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Design work on Irish language station signs halted due to potential legal action

01 Apr 2025 5 minute read
A view of Grand Central Station in Belfast. David Young/PA Wire

Design work on Irish language signs at Belfast’s Grand Central Station has stopped due to “potential legal action”, Translink has said.,

Stormont Infrastructure Minister Liz Kimmins gave the go-ahead for the signage last week, but it has led to a row among Stormont Executive ministers.

Deputy First Minister Emma Little-Pengelly said Ms Kimmins had a “legal duty” to bring the decision to the Executive.

DUP ministers have written to the Infrastructure Minister asking how the decision was made.

They have also said they will bring up the row at Thursday’s Executive meeting.

Judicial review

Meanwhile, loyalist activist Jamie Bryson from the Unionist Voice Policy Studies (UVPS) group is attempting to secure a judicial review in the High Court in Belfast against the Department for Infrastructure, stating the decision was taken “without Executive approval”.

Ms Kimmins has said the inclusion of Irish on signs at the station would be a “hugely positive development”.

A Translink spokesperson said: “Design work to include the Irish language on physical signage and on ticket vending machines at Belfast Grand Central Station has now stopped pending potential legal action.

“The options to include Irish language on ticket vending machines would need to be further explored with the supplier.

“The options could include adding this to the current offering or making a substitute”.

Powersharing

The Department for Infrastructure said the decision to install the signs was taken directly by Ms Kimmins, and not by Translink, the publicly funded transport operator which owns the £340 million station.

Under Stormont rules, ministerial decisions that are deemed significant or controversial should be considered collectively by the powersharing coalition, rather than by an individual minister.

However, within the Executive it is ultimately the responsibility of Sinn Fein First Minister Michelle O’Neill and DUP deputy First Minister Emma Little-Pengelly to jointly decide what issues are significant or controversial and should be subject to a wider vote.

Ms Little-Pengelly told the BBC Good Morning Ulster programme that her concern was the cost of replacing signs that are “virtually new”.

She added: “The minister appears to have announced over the course of the last week that she is going to pull those out and replace those at a cost to the taxpayer of £120,000.

“I think there is genuine concern. This is a legitimate question to ask, why on earth would we be doing this at this time?”

Questions

The deputy First Minister continued: “Any controversial or significant issue ought to be brought to the Executive.

“The minister has not done that so we have asked questions about what is the nature of this decision, we will be asking those questions as to why she has not brought that to the Executive.

“The key issue is to get that information and to ask the minister what she is doing.

“If it is an issue which is controversial or significant she has that legal duty under the legislation to bring that matter to the Executive.

“First of all it is about making that absolutely clear to the minister.

“The minister then has a decision to make about bringing that.

“That decision is not rightfully taken, it is not a decision that she can take alone, she would need to bring that to the Executive, that is the stage we are at.

“All controversial and significant matters have to be brought to the Executive for Executive agreement. That is the law. The minister should want to abide by the law.”

Ms Little-Pengelly added: “To be putting new signs into a building and then ripping them out a few months later to replace them on a particular agenda to me does not constitute value for money, it doesn’t constitute good decision-making.”

Ulster Unionist minister Mike Nesbitt said the cost of replacing the signage was an issue for him.

He said: “Could you imagine if I decided I wanted tri-lingual language on every building that delivered healthcare, whether it was hospitals, GP surgeries, social care venues?

“That would cost, I would imagine, tens and tens of millions of pounds while people are stuck on waiting lists for year after year.

“I am looking forward to discussing it with Executive colleagues on Thursday morning.”

He added: “One of the first questions I want to ask is why has this issue come to the fore so late in the day?

“Why did a previous minister not sort it out during the construction phase of Grand Central Station?”

Disappointment

Grand Central Station has been billed as the largest integrated transport hub on the island of Ireland, with services including trains between Belfast and Dublin.

When the station opened last year disappointment was expressed by the Irish language community that the signage did not incorporate Irish.

Speaking at Westminster, Hilary Benn said: “That is a matter for the minister and the department in discussion with Translink, but look my view is we should celebrate and respect all languages and all traditions in Northern Ireland.”

“It’s a matter in the end for the Infrastructure department and the Executive to sort out.

“But I repeat, we should respect all the languages and all traditions, because that’s the way in which Northern Ireland will continue to progress.”


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Evan Aled Bayton
Evan Aled Bayton
1 month ago

Perhaps the signage should be in Latin and Old English? Probably they would argue about the order of signs. It reminds me of when I was in outpatients I think in Ysbyty Gwynedd. There were signs for the ENT and Ophthalmology departments which read Otorhinolaryngology and Ophthalmology then the two very long Welsh equivalents and finally underneath, presumably in Scouse, Eye and Ear.

Gareth
Gareth
1 month ago

I assume the loyalists missed the memo about diversity and inclusivity!

Gareth
Gareth
1 month ago
Reply to  Gareth

Hello Gareth, you have the same user name as me.
Not seen you on here before. Croeso.

Last edited 1 month ago by Gareth
Gareth Cemlyn Jones
Gareth Cemlyn Jones
1 month ago
Reply to  Gareth

I have posted a few times but not with this user name!

Bryce
Bryce
1 month ago

If taxpayer value for money is the basis for legal action then perhaps someone could challenge the tens of billions being spaffed on refurbishing the Palace of Westminster when the cheapest option is to move central government to portacabins in Coventry and put the Palace on eBay.

Kurt Morgan
Kurt Morgan
1 month ago

Discrimination by Ulster Scots Loyalists against the Irish Language and therefore Irish people. This stinks to high hell! I hope the legal challenge is throw out and the Far right DUP learn to keep their mouths shut, at least.

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