BACK Saturday Night/ Sunday Morning! :D |
Change the batteries in your smoke alarms/ carbon monoxide detectors as well.!!
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friendly reminder
Spring Up this weekend! :D
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It is that time already. Thanks for the reminder AKA2D. :)
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HC we forgot to send my cousin to girl scouts THIS (Monday) evening because we STILL can't get it together over here at my aunt's house? We were straight Sunday, but somehow, someway, the time change gets my fam EVERY time.
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I think the any time change should happen on Sat. so we have 2 days to adjust
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ttt
ETA Instructions: Fall Back |
As of 2007, Daylight Savings Time will be extended. This has nothing to do with this year, of course, but here's a tidbit of information in case you didn't know.
This year and next year, daylight-saving time begins for most of the United States at 2 a.m. on the first Sunday of April. Clocks are turned back an hour at 2 a.m. on the last Sunday of October. Under the 2005 Energy Bill, beginning in 2007 daylight-saving time is extended one month. It starts three weeks earlier and ends a week later. So it would begin for most of the U.S. on the second Sunday in March and end the first Sunday in November." |
Through the end of 2006, the United States starts its Daylight Savings Time on the first Sunday in April (April 2, 2006), and changes back to standard time on the last Sunday in October. Beginning in 2007, it will start Daylight Savings Time on the second Sunday in March, and change back to standard time on the first Sunday in November. Under Section 110 of the Energy Policy Act of 2005, the U.S. Department of Energy is required to study the impact of the daylight saving extension no later than nine months after the change takes effect. Congress has retained the right to revert back to the daylight saving schedule set in 1986 if it cannot be shown that there are significant energy savings from an extension of daylight saving time.
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