logo
Newport City Council in drive Welsh speakers by 2050

Newport City Council in drive Welsh speakers by 2050

Yahoo13 hours ago
Newport City Council has released new information following their promise to promote the growth of the Welsh Language by 2050.
Newport City Council published a draft of their Welsh Language Annual Monitoring Report on June 30, which contained information on the popularity of the Welsh language in Newport between 2024 and 2025.
Demonstrating their commitment to keeping the language alive, the council aims to normalise the Welsh language in areas where it is less spoken. This is a continuation of their five-year strategy, implemented in 2022, to increase the number of Welsh speakers within the area by 2027. The council's eventual goal is the 'Cymraeg 2050' strategy, which aims for one million Welsh speakers across the country by 2050.
Data from the Annual Population Survey regarding the use of the Welsh language highlights Blaenau Gwent as the county with the lowest estimated number of Welsh speakers.
In 2022, when the council's five-year strategy was put in place, Blaenau Gwent had an estimate of 11,200 people able to speak the language. Now in 2025, this number has decreased to around 9,500 Welsh speakers within the county.
Despite this statistic, Blaenau Gwent Council states that it "remains fully committed to the Welsh Government's Cymraeg 2050 vision".
The council plans on "working closely with neighbouring authorities to strengthen regional provision and continue to promote Welsh language use across our workforce and communities".
Newport City Council's strategies aim to meet the requirements of the Welsh language legislation; to ensure that both the Welsh and English languages are equally endorsed. The council has a wide outreach to Welsh organisations and schools also committed to the survival of the language. Newport City Council have decided not to comment further outside of their published report, which aims to normalise the language instead of outdate it.
The intention to provide bilingual services throughout the city aims to integrate the Welsh language into everyday life. The council has been developing the 'Cymraeg Gwaith'/'Work Welsh' programme for Welsh language skills to be built upon within the workplace, working with Menter Iaith Casnewydd and Coleg Gwent to encourage these changes.
Administering Welsh language lessons in local schools as well as providing 'Welsh for Adults' schemes, the council has focused on working with Welsh services throughout the county to better support the growth of Newport's Welsh speakers.
By encouraging a community effort towards a thriving Welsh language, Newport City Council is determined to provide opportunities for people of all ages to learn Welsh. Looking ahead to 2026, the report encourages increasing Welsh language skills in Newport through refining programmes like 'Cymraeg Gwaith', as well as engaging with minority ethnic communities to widen the outreach of the language.
Building up to the Urdd Eisteddfod coming to Newport in 2027, the council is directing its focus towards working with local authorities to promote the language before this Welsh-driven festival makes its highly anticipated arrival.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Ascendant Loyalty and The Loyalty People Announce Strategic Partnership to Achieve Global Reach and Enhance Loyalty Consulting Services
Ascendant Loyalty and The Loyalty People Announce Strategic Partnership to Achieve Global Reach and Enhance Loyalty Consulting Services

Yahoo

time36 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Ascendant Loyalty and The Loyalty People Announce Strategic Partnership to Achieve Global Reach and Enhance Loyalty Consulting Services

CHICAGO, Aug. 15, 2025 /PRNewswire/ -- Ascendant Loyalty ( a pre-eminent Chicago-based consultancy specializing in customer-centric growth, retention and loyalty programs, has announced a strategic partnership with The Loyalty People ( a UK-based leader in loyalty and CRM strategy. This collaboration brings together two respected voices in the loyalty space to offer clients deeper insight, broader capabilities and a truly global consulting practice. By combining The Loyalty People's strategic reach across EMEA with Ascendant Loyalty's Big 4-level consulting rigor across North America and APAC, the partnership creates a unique value proposition for brands looking to build, evolve, or optimize their loyalty and CRM efforts. "Our Loyalty Leaders proven process/method has focused on creating real business value on a sustained basis informed by customer insight," said David Slavick Co-founder & Partner at Ascendant Loyalty. "With The Loyalty People's deep network and market insight in EMEA, we're extending our footprint and elevating the impact we can deliver for brands across the globe." Together, the two firms will collaborate on strategic projects, share market insights, and create joint offerings designed to help brands across retail, travel, e-commerce, hospitality and more to achieve profitable growth through proven best practices and capabilities in customer acquisition, retention, loyalty, and CRM. "This partnership is built on a shared belief in customer-first thinking and practical, outcome-driven consulting," said Pete Howroyd, Founder of The Loyalty People. "We're stronger together – combining regional expertise, proven methodologies, and a network of senior consultants to deliver even greater results for valued clients." About Ascendant LoyaltyAscendant Loyalty is a North America-based customer-centric consultancy offering expertise in customer growth and retention through CRM and loyalty marketing programs. Known for its Big 4-style approach and deeply collaborative client relationships, Ascendant Loyalty serves global brands across retail, travel, e-commerce and hospitality. From strategy to program design and technology selection, Ascendant Loyalty delivers world-class solutions that drive long-term customer value and sustained profitable business About The Loyalty PeopleThe Loyalty People is a UK-based consultancy and global marketing community focused on loyalty, CRM, customer engagement, and marketing strategy. Through its fast-growing platform, The Loyalty People connects brands with experts, tools, and insights to accelerate Contact:David Slavick224-357-8216399766@ View original content to download multimedia: SOURCE Ascendant Loyalty Marketing Sign in to access your portfolio

