This should provide some more grist for understanding the reality of
civil time.  This happens pretty often somewhere in the world.

A DOT final ruling on Indiana came out today, affecting time zones
starting April 2, 2006:
 http://www.dot.gov/affairs/dot0406.htm

> Under the Uniform Time Act of 1966, the Secretary of Transportation
> has the authority to set time-zone boundaries and must base
> decisions on the "convenience of commerce."
> ...
> After five months, 22 hours of public hearing testimony and more
> than 6,000 public comments, the U.S. Department of Transportation
> today announced a final rule that will change the clock for eight of
> 17 Indiana counties seeking to move to the Central time zone.
> ...
> Seventeen Indiana counties asked the Department last September to
> change from Eastern to Central time. On Oct. 25, the Department
> issued a notice proposing Knox, Perry, Pike, St. Joseph and Starke
> counties move from Eastern to Central time, and made no change to
> time zones in the remaining 12 counties.  ...

I heard about this from the time zone mailing list.  See e.g.
 http://www.twinsun.com/tz/tz-link.htm

Deborah Goldsmith writes to [EMAIL PROTECTED] about
it:

> Based on my reading of this document, only one zone in tzdata is
> affected, America/Indiana/Knox. That zone will start observing US
> Central Time starting April 2, 2006, at the time of the switchover
> to Daylight Savings Time. Probably the easiest thing to do is to
> change the last two lines as follows:

> From:
>                        -5:00   -       EST     2006
>                        -5:00   US      E%sT
> to:
>                        -5:00   -       EST     2006 Apr 2 2:00
>                        -5:00   US      C%sT

Will your computer's time zone databases be up-to-date then?

Cheers,

Neal McBurnett                 http://bcn.boulder.co.us/~neal/
Signed and/or sealed mail encouraged.  GPG/PGP Keyid: 2C9EBA60

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