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Sunday Trading laws srapped during Olympics
// Chancellor George Osborne will risk a row with Church leaders in this week’s Budget by announcing plans to scrap Sunday trading laws for the summer.
The move – timed to coincide with the Olympics and Paralympics – means that large shops in England and Wales will be allowed to open around the clock for an eight-week period starting 22nd July. //
http://www.dailymail....x-rules-Olympics.html
Should this be permanent? Are the sunday trading rules archaic?
The move – timed to coincide with the Olympics and Paralympics – means that large shops in England and Wales will be allowed to open around the clock for an eight-week period starting 22nd July. //
http://www.dailymail....x-rules-Olympics.html
Should this be permanent? Are the sunday trading rules archaic?
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.I'd like to keep an official day of rest please. Shops first, then they'll want you in the office on a Sunday. Sunday is the only day I don't feel guilty relaxing on. A time when you know most people aren't working, you can visit family and things. I'd like to keep the tradition - and the laws. Visitors here can chill or walk about on the Sunday like we do, rather than having to spend spend spend and fulfil the capitalist dream. The tories are only doing it for their friends.
I have no opinion on sunday opening times but this relax in the law has been put in place because the official Olympic shops fell foul of it. Either they comply with the law or the change it permanently, just because it interferes with what they wany doesn't make it right to scrap it temporarily. Talk about 'do as I say, not do as I do'.
I think that the large stores should close all day Sunday, if people do not have enough time to shop six days of the week, tough.
Nothing to do with religion, just setting one day out of seven as a 'special' day, a day when all the family can be together.
At one time shops were not only closed on a Sunday but also half day on Wednesday, we managed quite adequately then.
Apart from all this, think of the small corner shop, they would lose that convenience Sunday trade, the only day that they get one over the huge greedy supermarket conglomerates`.
Nothing to do with religion, just setting one day out of seven as a 'special' day, a day when all the family can be together.
At one time shops were not only closed on a Sunday but also half day on Wednesday, we managed quite adequately then.
Apart from all this, think of the small corner shop, they would lose that convenience Sunday trade, the only day that they get one over the huge greedy supermarket conglomerates`.
I'm all for it if it will generate additional revenue and maybe jobs and boost the economy.
Not everyone has a family around them to have a family day on a Sunday why not let those who want to work or shop and boost the economy while they are at it. In the current climate it may present an opportunity for those who need a job or extra money find more potential to work around other commitments such as care of children or dependents or studying.
Not everyone has a family around them to have a family day on a Sunday why not let those who want to work or shop and boost the economy while they are at it. In the current climate it may present an opportunity for those who need a job or extra money find more potential to work around other commitments such as care of children or dependents or studying.
I think some of the silly restrictions need to be changed. Our local co-op is open until 10pm on a Sunday but after 5pm they have to close of a certain number of isles -usually the ones with the useful items in. I've never understood what the point of that is. Either tell them to close or let them be fully open, not half open.
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