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Module 5

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Andy Pollak is Director of the Centre for Cross Border Studies, with offices in Armagh and Dublin, and Secretary of the all-island universities network, Universities Ireland. He is a former Belfast reporter, assistant news editor, religious affairs correspondent and education correspondent with The Irish Times, and co-author of a biography of Rev Ian Paisley. The Centre for Cross Border Studies researches and develops cooperation across the Irish border in education, health, ICT, the economy and other areas. It manages North-South higher education, teacher education and spatial planning networks, trains public servants in cross-border cooperation, and provides practical cross-border information through conferences, workshops and websites (www.crossborder.ie and www.borderpeople.info). Andy is a board member of the ICLRD.

Dave Walsh is Principal Officer in the Irish Department of Environment, Heritage and Local Governments Spatial Policy Unit, whose main area of responsibility is implementation of the National Spatial Strategy (NSS). Published in November 2002, the NSS is a 20 year planning framework for spatial development in the Republic of Ireland, and aims to achieve a better balance of social, economic and physical development across the country. The Unit also supports a policy framework for the planning system which seeks to achieve good spatial planning through strategic regional planning; clearly focused development planning at city, county and town level; better local area planning; retail planning; rural housing; and residential densities towards sustainable communities.

Module 4: Engaging the Community

Tuesday 13th April: 3.30pm-7pm, Clanrye O’Hares Room, Canal Court Hotel, Newry

3:15-3:30pm Module registration: tea/coffee available on arrival
3:30-3:45pm Welcome; Reflections on Module 3; Defining the task for Module 5
3.45-4.00pm Reflective questions (consider the selected Module 3 themes: Tourism and Recreation; Cross-border Enterprise/Trade Strategy; and Green/sustainable/renewable energies):Who are the key stakeholders in the Twin-City Region and beyond?

How can these stakeholders be engaged in an action agenda for the region?

What specific role can local authorities, business, including chambers of commerce, and others play in harnessing greater community involvement?

  • Feedback from each table
4:00-4:30pm Case study (s) of Community Participation:In the Newry-Dundalk Twin-City Region, local governments and the respective chambers have been closely involved in developing the concept and strategies for the Twin-City Region. Engaging a wider community of stakeholders is a crucial step to furthering the concept and initiating/sustaining action around key projects and programmes. The cross-border context adds a layer of complexity when engaging the community given different types of social networks.

Brendan Bartley, drawing on his research and case studies in Ireland will highlight key issues for engaging community/local govt/private sector partnerships and developing a programme of sustained engagement among key stakeholders including the role for local authority leadership – Brendan Bartley, Research Associate, National Institute for Regional & Spatial Analysis, NUI Maynooth

  • Q&A with Brendan Bartley
4:30-5:00pm Putting the Community in Planning and Service Delivery: lessons from the UK for the Twin-City RegionWithin in Northern Ireland, the RPA proposes to devolve planning responsibilities to the new councils and encourage a more integrated community planning process to shape and implement local and regional development strategies. Under RPA, local councils will have increased discretion in linking a family of services, among them economic development, services, housing and planning.

Prof Greg Lloyd will provide insights on experiences from the UK on community participation to highlight the key issues and opportunities under RPA and the potential application within a cross-border context – Prof Greg Lloyd, Head of the School of the Built Environment, University of Ulster

  • Q&A with Prof Greg Lloyd
5:00-5:15pm Coffee break
5:15-6:30pm Working GroupsDeveloping an action agenda for community engagement

To consider two inter-related but discreet tasks:

  • How to cement the concept of the Twin-City Region in the eyes of the community (community in its broadest sense: businesses, NGOs, community groups, cross-border networks, centres of learning etc.)
  • How to ensure community involvement in taking forward a future action agenda
6:30-6:50pm Plenary – Bringing it all together – with input from expert panel comprising Prof Greg Lloyd and Brendan Bartley (facilitated by ICLRD)Report back from working groups, response and discussion from panel
6:50-7:00pm Engaging the Community in Shaping and Delivering Local Strategies (link to Module 5); Module 4 close; confirmation of arrangements for Module 5

