Auckland Chamber of Comm.: Allow Easter Trading
20 November 2009
Media
Release
Auckland Chamber of Commerce head Michael
Barnett today called on all Parties in Parliament to put
aside political differences and unite to pass legislation to
allow any shop across New Zealand wanting to trade over
Easter to do so.
“It is crazy that current laws
allow shops in Queenstown and Taupo to open on Easter Sunday
but nearby Rotorua and many other cities and towns
cannot”.
“It is stupid that in some cities and
towns garden centres can open over Easter but hardware
stores cannot”.
“And it doesn’t make sense that
in some cities and towns such as Wanaka one part of a
shopping centre is exempt from Easter trading laws while the
rest of the town cannot trade,” said Mr Barnett.
He
said the Chamber of Commerce urged all Members of Parliament
to give “the strongest possible support” to the Easter
Trading Bill of Rotorua MP Todd McClay drawn from the
Members Ballot in Parliament yesterday.
Parliament has
made 9 attempts to amend the Easter trading laws since the
Act came into force in 1990, and each time the situation has
been made more confusing and contradictory.
This issue
is about freedom of choice, equality and the right of people
– shop owners and staff, regular customers and tourists -
to decide for themselves what they want to do on Easter
Sunday.
“If someone wants to work or shop over
Easter – as at any other time – then it should be their
decision”.
He called on all MPs to exercise their
conscience by applying some common sense logic to support
the right of choice when people can shop, and sweep away the
huge inequalities in the current laws.
Easter trading
is a conscience issue in Parliament and therefore MPs have a
free vote when deciding to support Mr McClay’s
Bill.
ENDS