Venue: Siambr Hywel Dda, Swyddfeydd y Cyngor, Caernarfon, Gwynedd. LL55 1SH
Contact: Ann Roberts 01286 679780
No. | Item |
---|---|
APOLOGIES To receive apologies for absence. Minutes: Councillors Craig ab Iago, Thomas G. Ellis, Alan Jones Evans, Gareth
Thomas and John Wyn Williams. |
|
DECLARATION OF PERSONAL INTEREST To receive any declaration of personal interest Minutes: No declarations of personal interest were
received from any members present. |
|
URGENT BUSINESS To note any items that are a matter of urgency in the view of the Chairman for consideration Minutes: None. |
|
The
Chairman shall propose that the minutes of the previous meetings of this
committee held on 13th October 2013 and 22nd November
2016 be signed as a true record. Additional documents: Minutes: The Chair signed the minutes of the previous meetings
of this committee, held on 13 October and 22 November 2016, as a true record. |
|
REPORT OF THE CABINET MEMBER - THE WELSH LANGUAGE To submit
the report of the Cabinet Member – The Welsh Language Minutes: Submitted – the verbal report of the Cabinet Member -
the Welsh Language, detailing recent developments in the field, including:- ·
A useful and
constructive meeting had been held with Alun Davies AC to discuss the Council's
Hunaniaith arrangements and the intention to develop
relevant schemes for Gwynedd. It was
acknowledged that Gwynedd's situation was very different. ·
It was intended to hold a seminar in May/June in Gwynedd that would offer
support to communities to promote the use of the Welsh language in their areas.
·
The second meeting of
the Hunaniaith Board had been held with the Language
Officers of other public bodies to discuss how they could contribute to our
strategy. The Board was expected to
adopt the new Welfare Plan and to make a commitment to the Welsh language. ·
The various local activities to promote Welsh across the county included
activities in Bangor and the good work of Y Popty. ·
Language Charter work
- a working group was holding meetings to discuss the progress of the work at
Secondary Schools. In response to a
comment that discussions were taking place in English at meetings held outside
the Council, it was reported that there was a project in the pipeline with
public services to try to get the services to normalise the Welsh language by
committing to the first contact always being in Welsh. RESOLVED to note the
content of the report. |
|
A PRESENTATION ON THE MAIN OBJECTIVES OF THE SECONDARY SECTOR LANGUAGE STRATEGY (DRAFT) To accept
the comments of the members of the Language Committee Minutes: The Area Education
Officer provided the background. It was
noted that Primary School children had been part of the Language Charter for
three years and the intention was to build upon this. The work of creating a strategy by 31
March 2017 was ongoing, and the strategy was to be implemented from 1 April
2017 onwards. Carys Lake, Leader of the
Ysgol Eifionydd Language
Centre, was welcomed to the meeting and it was explained that she had been
working on a commission to create the strategy jointly with the Education
Department. The Leader of the Ysgol Eifionydd Language Centre
presented the main objectives of the Secondary Language Strategy (draft) and
provided the local context to the work: •
Trywydd Report •
Welsh-Medium
Education Scrutiny Investigation Report •
Alun Charles
Report •
Strategic Plan
– Welsh in Education •
Gwynedd
Language Strategy 2014-2017 •
The Council’s
Strategic Plan It was noted that
all of the abovementioned reports stated that there was a need to ensure
progression of the work with the Welsh language from the Primary to the
Secondary. In terms of the
national context and to meet the “Million Welsh Speakers by 2050" target
and ensure that the Welsh language thrives there was a need to get all
stakeholders involved in the plan e.g. all the staff. The aim of the
Secondary Language Strategy was to promote social use of Welsh among children
and young people and to develop it as an effective medium for all aspects
of school life. It was noted that there were two elements to
this aim, namely the curriculum and social.
Experiences in lessons influenced the social element. The next step would
be to give a presentation to a working group of representatives from amongst Headteachers who had met twice to discuss the draft
aims. The following eight aims were
agreed upon:
i.
Leadership and
expectations
ii.
Ethos
iii.
The voice and
ownership of young people
iv.
Training requirements
v.
The role of the
Language Department and the School (guidance from the Language Department and
getting young people to study subjects through the medium of Welsh)
vi.
Curricular experiences
vii.
Bridge learners (turn learners into Welsh-speakers to enable them to learn
through Welsh)
viii.
