The leap second happens world wide in UTC at 23:59:60. Since all time zones 
follow UTC,
it is whatever time that is offset from UTC. Otherwise, the offset would no 
longer be fixed,
but variable for a few hours. While there isn’t a standard for this, I believe 
it follows trivially
from the definition of timezones.

I’ve never seen any jurisdiction that’s done it differently ever. That’s just 
the sort of thing that
people would bring up arguing against leap seconds because it would be insanely 
stupid to
do this.

I’m also pretty sure that a local time zone isn’t a local time scale in the 
strictest sense of
time scale. Again, I don’t have a reference to site for this.

Warner

> On Feb 5, 2015, at 2:37 PM, Stephen Scott <stephensc...@videotron.ca> wrote:
> 
> Hello Kevin.
> 
> The information specifying that for Japan the next Leap Second will be 
> applied Wednesday, July 1, at 9:00. is interesting in that this is the first 
> official policy on when the Leap second shall be applied to a local 
> timescale. Maybe I have been looking in teh wrong places. 
> This is a local decision for a local time.
>  I am not aware of any international standards that touch the subject.
> I would be interested in learning about other jurisdictions that may have 
> published a policy.
> 
> Stephen Scott
>  
> On 2015-02-05 09:35, Kevin Birth wrote:
>> Wednesday, July 1, at 9:00.
> 
> 
> 
>       
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