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Union criticises Good Friday bill

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Sat, 23 Apr 2011 12:56p.m.

Most shops must remain closed on Good Friday and Easter Sunday (NZPA, file)

Most shops must remain closed on Good Friday and Easter Sunday (NZPA, file)

The retail workers' union has quickly scorned a planned parliamentary bill to allow shops to open on Good Friday.

"This is a complete time waster," National Distribution Union general secretary Robert Reid said today of National MP Tau Henare's member's bill.

Mr Henare told Radio New Zealand that if his bill was selected from the ballot he would not want it to be subject to a conscience vote - the main reason previous bills have failed.

Parties should instead have a serious think about their position on open trade, because banning trading hurts the country's productivity and reputation overseas, he said.

Most shops must remain closed on Good Friday and Easter Sunday or face a fine of up to $1000. Exemptions apply for convenience, souvenir and duty free stores, pharmacies and shops in premises where there are bona fide shows or exhibitions.

Mr Reid said eight bills since 1996 trying to liberalise Easter trading had failed through lack of support and he questioned why Parliament would want to make things worse for the country's 267,000-strong workforce.

"Our shopping laws are already among the most deregulated in the world. New Zealanders can shop on 361 and 1/2 days a year. We can shop on 51 of 52 Sundays of the year.

"Retail workers work unsociable hours in order to meet this demand. Most are required to be available on any of a shop's opening days, especially the busiest times of weekends and public holidays.

"It seems extraordinary that Parliament would want to dismantle one of our only laws that explicitly promotes the interests of family and community over the marketplace."

Mr Reid said retailer arguments that shop trading amendments were just about choice, and that retailers would not be forced to open, were highly dubious.

If one business opened on Good Friday its competitors would be forced to also open, meaning its workers would have to forgo a day off.

Easter was one of the few times that retail workers get to see family and friends and go to reunions, jubilees and other events, many of which were planned around Easter, he said.

Stores across the country yesterday flouted Easter trading laws by opening their doors.

All of Oderings' 10 stores nationwide opened yesterday.

"It's a bit like a victimless crime... If there wasn't the demand we wouldn't be open," said director Darryn Odering.

Garden Centres had been allowed to open any day they liked, until 1990 when they were left off the schedule which gave other shops, including video stores and service stations, the right to open, Mr Odering said.

The business had been fined every year since 1994 - last year a total of $13,500, he said.

NZPA

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Comments

26 Apr 2011 11:26a.m.

Rob wrote:

Keep the shops closed as they are now. The alternative is to forget the meaning of Easter and lets make it a normal work day... ie no holiday...

26 Apr 2011 12:22a.m.

keri wrote:

i work over the weekends so if this bill came to pass but they saying that you had a choice i won't get a choice i work at a pak n save and if they had the option of opening they would take it them closing on the friday and sunday gives all of my family members the chance to have dinners andn lunches together because we are all off it is only two days off pak n save still opens up on a saturday