
Belfast Grand Central Station: No Irish signage for at least six months
Work to install Irish language signs at Grand Central Station in Belfast will not go ahead for at least six months, the High Court has heard. Loyalist activist Jamie Bryson is challenging Sinn Féin Infrastructure Minister Liz Kimmins' decision to approve the £150,000 scheme at the city's new public transport hub.The court was told on Wednesday it was not necessary to impose an interim order against any changes to signs as the procurement process would take six months.A barrister representing the minister indicated Mr Bryson could face a claim for damages if he lost his case.
"Let's say the costs of IT or signage goes up by £50,000 and the case fails, we need to know… if that will be met," Tony McGleenan KC said.The judge, Mr Justice Scoffield, asked Mr Bryson if he was prepared to give assurances over any financial damages or losses if he sought and obtained an injunction in an ultimately unsuccessful challenge.Mr Bryson replied that he would. "If I was not confident in my own case I would not be here", he added.
Judicial review proceedings were issued after Kimmins announced in March that Irish signage would be installed at Grand Central and on ticket vending machines.The minister said she was "committed to the visibility and promotion of Irish language" and it was important that Grand Central Station was "reflective of all citizens".The Department for Infrastructure (DfI) said the signs would cost about £150,000. Work to introduce the bilingual signs had been put on hold until 1 May because of the legal action.
Representing himself in the case, Mr Bryson contends that Kimmins unlawfully breached the ministerial code by failing to refer the issue to the full Stormont Executive.Mr Bryson said Kimmins had made it clear she did not believe it was a controversial decision. "She is not for turning…and it is precisely the type of case where the court should intervene," he said.
Mr Justice Scoffield declined to impose any interim order."The main reason why I'm not going to do that is it would put you at risk if it comes to a cross-undertaking in damages," he said."Secondly, I've been told by senior Crown counsel, acting on instructions, that the practical position is that nothing is going to happen in the near future.""It is unnecessary for me to exercise the court's coercive powers."The judicial review application for hearing has been listed as 9 May.

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BreakingNews.ie
8 hours ago
- BreakingNews.ie
Opposition criticises rent control plans as ‘recipe for rocketing' prices
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She said plans to restrict rent increases except in cases where renters leave tenancies voluntarily, would see one renter replaced by another whose rent will have 'ballooned'. Advertisement 'Students will be amongst the first hit by your actions. Finding affordable rental accommodation has been a constant struggle for students and their families, but you are now ensuring that this will be even harder. She said the plan would see investment funds build expensive rental properties and charge 'extortionate' rent. 'Your first major action in housing is to enable big landlords to hike up extortionate rents even further,' she said. 'At a time when Government should be acting to cut rents and to ban rent increases, at a time when people across the State fork out on average new rent of €2,000 a month – here in Dublin, of course, rent can hit €3,000 per month or even higher – but instead, you create a new opportunity for tens of thousands of landlords to jack up their rents.' Advertisement Labour leader Ivana Bacik said the Government had performed a 'screeching U-turn' on RPZs. She said the RPZs scheme had been called into question before, and was now being extended nationwide. 'So perhaps we should start calling you the Grand Old Duke of Cork, because you led your men up to the top of the hill before marching them all the way back down again. And it's just a mercy, I suppose, that they weren't sent over the top – a mercy for renters.' She said the 'panicked announcement' was sowing fear among renters and uncertainty among investors. Advertisement 'You're extending the RPZ, sure, but if you're hollowing out what is meant by an RPZ, if you're reducing protection to those within RPZs then that doesn't have the desired effect.' Social Democrats deputy leader Cian O'Callaghan said that according to the line in the press release, renters will face 'astronomical rent increases they cannot afford every six years'. 'You're throwing renters under the bus. Incredibly, you're planning even more favourable treatment for vulture funds than already exists. 'They currently pay almost no tax, they charge some of the highest rents in the country, and now, when it comes to rent regulation, you're rolling over to them yet again. Advertisement 'So Taoiseach, who is in charge here? Is it the Government, or is it the vulture funds?' People Before Profit TD Paul Murphy said the Taoiseach had been asked the same question three times about the line in the Department of Housing press release. He said that rents being 'reset' to the market rate when a tenant leaves a tenancy was 'a recipe for rocketing rents'. 'Not just new landlords, not just big landlords, not just small landlords, every single landlord, which means existing tenants, new tenants – yes, please, if the minister could inform the Taoiseach of what's going on here, what's in the policy, that'd be very, very helpful. 'So what you're saying to existing, new tenants – all of them – is they get the limited protection of the 2 per cent, or [inflation] if it's new, for six years. At six years, it's a free-for-all. They get to reset to market rate. Taoiseach Micheál Martin said he was accused of getting rid of RPZs months ago, when 'it was never, ever contemplated to end RPZs'. 'What is now emerging are probably the strongest set of rent protection measures we've ever had in the history of the State.' Responding to the criticism of the line in the press release, the Taoiseach suggested the plan does include a provision for when a renter voluntarily leaves that rents can be rematched to the market rate. 'Forget all the noise, the sound and the fury, and go through it detail by detail. This is a well-balanced package.' Ireland Nationwide rent controls planned as Government loo... Read More He said the State is the lead investor in housing in Ireland, contributing more than €7 billion a year, but the Department of Housing said that around €20 billion is needed to get to 50,000 houses a year. 'Now, where do people think we're going to get to €20 billion from? 'I don't believe you can replace all of it by 100 per cent State either constructive housing, State rental housing or whatever.'


