Parliament Must Update Easter Trade Laws
Media release
Newmarket Business Association
Friday, 20 November 2009
The country’s
leading retailing district is supporting the Auckland
Chamber of Commerce’s call today for Parliament to fix the
annual Easter trading circus once and for all.
Reignited calls from Auckland’s Chamber of Commerce
and the Newmarket Business Association follow Parliament’s
drawing of Rotorua MP Todd McClay’s private members’
bill on Easter trading.
“Easter trading will
continue to be a headache if Parliament does not confront
the raft of outdated laws, anomalies, and historic
exemptions,” says Cameron Brewer, chief executive of the
Newmarket Business Association.
“This is not a
blanket liberalisation of shop trading hours as our surveys
show a lot retailers don’t actually want change. Rather,
this is about empowering local communities to make up their
own minds about opening on Easter Sunday.
“It’s
crazy that visitor destinations like Queenstown and Taupo
can trade, but Rotorua, Mt Maunganui and Wanaka can't and
desperately want to.
“Tourism New Zealand surveys
show shopping is a favourite leisure activity for tourists
visiting New Zealand. For popular destinations like Rotorua,
it’s a no-brainer.
“There also remain silly
anomalies that see the likes of Parnell being allowed to
trade on Easter Sunday because it has got an historic
exemption. What’s more it’s bizarre that since 2001
garden centres can open on Easter Sunday, but hardware
stores can’t.
“In 2007 the Department of Labour
conducted some extensive and costly consultation on Easter
trading, only for the previous Government to then do
nothing. In fact, Parliament has had nine attempts in nearly
20 years to amend the 1990 legislation. Political consensus
is well overdue. It’s time to sort out the annual Easter
circus once and for all,” says Cameron Brewer.
ENDS