Matters concerning the Welsh language should be
dealt with in Cardiff Bay, according to the
Presbyterian Church of Wales, which has voiced its
support for the proposed Legislative Competency
Order (LCO) which will transfer the right to
legislate on the language from Westminster to the
Welsh Assembly Government.
But in a statement to the consultation on the LCO,
the Church’s Church and Society Department stresses
that obtaining the LCO should be the priority at the
moment, and that focus on its use should be reserved
until it has received Wesminster’s seal of approval.
“There’s no two ways about it: laws concerning the
Welsh language should be made in Wales, not London,
“ said Reverend Glyn Tudwal Jones, Clerk of the
Church and Society Department. “But we’re concerned
that the amount of detail included in the
consultation could complicate the process of
actually getting the LCO and distract attention from
this basic principle.”
“Having said that, we support the idea of making
some bodies to provide an equal service in both
Welsh and English and we also back the intention of
appointing a Language Commissioner and giving the
Welsh language official status.”
“The Presbyterian Church of Wales is run on a wholly
bilignual basis,” said Reverend Ifan Roberts, the
Church’s General Secretary. “Our members, who belong
to either Welsh- or English-speaking churches,
receive information and resources in the language of
their choice. If a relatively small charity like us
can provide a full bilingual service in a simple and
cost-effecitve manner, then I believe that large
organisations which provide a public service should
be able to do so too.”
“But we Welsh speakers must make use of the services
presently provided in Welsh and speak Welsh whenever
possible.”