It appears that Alberta’s United Conservative Party government is expected to permanently make the switch to daylight saving time.
Government sources have confirmed to Global News that making the move permanent will be part of an omnibus bill that will be tabled in the Alberta Legislature later this week.
The confirmation comes after Premier Danielle Smith said in an interview with Postmedia that the move to daylight saving time this spring was the last time clocks in Alberta would be changed, meaning the clocks will not be falling back an hour in the fall, nor will they be moved ahead an hour next spring.
The legislation to make the move permanent would still need to be voted on in the Legislature, but judging by Smith’s comments to Postmedia, it appears that is just a formality.
Going forward, this means Alberta (which observes Mountain time) would be on the same time as Saskatchewan (which observes central standard time) year-round. .
Alberta clocks would also be an hour later than British Columbia (which is on Pacific time), where the switch to daylight saving time was already made permanent when B.C. residents moved their clocks forward an hour on March 8, 2026.
The move also comes five years after Albertans voted in a province-wide referendum, by the narrowest of margins — 50.2 per cent to 49.8 per cent — to reject the idea of moving permanently to daylight saving time.
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However, following B.C.’s decision to make the switch permanent this spring, Premier Smith said her government would once again consider abandoning the practice of changing clocks twice per year.
The province traditionally “springs forward” on the second Sunday in March and “falls back” on the first Sunday in November.
However, according to the Pew Research Center, only about a third of the world’s countries follow daylight saving time. The vast majority of them are in Europe.
A survey by the provincial government in 1991 also showed that 91 per cent of surveyed Albertans were in favour of moving permanently to daylight saving time.
The former NDP government also explored doing away with daylight time in 2017, but did not go ahead in part over concerns about the impact on airline schedules and starting times for NHL games.
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