There is public support for a switch to permanent daylight time in British Columbia and Ontario, which have passed laws to allow the change, but the potential costs and risks of going it alone are holding up the move, say business and political experts. Prof. Andrey Pavlov at Simon Fraser University’s Beedie school of business in Burnaby, B.C., is among those who support making the change permanent. “I just worry if we’re the only ones who do it, that’s going to hurt us,” he added. Only Yukon and most of Saskatchewan observe permanent daylight time and won’t change their clocks with the rest of Canada early Sunday. B.C. outlined a plan to switch permanently in 2019, but the legislation did not set a date because the province is waiting for Washington, Oregon and California to also approve the change. Premier John Horgan’s government introduced the legislation after a public survey …