The Special Commission on the Commonwealth's Time Zone will vote on November 1st on a final draft of a report recommending that Massachusetts move to the Atlantic Time Zone from the Eastern Time Zone:
A commission is studying the possibility of having Massachusetts join the Atlantic Time Zone, putting it permanently an hour ahead of its current Eastern slot.
That would mean later sunsets in the colder months, and would put the state on a zonal par with the likes of Newfoundland, Nova Scotia, and Bermuda rather than the rest of the eastern United States.
The 11-member commission submitted a draft report on the move in September, and will vote on a final one on November 1. If that gets a green-light, the recommendation will go to lawmakers—who may or may not pursue the move.
Maine and New Hampshire would likely join Massachusetts in switching to the Atlantic Time Zone.
2014 editorial on the benefits. Also at NBC.
(Score: 4, Interesting) by Aiwendil on Monday October 30 2017, @12:19AM (1 child)
Just like how it is when calling people today - you need to know their current rythm (I know lots of shift-workers).
Still instead of searching "time in alaska" you'd just search "workday in alaska" (most likely new concept to enter) and it will problaby answer with "ended X hours ago and will start in Y hours".
I'd take using a new word in search engines any day over the hassles that arises whenever (multiple) timezones and/or DST comes into play (most of europe went back to standard time yesterday)
(Score: 2, Insightful) by Anonymous Coward on Monday October 30 2017, @09:58AM
Time zones are one thing, and very useful, DST is another, and should be nuked from orbit. Of Proxima Centauri.