
Bäckerverband sees in the new Sunday regulation an “important signal” – but mini-job reform clouds joy
Home Consumer Bakers Association sees in the new Sunday regulation an “important signal” – but mini-job reform clouds joy Stand: 08.07.2026, 19:48 clock
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Summary
An employee cleans mixed bread into the display of a bakery. (Symbol photo) © Jan Woitas/dpa Concretely, the government is planning an extension of § 10 of the Working Time Act: Instead of three hours as before, bakeries should be allowed to employ their staff on Sundays and public holidays up to eight hours in the future. Whether bakeries are allowed to sell longer on Sundays is still in the hands of the federal states – since 2006, they regulate the shop closure independently.
Cross-referenced from 2 sources.
Factual coreconfirmed by several independent voices
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Reported detailssecondary facts, each attributed to its source
An employee cleans mixed bread into the display of a bakery. (Symbol photo) © Jan Woitas/dpa Concretely, the government is planning an extension of § 10 of the Working Time Act: Instead of three hours as before, bakeries should be allowed to employ their staff on Sundays and public holidays up to eight hours in the future.
according to Frankfurter Rundschau +1Whether bakeries are allowed to sell longer on Sundays is still in the hands of the federal states – since 2006, they regulate the shop closure independently.
according to Frankfurter Rundschau +1
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Framing by sidesame fact, different words — loaded terms highlighted
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