Council faces wait for ruling on asylum seekers hotel injunction bid
Council faces wait for ruling on asylum seekers hotel injunction bid

Yahoo

time36 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Council faces wait for ruling on asylum seekers hotel injunction bid

A council will discover on Tuesday whether it has been successful in a bid to temporarily block asylum seekers from being housed at an Essex hotel. Epping Forest District Council is seeking an interim injunction stopping migrants from being accommodated at the Bell Hotel in Epping, which is owned by Somani Hotels Limited. It comes following a series of protests in recent weeks outside the hotel after an asylum seeker who was housed at the hotel was charged with sexually assaulting a 14-year-old girl. At a hearing on Friday, barristers for the council claimed Somani Hotels breached planning rules as the site is not being used for its intended purpose as a hotel, and that the situation 'could not be much worse'. The injunction sought by the authority, if granted, would require the company to stop housing asylum seekers at the hotel within 14 days. Barristers for the company said the 'draconian' move would cause 'hardship' for those inside the hotel, and that 'political views' were not grounds for an injunction to be granted. They also said that contracts to house asylum seekers were a 'financial lifeline' for the hotel, which was only 1% full in August 2022, when it was open to paying customers. At the end of the hearing, Mr Justice Eyre said: 'I am not going to close my notebook and give a decision now. 'I am going to reflect on this, but we need a decision sooner rather than later.' The judge later said that he would give a ruling at 2pm on Tuesday. He also ordered that Somani Hotels could not 'accept any new applications' from asylum seekers to stay at the site until he had ruled on whether to grant the temporary injunction. The hotel has become the focal point of a series of protests after Hadush Gerberslasie Kebatu, 38, was charged with trying to kiss a teenage girl. Kebatu, who was housed at the hotel at the time of the incident, denies the allegations and is due to stand trial later this month. Opening the hearing in London, Philip Coppel KC, for the council, said the authority had a 'very serious problem' which was 'getting out of hand' and causing 'great anxiety' to residents. He said this had been caused by a 'breach of planning control' by the company, with the site 'no more a hotel than a borstal to a young offender' for asylum seekers. In written submissions, Mr Coppel said there was a 'preponderance of factors overwhelmingly in favour of granting an injunction', which included removing 'the catalyst for violent protests in public places'. Concluding his submissions, Mr Coppel told Mr Justice Eyre that if an injunction was not granted, 'Your Lordship will be telling the residents in Epping: 'You have just got to lump it'.' Piers Riley-Smith, representing Somani Hotels, told the court in written submissions that the alleged planning breach was 'not flagrant' and that it was 'entirely wrong' for the council to 'suggest the use has been hidden from them'. The barrister told the court the hotel previously housed asylum seekers from May 2020 to March 2021, and from October 2022 to April 2024. He also said that while the company did apply for planning permission for a 'temporary change of use' in February 2023, this was a 'pragmatic attempt to address the claimant's concerns, rather than an acceptance that such a use required planning permission'. This application was later withdrawn as it had not been determined by April 2024, the barrister said. Asylum seekers then began being placed in the Bell Hotel again in April 2025, with Mr Riley-Smith stating a planning application was not made 'having taken advice from the Home Office'. In court, he said that while there were genuine concerns among local residents, these had 'expanded' to include 'concerns about wider ideological and political issues from those outside the community'. He continued that these 'particular ideological, non-community concerns are not relevant to planning', and that the concerns of local residents did not 'justify' a temporary injunction.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store