Through 2006, the local time (PST, UTC−08:00) changed to daylight time (PDT, UTC−07:00) at 02:00 LST (local standard time) to 03:00 LDT (local daylight time) on the first Sunday in April, and returned at 02:00 LDT to 01:00 LST on the last Sunday in October. The
United States Congress passed the
Energy Policy Act of 2005, which moved the local time changes from PST to PDT to the second Sunday in March and the reversal from PDT to PST to the first Sunday in November. Several Mexican states, including Baja California, implemented the new dates for the daylight time changes in 2010, ending a three-year period during which cities across the
Mexico–United States border had a one-hour difference for two months a year. Baja California remains the only state in Mexico to fully observe daylight saving time. Proposals to abolish the bi-annual time change and adopt year-round standard time or daylight time gained popularity among U.S. states in the 2010s. 59 percent of voters in California approved a
2018 ballot proposition that authorizes the legislature to use year-round daylight saving time, pending Congressional approval. The
Washington State Legislature passed a bill in May 2019 that would move the state to permanent daylight time, subject to Congressional approval; the
Oregon Legislative Assembly passed a similar bill a month later, while California's attempt failed. The provincial government of British Columbia announced in 2019 that they would follow the U.S. states in whether the time changes were kept or removed to maintain a unified time zone. In 2020, Idaho passed legislation to allow for permanent daylight time for the Pacific Time Zone. Congressional approval was sought through the
Sunshine Protection Act, which was submitted several times and passed by the
U.S. Senate in 2022, but its equivalent in the
House of Representatives failed to pass. In March 2026, British Columbia announced it would not wait for the U.S. Congress and would adopt daylight saving time (UTC−07:00) year-round first, now named
Pacific Time by the provincial government. ==See also==