Bill Text: IL HB2946 | 2021-2022 | 102nd General Assembly | Introduced


Bill Title: Amends the Time Standardization Act. Provides that daylight saving time shall be the year-round standard time of the entire State. Makes other changes. Effective immediately.

Spectrum: Partisan Bill (Democrat 1-0)

Status: (Introduced - Dead) 2021-03-27 - Rule 19(a) / Re-referred to Rules Committee [HB2946 Detail]

Download: Illinois-2021-HB2946-Introduced.html


102ND GENERAL ASSEMBLY
State of Illinois
2021 and 2022
HB2946

Introduced , by Rep. Bob Morgan

SYNOPSIS AS INTRODUCED:
5 ILCS 440/1 from Ch. 1, par. 3201

Amends the Time Standardization Act. Provides that daylight saving time shall be the year-round standard time of the entire State. Makes other changes. Effective immediately.
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A BILL FOR

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1 AN ACT concerning government.
2 Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois,
3represented in the General Assembly:
4 Section 5. The Time Standardization Act is amended by
5changing Section 1 as follows:
6 (5 ILCS 440/1) (from Ch. 1, par. 3201)
7 Sec. 1. Notwithstanding how time is advanced pursuant to
8the federal Uniform Time Act of 1966, 15 U.S.C. 260a, at At two
9o'clock ante meridian of the second Sunday in March of 2022
10each year, the standard time in this State shall be advanced
11one hour; and thereafter, daylight saving time shall be the
12year-round standard time of the entire State , and at two
13o'clock ante meridian of the first Sunday in November of each
14year the standard time in this State shall, by the retarding of
15one hour, be made to coincide with the mean astronomical time
16of the ninety degrees of longitude West from Greenwich, the
17standard official time of which is described as United States
18standard central time, so that between the second Sunday of
19March at two o'clock ante meridian in each year and the first
20Sunday in November at two o'clock ante meridian in each year
21the standard time in this State shall be one hour in advance of
22the United States standard central time: Provided, however,
23that nothing in this Act shall be so construed as to be in

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1contravention of any federal law or authorized order of the
2Interstate Commerce Commission with respect to the time zones
3of the United States. And in all laws, statutes, orders,
4judgments, rules and regulations relating to the time of
5performance of any act of any officer or department of this
6State, or of any county, township, city or town, municipal
7corporation, agency or instrumentality of the State, or school
8district or school authority or relating to the time in which
9any rights shall accrue or determine, or within which any act
10shall or shall not be performed by any person subject to the
11jurisdiction of the State, and in all the public schools and in
12all institutions of the State, or of any county, township,
13city or town, municipal corporation, agency or instrumentality
14of the State or school district or school authority, and in all
15contracts or choses in action made or to be performed in the
16State, it shall be understood and intended that the time shall
17be the time prescribed in this Section.
18 If the date on which time is to be advanced one hour, the
19date on which time is to be retarded one hour, or both, as set
20forth under Section 260a of the federal Uniform Time Act of
211966 (15 U.S.C. 260a), as now or hereafter amended,
22renumbered, or succeeded, differs from either or both of those
23dates as set forth under this Section, then the dates set forth
24under the federal law shall control and shall apply in
25Illinois, notwithstanding the dates set forth in this Section.
26(Source: P.A. 95-725, eff. 6-30-08.)

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1 Section 99. Effective date. This Act takes effect upon
2becoming law.
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