Holyrood staff to be taught Gaelic: 2 press reports
Posted: Fri Jul 09, 2010 11:47 am
From the Herald yesterday - the SENSIBLE report:
Holyrood staff to be taught Gaelic
http://www.heraldscotland.com/news/poli ... -1.1039905
This will be of interest to some on here, I'm sure:
From the Daily Record - the STUPID version:
http://www.dailyrecord.co.uk/news/scott ... -22399799/
This is literally what gives Gaelic 'a bad press'.
See the comments too. One sensible one:
Holyrood staff to be taught Gaelic
http://www.heraldscotland.com/news/poli ... -1.1039905
Our Arthur as usal has something sensible to say, and the emphasis is on using creative but cheap methods to maximise the visibility and confidence of Gaelic.Gaels have long complained that they don’t get the best reception from Scottish officialdom.
Now, at least, that reception will be in their own tongue.
The Scottish Government yesterday announced that the front-of-house staff in its buildings – its receptionists and commissionaires – are to be taught a smattering of Gaelic.
Culture and External Affairs Minister Fiona Hyslop yesterday said the move, along with a range of other measures, were “about increasing the visibility of the language in everyday life and motivating people to learn and use it”.
The Government, as part of a Gaelic Plan published yesterday, has also promised to put up bilingual “welcome” signs in all its foyers by August and to include a Gaelic-language logo on all its emails, business cards and letterheads by June of next year.
This will be of interest to some on here, I'm sure:

*****************************************************************************************The Scottish Government, for example, has pledged to reply in Gaelic to letters and emails sent to it in the language.
From the Daily Record - the STUPID version:

http://www.dailyrecord.co.uk/news/scott ... -22399799/
Scottish Govermnet to spend £26m on tr*nsl*t*ng road signs into Gaelic
Jul 9 2010
The snp have unveiled plans to spend £26million tr*nsl*t*ng road signs into Gaelic.
The Scottish Government will also adopt a bilingual logo with staff forced to take Gaelic training.
And secondary school pupils will be persuaded to take up classes instead of a foreign language.
The plan has been devised over five years following a request from quango Bord na Gaidhlig.
But Tory Ted Brocklebank said: "It's not for the government to go on a crusade to take Gaelic into every area of Scotland. Let's save it in the Highlands.
This is literally what gives Gaelic 'a bad press'.



See the comments too. One sensible one:
dimairt wrote:
Wrong, wrong and wrong again. £25m is to be spent on the language not road signs. Road signs will be bi-lingual when they are to be replaced and only where it is appropriate.
Staff are not being "forced to take Gaelic training", some front-of -house staff at the Parliament are to learn some basic greetings.
Gaelic is for Scotland not just the Highlands - the fastest growing school in Glasgow is our Gaelic school.
But hey, this is the Record - let's not allow facts to get in the way of a "story."