Have your say on the future of local councils
Residents, businesses and other stakeholders across Cambridgeshire and Peterborough are being asked for their views on the future of local government.
Restrictions to opening times on Sundays are under the Sunday Trading Act 1994 Act (external link) confined to large shops (defined under the Act as those having an internal sales area of over 280 square metres), which may open for six hours between 10:00am and 18:00pm and are required to remain closed on Easter Sunday. Small shops are not covered by these restrictions and can open freely. The Sunday Trading Act also includes specific measures to protect the rights of shop workers who do not wish to work on Sunday.
Apart from the restrictions mentioned above it is left to individual owners to determine their opening hours in the light of customer demand.
The Regulatory Reform (Sunday Trading) Order 2004 removed the requirement for large shops to notify local authorities of their Sunday trading hours or of any changes. Large shops limited to trading for a maximum of six hours between 10:00am and 18:00pm on Sundays must display these hours inside and outside the premises.
Shops that are subject to planning restrictions that prevent them trading on a Sunday must still comply with those restrictions.
The Christmas Day (Trading) Act 2004 (external link) prohibits large shops from opening on Christmas Day.
The Sunday Trading Act 1994 requires large shops - those where the relevant floor area exceeds 280 square metres to close on Easter Sunday.
There are certain exemptions to the 280 rule:
The Sunday Trading Act 1994 contains provisions for the protection of staff. These provisions are not enforced by the Local Authority but are the jurisdiction of an Industrial Tribunal with the exception of the original provisions of the Shops Act 1950 relating to time off in respect of Sunday working.