Clocks and countdowns set for ‘Juan Time’

Does the New Year come to your neighbor a few minutes ahead or late? How about welcoming 2012 at the exact same time?

The Department of Science and Technology is calling on the nation anew to synchronize watches and clocks with Philippine Standard Time (PST) so everybody greets 2012 at the same time.

Science Secretary Mario Montejo also appealed to organizers of public New Year countdown activities across the country, especially those that are broadcast, to carry time based on official timekeeping by the Philippine Atmospheric, Geophysical and Astronomical Services Administration (Pagasa).

The weather bureau, the country’s official timekeeper, displays the official time on its website www.weather.gov.ph. Pagasa uses a precise time system that consists of a rubidium atomic clock and a Global Positioning System.

“Let us synchronize our time pieces with the PST so that we will all celebrate at the same time the coming in of the New Year. We will be one nation using one standard time,” Montejo said in a year-end message.

Montejo’s call is part of DOST’s “Juan Time” project. The initiative aims to redefine the notoriously late “Filipino Time” by encouraging Filipinos to synchronize with PST and encourage timeliness.

The science department partnered with the local office of the Discovery Channel for the initiative.

The Department of Education adopted the campaign earlier this year and ordered all offices and schools to synchronize clocks with PST.

“The national launch of Juan Time paved the way for Filipinos to understand the value of time. This sociocultural initiative, where science is central, has made the public appreciate the existence of the PST—with the Pagasa as the country’s official time keeper,” said Montejo.

In 2012, Montejo said, DOST will pursue a five-point development plan aligned with the national development agenda.INQUIRER

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