INDIANA, USA — It's almost time to turn back the clocks for daylight saving time. However, some states have taken steps toward making daylight saving time permanent. Here's where Indiana stands.
On Sunday, Nov. 2, Americans will get an extra hour of sleep when clocks "fall back" an hour at 2 a.m.
Only two U.S. states, Arizona and Hawaii, don't observe daylight saving time at all, refusing to roll their clocks forward and backward every year. This is thanks to a loophole in a 58-year-old federal law that requires states to stay on daylight saving time.
For the rest of the U.S., however, Congress decides whether or not states must observe daylight saving time.
The Uniform Time Act of 1966 mandates the use of daylight saving time across the country, but allows states to opt out and exem

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