The School and the
Community (link the school with businesses and the community) It was reported that
it was intended to use the above eight aims to set criteria to monitor paths of
progression. The criteria would ask for
evidence to prove achievement. It was
reported that work was ongoing in setting the criteria and the evidence
required and it was acknowledged that there was a need to be ambitious. It was noted that
Gwynedd Council led in this field and that the rest of Wales looked at what was
happening here in Gwynedd for guidance on the way forward. Additionally, it was noted that Council
Officers met regularly with Welsh Government to discuss the way forward. A member observed that the schools were not familiar or were not able to ... view the full minutes text for item 6. |
|
INVESTIGATION REPORT - VISIBILITY OF WELSH LANGUAGE IN GWYNEDD PDF 57 KB To submit
the report by the Chair of the Investigation Additional documents:
Minutes: Submitted - a report by the Strategic Planning
Manager, Performance and Projects on behalf of the Chair of the Investigation
as he was unable to attend the meeting. It
was explained that members of the investigation had concentrated on what the Council
was able to do and improve in terms of the visibility of the Welsh language in
Gwynedd e.g. procurement, and the Council's culture and ethos. The following fields were investigated: ·
The Council's
management of its own property and lands ·
The Council’s
procurement arrangements ·
Grant conditions and support the Council allocates ·
The degree of
influence the Council had on signs placed on roadsides ·
House and place names A
report was given on the support and the evidence received from Dr Rhian Hodges and
Dr Cynog Prys, University
of Wales, Bangor and Durk Gorter,
a Research Professor and an expert on the linguistic landscape field from
Ikerbasque.net, namely an organisation based in the Basque country. The
main point was noted, namely that there was a need to be proactive and not take
matters for granted. The Council should
normalise the use of the Welsh language first, it should be pro-active and
promote the Welsh language and be ambitious and push the boundaries. Draft
recommendations were submitted to the Cabinet Member and it was suggested that
there was an opportunity to share good practice with others and to consider
attracting income at the same time. It was reported that there were obvious matters within
the recommendations that could be linked in with Language Audit plans. The
Cabinet Member for the Welsh Language reported that he did not anticipate any
obstacles to implementing the recommendations and that work had commenced to
improve the visibility of the Welsh language by erecting Welsh language signs
in the Council's reception areas. The Cabinet Member for the Welsh Language expressed
his gratitude for the work undertaken by the members and the officers. RESOLVED to accept the recommendations of the investigation and to
submit them formally to the Cabinet Member. |
|
IMPLEMENTING THE WELSH LANGUAGE STANDARDS PDF 355 KB To present
the experience of preparing and implementing the Welsh Standard, the role of
the Welsh language Commissioner and arrangements to promote and encourage the
use of the Welsh language in response to the call for evidence 'Preparing for a
Welsh Language Bill’ by the Minister of the Welsh Language and Lifelong
Learning. Minutes: Submitted by the Welsh Language Services Manager - a
draft summary of Gwynedd Council's proposed response to the statement of the
Minister for Lifelong Learning and Welsh Language 'Preparing for the Welsh
Language Bill - Application for evidence'
It was explained that the First Minister and the
Minister for Lifelong Learning and Welsh Language had announced their intention
to consider amending the Welsh Language Bill 2011 as five years had passed
since it was first enshrined. The
intention was to introduce amendments to the Bill in order to achieve the
ambition of a million Welsh speakers by 2050. It
was reported that the Minister had asked three questions in his statement. It was reported that the Language Standards sought
to bring consistency across Wales, however the standards were onerous and open
to interpretation. The
Council's proposed responses were presented to the committee and members were
asked for their observations. The
Committee was grateful for the comprehensive report and it was observed that
the standards were acceptable as they were but they were not relevant to
Gwynedd Council. It was asked if the
Government had a timetable and whether it was intended to extend the bill to
banks, electricity companies, water etc.
It was noted that there was a need for the Standards. An observation was made that the Language
Board had an expertise in the field and offered support, however this had all
been lost with the emergence of the Commissioner's Office. The Welsh Language Services Manager was thanked for
the report and the member's important point that there was a need to press for
the expertise the Language Board possessed was noted. RESOLVED
to approve the contents of the report. |
|
To receive
an update from the Language Development Officer - Workplace Minutes: Submitted - the report of the Language Development
Officer summarising the findings of the Language Audit and offering further
action steps. The members were updated on the developments in the
four departments in question. It was
reported that it was intended to try to get the Departments to take
responsibility for the action plans. It was noted that ·
action plans were in
place for the Consultancy Department and the Adults, Health and Well-being
Department and there was a need to agree on the timetable. ·
a draft action plan
had been planned with the Economy and Community Department and it had been decided
to hold back until the findings of the Language Investigation were known. Nevertheless, it was noted that the Tourism
Service was working on improving the relationship with events organisers to
seek to influence events held in the County.
Additionally, it was noted that specific attention had been given to the
Leisure Service by re-establishing Welsh language improvement lessons among the
staff. ·
work with the
Regulatory Department would begin soon. ·
the Language Officer
sought to ensure the Department's ownership of the action plans. ·
communication plan
setting out guidelines on how to encourage staff to be more proactive and to
promote speaking Welsh at all times. ·
more staff had been
asking for the Welsh lanyards recently and staff had been asking for support to
create signs. Following a member's comment that a number of
non-Welsh speaking staff worked at the Recycling Centre, it was agreed that the
matter would be looked into. RESOLVED to note the
content of the report. |
|
LANGUAGE COMPLAINTS PDF 205 KB To receive
an update from the Language Development Officer - Workplace Minutes: Submitted – the report of the Welsh Language
Development Officer detailing the three latest language complaints to hand and
the responses. Following a discussion about the street signs, it was
reported that the policies would be considered and a report would be submitted
to the Welsh Language Committee during the next political year. RESOLVED to note the
content of the report. |