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Cost of Irish-language Act at £2 million per year according to new figures from Conradh na Gaeilge

Plé-Cháipéis ar Acht Gaeilge ó ThuaidhAdditional, once-off, cost of £9 million needed over five years to create the basic infrastructure to support legislation

Irish-language organisation Conradh na Gaeilge have launched new figures as part of a pdfdiscussion document explaining proposed costs associated with the introduction of an Irish-language Act. The document includes a breakdown of the different sections that would be involved in an Irish language Act, with an explanation of these sections, and particular proposals that are workable to implement them.

11 sections are proposed as part of an Irish language Act, including provisions which concern the Official status of the language; Irish in the Assembly; in Local Government; Irish and the BBC; Irish in the Department of Education as well as the role of a Language Commissioner and Placenames.

Costs for the different sections can be surmised in two parts:

  • One off costs to bring in an Irish-language act - £8.5 - £9million over 5 years
  • Annual implementation cost – £2million per annum
  • The total cost over the initial 5 years would be £19million – equivalent of £3.8million per year over a 5-year lifespan of an Executive

Dr Niall Comer, President of Conradh na Gaeilge says:

“It is our aim that this discussion-document will inform people on what an Irish-language Act involves; what proposals we are making; why we need the provisions we are recommending and what the best ways to implement those provisions are. Already, 5 parties alongside a majority 50 of the 90 newly-elected MLAs support protective legislation for the Irish-language in the form of an Act. We are calling on the parties now to come together and support these proposals, and to implement Irish-language legislation, as recently recommended by both the Council of Europe and the United Nations, and as was promised over ten years ago in the St Andrew’s Agreement.”

Julian de Spáinn, General Secretary, Conradh na Gaeilge, says:

“The Irish-language Act is now at the top of the parties’ agendas during current negotiations. We are confident that we can overcome this challenge and that the rights of the Irish-language community will finally be delivered. We believe that this document presents a realistic and deliverable framework that will meet the basic legitimate expectations of the Irish-language community.”

“These figures also challenge and falsify many of the unsubstantiated figures that have been presented to the media by certain parties recently. According to our own research, the annual cost of an Act would be £2million with a one-off implementation cost of £9million over 5 years – which is the overall equivalent of £3.8million per annum for the initial 5 years. We believe these to be reasonable costs that are based on practical proposals, especially if the Act is implemented properly and willingly. More importantly, these proposals represent an investment in the economy and the people of the North in general and it is estimated that there would be an additional £8million of income for the economy if the BBC fully fulfilled its obligations to Irish-language programming.”

 

 

 

Conradh na Gaeilge

6 Harcourt Street, Dublin 2.
Phone: +353 (0) 1 475 7401, Fax: +353 (0) 1 475 7844, Email: This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.