As fall rolls in and Halloween decorations start popping up in yards and stores, we are just under a month away from falling back and changing our clocks to get one more hour of sleep and less ...
As fall seems to have maybe actually really arrived in central Ohio, daylight hours are getting noticeably shorter. But when will we start leaving work in the dark? Here's what to know about the end ...
Every autumn, the same ritual plays out. Michiana residents, like most of the United States except for Hawaii, Puerto Rico and most of Arizona, "fall back" by setting our clocks an hour earlier, ...
As the fall season nears, you will notice days becoming shorter and nights longer, signaling the end of daylight saving time. The time changes twice a year — once in the spring and once in the fall — ...
Daylight saving time will end for 2025 on the first Sunday of November, when clocks "fall back" one hour. Despite ongoing debate in Congress, a decision to permanently end the time change has not been ...
The practice of changing clocks is intended to maximize natural daylight during the summer months. The time change has become controversial due to potential negative health impacts and disruptions to ...
Daylight saving time will end for 2025 in the first week of November, when clocks will "fall back" one hour. Congress has not yet passed legislation to make daylight saving time permanent, despite ...
Daylight saving time ends on the first Sunday in November each year. This year, we fall back on Nov. 2. The clocks change again on March 8, 2026, marking the start of daylight saving time. Ohio ...