BBC News
9 hours ago
- BBC News
Nama trial: Ex-Sinn Fein worker says he was Jamie Bryson go-between
A former Sinn Féin election worker for Daithí McKay has told a court he was "used" as a go-between to send secret messages to loyalist activist Jamie O'Hara told Belfast Crown Court he thought the plan was "mad" as Mr Bryson was "not the biggest lover of the Shinners", but went along with it in September said Mr McKay, who was chair of Stormont's Finance Committee at the time, assured him there was "nothing criminal" about passing on the McKay, Mr O'Hara and Mr Bryson deny charges related to misconduct in public office and have been on trial for the past three weeks. The case centres on a meeting of the Finance Committee on 23 September 2015, at which Mr Bryson gave evidence about how Northern Ireland property loans were handled by the National Asset Management Agency, known as prosecution say the procedural rules of the committee were is alleged that a series of direct messages exchanged on Twitter before the meeting were evidence of a Bryson has admitted sending a series of private messages to the accounts of Mr McKay and Mr O'Hara but insisted he did not break any laws. 'Daithí McKay asked me for a favour' Mr O'Hara, who gave evidence for the first time to the court on Tuesday, insisted he was simply a conduit between Mr McKay and Mr Bryson, copying and pasting messages from one to the other."I just done what I was asked," he told the court."He (Mr McKay) said to me: 'Don't worry about it, it's nothing that serious, it's nothing criminal.'" Mr O'Hara, 40, from Lisnahunshin Road, Cullybackey, is a self-employed plasterer who lives with his mother. He told the court he has dyslexia and left school at 16 with no joined Sinn Féin in 2006 and said he had helped Mr McKay when he was an MLA by working in his constituency, canvassing and putting up election 2015, he said Mr McKay rang him and asked for a "favour", copying and pasting messages to and from Jamie court was told that private messages on Twitter had previously been directly exchanged between Mr Bryson and Mr McKay, but then Mr O'Hara became involved. 'I think he used me' It is alleged that Mr McKay told Mr Bryson to follow Mr O'Hara's Twitter account and they then exchanged a series of detailed messages before the committee meeting on 23 September court was told these included suggestions on how to present O'Hara was asked if he wrote the replied: "No, I didn't. Daithí McKay did."He was asked if he was worried that what he was doing was criminal."No, because he reassured me it wasn't," said Mr O' insisted he did not understand the messages he was passing on as they had "too many big words". Asked if he still regarded Mr McKay as one of his friends, he said: "No, I do not. I think he used me."Mr O'Hara denies a charge of conspiracy to commit misconduct in public court was told by a psychologist who assessed Mr O'Hara that he has an extremely low IQ and a reading age of the view of the psychologist, it was "very unlikely" that Mr O'Hara composed the messages sent from his account to Mr Bryson. All evidence now heard The non-jury trial, in front of Judge Gordon Kerr KC, began last Bryson, 35, from Rosepark, Donaghadee denies a charge of conspiracy to commit misconduct in public McKay, 43, from Loughan Road, Dunnamanagh, denies actual the committee meeting in 2015, Mr Bryson made an allegation about the then leader of the Democratic Unionist Party (DUP) Peter Robinson, which was later denied and described by the politician as "scurrilous".The prosecution say Mr Bryson and Mr McKay were involved in an attempt to undermine the rules of the committee, in order to cause "considerable political embarrassment" to a number of people including Mr in the trial, when Mr Bryson gave evidence, he said he was not aware that Mr O'Hara had been acting as an alleged "back channel" to Mr McKay. After Mr O'Hara had been cross-examined, the court was told Mr McKay would not be giving evidence in the trial has now been heard and the case has been re-listed for final submissions on Monday Kerr said he hopes to give his judgement by the end of June.


