Applying for an exemption from the ban on working on Sundays and public holidays
Description
As an employer, you require a permit from the local authority responsible for occupational health and safety if you wish to work on a Sunday or public holiday. You can apply for a permit to work on Sundays or public holidays for
- holding in-house and order fairs for commercial resellers.
- Preventing disproportionate damage to a business due to special circumstances, such as a very high sickness rate or late delivery of materials.
- the statutory stocktaking, if this cannot be carried out on a weekday.
If there are other reasons, these will also be examined and work on Sundays or public holidays will be approved if necessary.
The general ban on working on Sundays and public holidays does not apply to activities that serve to meet the particularly prominent needs of the population, such as
- Services of general interest (for example in the care of the sick or the care of animals),
- services (for example in restaurants or cab companies) and
- Leisure activities (for example in theaters, soccer or leisure facilities)
- Use in emergencies and exceptional cases (work that cannot be postponed, such as repairs to burst pipes or storm damage to roofs).
Maximum limits apply for certain exceptions.
- You are an employer.
- You have admissible reasons for your application for approval.
- Statement from the staff or works council (if available)
- Proof that disproportionate damage would occur (e.g. information on contractual penalties, loss of orders and customers, loss of jobs)
- Damage as a result of the special circumstances is any financial disadvantage that the employer would suffer as a result of the special circumstances. However, not every impending loss is sufficient; it must rather be disproportionate (unacceptable or unreasonable) and go beyond the economic losses that are already caused by the general shutdown on Sundays and public holidays. Concrete, numerical proof is required here.
Both the granting and the refusal to grant an exemption from the ban on working on Sundays and public holidays is subject to a fee. The amount of the fees is based on the fee schedule of the locally competent authority.
Fee: 25,00 - 435,00 EURPayment in advance: nohttps://landesrecht.sachsen-anhalt.de/perma?j=GebO_ST_%21_1
There is no deadline.
Application Deadline: 4 DaysYou should submit the application at least 4 working days before the Sundays and public holidays.
- Objection
- An appeal against the decision can be lodged with the local authority responsible for occupational health and safety within one month of notification.
- An unsuccessful appeal is subject to a fee.
You can lodge an appeal against the decision within one month.
Please contact the State Office for Consumer Protection.
If you run a business that is subject to mining supervision, please contact the State Office for Geology and Mining (LAGB).
You can apply for a permit to work on Sundays and public holidays from your local health and safety authority. The following steps are necessary:
- You submit an application to the competent authority and submit all other required documents.
- If the documents or information required for processing are incomplete, you will be contacted by the processing department.
- If the requirements for approval are met, you will receive a notice of approval, otherwise a notice of rejection.
Federal Ministry of Labor and Social Affairs (BMAS)
;Ministry of Labor, Social Affairs, Health and Equality of the State of Saxony-Anhalt
01.09.2022
The text was automatically translated based on the German content.
06130 Halle (Saale), Stadt
06112 Halle (Saale), Stadt
Remark: The head office is located in Halle (Saale). The addresses of the individual locations can be found on the website of the State Office for Consumer Protection.