Israel ‘Springs Forward’ To Daylight Saving Time

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hebrew-clockDaylight savings time went into effect across Israel early this morning, turning 2 a.m. instantly into 3 a.m.

The period of extended daylight hours will last until October 25, after the Yomim Noraim of 5776 have ended.

The Palestinian Authority will move its clocks forward on Shabbos.

Jordan and Syria ushered in daylight savings time at midnight early this morning, two hours earlier than Israel.

Most European states will do so only on March 29.

To preempt mix-ups, mobile phone companies sent users text messages days ahead of the clock change urging them to manually reset the time on their smartphones rather than rely on automatic updates.

In September 2013, confusion ensued after the state decided to substantially move back the end of daylight savings time.

Some phones and computers programmed to automatically move the clocks back stuck to the old schedule, changing the time more than a month before the change officially went into effect.

The “phantom change” caused mass confusion among many as phones, computers and automatic scheduling applications went out of whack.

A number of Israelis reported being late to work and their children late to school.

In 2013, the Knesset passed legislation extending daylight savings time from the last Sunday in March to the last Sunday in October. Before that, standard time would begin the Saturday night before Yom Kippur, so that the day’s fast, which is pegged to nightfall, would seemingly end an hour earlier.

Because the Hebrew calendar is lunar, Yom Kippur can fall between mid-September and mid-October, which used to mean that Israelis returned to standard time as much as a month and a half before most other countries, where daylight savings time ends on November 1.

As a result, the issue of the seasonal time transition became contentious among Israelis, and was caught up in political tensions between religious and secular politicians.

Religious parties generally pushed for the early time change to ease the Yom Kippur fast, which lasts from sundown to sundown, and some secular activists protested that the change was unnecessarily inconvenient and expensive. They pointed to a relatively early loss of daylight hours and a resultant rise in electricity bills, as well as a greater number of car accidents as people who would otherwise drive home from work in daylight were forced to drive in darkness.

Read more: The Times of Israel

{Matzav.com Israel}


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