The Herald Scotland
11 hours ago
- The Herald Scotland
Scotland must read the small print in Ireland's growth success
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Now, reciprocal tariffs of up to 50% are being threatened by the Trump administration: not good news for the likes of Pfizer, in Cork, which exports 80% of its drugs back to the US for finishing. Unsurprisingly, the high surge in Irish first-quarter growth is in large part due to stockpiling by these businesses in anticipation of new tariffs being imposed. Paul Krugman, the Nobel Prize-winning economist, described Irish growth as 'leprechaun economics' where GDP is 'artificially' distorted by multinational tax strategies. He's right. The main lesson for Scotland is to avoid dangerous over-dependence on powerful multinationals and to try to keep on Trump's good side – at least until things change. Other home-grown development paths are always available. Ewen Peters, Newton Mearns. FM should call an NHS summit I RECENTLY read a letter, published elsewhere, from a group of senior health professionals who very crisply, in a blameless collegiate way, described a way forward for our NHS and Social Care. In essence they are calling for John Swinney to put aside party politics and call a non-political summit to discuss and review the way forward for our health service. We've had various summits most recently about the rise of far right so surely it shouldn't to too difficult to organise this considering it's the subject uttermost in the minds of most citizens' concerns. Of course these experts are not suggesting that a simple summit will solve all the ills of our health and social care but as the start of a cross-party approach, upon which there are many areas of common ground. Our politicians owe us this but sad to say, with another election looming, I somehow doubt anyone has the guts or ambition to grasp the health nettle and plot a way forward. Come on, John, do as you say and put the people of Scotland First. Ian McNair, Cellardyke. Summits are the height of delusion I KNOW that the SNP likes to pretend that Scotland is a sovereign state bestriding the world stage. After all, as Cabinet secretary Mairi MacAllan told Holyrood in February 2024, 'More often than not, world leaders are approaching the Scottish government asking for our advice on how we have managed to lead the way so successfully on a number of fronts'. If you believe any of that, you will believe anything. John Swinney's self-important contribution to this is to hold 'summits'. Did we ever hear positive results from the one in April when he gathered the not very great or good together to devise a strategy for combating Reform? That went well last week. Now he is to hold a 'summit' on the scourge of knife crime. Some angry Scottish nationalists on social media are asking why he isn't holding a summit on independence, instead, which gives an indication of their (lack of) interest in the wellbeing of Scots. A summit is normally understood as a meeting of world leaders on a pressing issue of international concern. Using it to describe the deliberations of a devolved authority on a serious internal problem is to indulge in delusions of grandeur. Par for the SNP course. Jill Stephenson, Edinburgh. Organising NHS staff properly IAIN McNicol's letter (June 9) gives a glowing review of his NHS treatment and he suggests that taxes should be increased to improve funding of this enormous organisation. Not everyone has been so well treated and many have to wait a very long time for treatment. I speak from some experience. Television is full of programmes about hospitals, emergency services, ambulances. et cetera. Even for a minor accident it is not unusual to have a couple of ambulances, a fast response paramedic, the Hazardous Area Response Team, the fire service, a couple of police cars and a JRU (Joint Response Unit). In many cases a helicopter is called in to add to the mayhem and sometimes sent away again as not needed. The scene is a sea of blue lights and all colours of high-vis jackets. What does all that cost and could it not be more economically organised? Then the scene switches back to the A&E department and here you can see a large number of staff milling around, sitting at computers. I don't think funding is the problem. I think it has more do with actual organisation, but with an enormous unionised workforce it will never be sorted out. David Gilchrist, Paisley. Child Payment has been a success THERE can be little doubt that the Scottish Child Payment (SCP) is one of the most progressive initiatives delivered by either the UK government or any of the devolved ones during the last 10-15 years. Author, political commentator and Oxford University Professor Danny Dorling acknowledged this at the weekend when he said the SCP had significantly helped tackle child poverty in Scotland while remaining almost entirely ignored by politicians in England, whom he accused of wearing 'unbelievable blinkers'. He added that for an eligible family, 'If you've got three kids that's about £4,000 a year extra – that means that your children can eat and eat well, I mean healthily'. Figures published in March indicated that 31% of children across the UK were in relative poverty compared with 30% a year earlier. In Scotland the rate was 22% compared with 26% for the previous year. The SCP is yet another example of positive change initiated by the Scottish government and as such, is in stark contrast to the 'change' promised but not delivered by UK Labour. As Professor Dorling intimates, it is strange that there is such widespread ignorance of it south of the border. Perhaps the Child Poverty Task Force set up by Keir Starmer will recommend its adoption right across the UK. Alan Woodcock, Dundee. Sarwar did well in his TV interview THEY say that beauty is in the eye of the beholder. The letter from S. McArthur (June 10) would suggest that the same seems to apply to political programmes. Contrary to the views expressed, I found Anas Sarwar's interview to be excellent. He dealt at length with issues relevant to the Scottish Parliament, which was what the by-election was all about and declined the invitation to dwell on issues for which the First Minister has no responsibility whatsoever. He answered at length matters which they are. As a Labour voter I was very proud. John Swinney, a nice man, demonstrated the pressures he had been under the whole week-end, and was understandably crestfallen. I am sure that I was not alone in being hugely impressed by the interview with Dame Jackie Baillie as the votes were being counted. Emotionally drained, she gave the honest answer that at that point the result was too close to call. It came as no surprise when we saw the Herald's picture of Dame Jackie in tears. As a Labour voter I thought that, not for the first time, she is the kind of person who gives politics a good name. Sir Tom Clarke, Former Labour MP for Coatbridge. Election count? IT would appear that the First Minister does not even have a basic grasp of maths – pretty essential, may I suggest, for this role. He claimed that the Labour vote at Hamilton 'collapsed by 20% from 50% to 30%'; this is a reduction of 20% points, the actual percentage reduction is an entirely different figure . Perhaps the Cabinet Secretary for Education could put him right? Mike Flinn, West Kilbride.