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On September 24, 2020, Yukon switched to the Mountain Standard Time year-round. Therefore, clocks in Yukon and Alberta are the same in the winter, and Alberta is one hour ahead in summer. Previously, the territory had used the Pacific Time Zone with daylight saving time: UTC−8 in winter and UTC−7 in summer.
Lloydminster and surrounding area (the municipal government chose to unify the entire city with Alberta's time zone) Mountain Standard Time (MST) UTC−07:00 year-round: Yukon; British Columbia, northeastern Northern Rockies Regional Municipality [20] most of Peace River Regional District (except Fort Ware), including Dawson Creek
The city of Lloydminster, which is bisected by the Saskatchewan–Alberta boundary, and its immediate surrounding region observe Mountain Time year-round, with officially sanctioned daylight saving time, which in the summer is synchronized with the rest of Saskatchewan. That is to keep clocks on the Saskatchewan side in synchronization with ...
UTC−07:00 – Mountain Time zone: most of Idaho, part of Oregon, and the Mountain states plus western parts of some adjacent states UTC−06:00 – Central Time zone: a large area spanning from the Gulf Coast to the Great Lakes
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The Milton Study (Earl R.V. Milton – A submission to the Government of Saskatchewan regarding time zones in Saskatchewan, 1966) a) concluded that Saskatchewan is in the Mountain Standard Time Zone, and b) suggested that the three prairie provinces (Alberta, Saskatchewan and Manitoba) covered too much area to share a single time zone. [1]
This can affect how commercial broadcasters schedule their programming outside of Eastern, Central, and Pacific Time areas: the Atlantic and Mountain time zones are one hour ahead of the U.S. stations historically carried on television providers in their respective markets (such as Boston in Atlantic Canada, and Spokane in Alberta), meaning ...
Yukon Standard Time is the informal name of a time zone established in 2020 and used in the territory of Yukon in Canada. "Yukon Standard Time" is more formally referred to as year-round Mountain Standard Time (MST) but unlike other Mountain Time (MT, or MST/MDT) regions it does not observe daylight saving time, giving it a year-round calculation by subtracting seven hours from Coordinated ...