Module 4

Greg Lloyd is Professor of Urban Planning and Head of the School of the Built Environment at the University of Ulster. Having started his career at the University of Aberdeen, he subsequently became Professor and Head of the School of Town and Country Planning, University of Dundee. Before moving to UU, he was Professor of Planning in the Department of Civic Design, University of Liverpool. Professor Lloyd’s research and publication interests include the relations between public policy, planning and real property developments; institutional innovation in spatial planning practices; and the efficiency and effectiveness of new planning and regulatory arrangements. He is a member of the Scottish Government’s National Planning Framework Advisory Group and patron of Planning Aid Scotland; and was Independent Ministerial Advisor to the Northern Ireland Assembly on the reform of land use planning.

Brendan Bartley was Deputy Director of NIRSA and led its research strand on Balanced Regional and Rural Development for the Irish Social Science Platform (ISSP), an all-island platform of integrated social science research and graduate training focusing on the social, cultural and economic transformations shaping Ireland in the 21st century. Together with Dr Delphine Ancien at NIRSA, Brendan developed NUI Maynooth’s structured Masters and PhD programmes in Social Science for the ISSP’s Graduate Research and Education Programme (GREP). He was also the University’s Programme Director for the International Centre for Local and Regional Development (ICLRD). Over the past fifteen years, Brendan was directly involved in a number of European collaborative urban research networks in the connected areas of spatial planning, governance and urban regeneration. He has also been the Irish Contact Point for the European Spatial Planning Observatory Network (ESPON) which carries out comparative and applied research on territorial development and spatial planning in support of policy development at EU, national and regional scales.

Module 3: Making it Happen

Tuesday 9th March: 3.30pm-7pm, Clanrye O’Hares Room, Canal Court Hotel, Newry

3:30-4:00pm

Module registration: tea/coffee available on arrival

4:00-4:10pm

Welcome; Reflections on Module 2 and the importance of indicators/evidence to drive a regional agenda; Schedule for Module 3

4:10-4:25pm

Reflective questions posed to participants (facilitated by ICLRD):

What will the Twin City region economy look like in 3-5 years time?

What are the critical elements that will shape this economy?

What would prevent this economy from taking shape?

Feedback from each table

4:25-4:45pm

Right Here, Right Now: understanding possible economic futures based on current realities on the island of Ireland generally and the Twin-City Region specifically – Professor John Bradley, Economic Consultant and former Research Professor at the Economic and Social Research Institute

4:45-4:55pm

Q&A with John Bradley (facilitated by InterTradeIreland)

4:55-5:10pm

Coffee break

5:10-6:20pm

Working Groups (facilitated by ICLRD)

Exercise 1: – Visioning the Twin City Region economy (25 mins)

  • Revisit reflective questions on basis of John Bradley’s presentation
  • Discussion –

Why develop a Twin-City Region economy?

What is the basis for practical areas of collaboration?

Who are the stakeholders and what are their roles?

Exercise 2: – a sustainable economy in practice (45 mins)

  • World Café: development in the Twin-City Region

6:20-6:50pm

Plenary – Bringing it all together – with input from an expert panel comprising Padraic White, Chairman of the Louth Economic Forum, entrepreneur and former Managing Director of IDA-Ireland; and Fergal McCormack, Managing Partner of FPM Accountants and Chairman of ICLRD (facilitated by InterTradeIreland)

Report back from working groups, response and discussion from panel

6:50-7:00pm

Creating a short-term action agenda for the Twin-City Region economy (link to Module 5); Module 3 close; confirmation of date for Module 4

Module 3

John Bradley was formerly a research professor at the Dublin-based Economic and Social Research Institute and is a now an international research consultant in the areas of EU Structural Fund design and evaluation. During the 1980s he advised the Irish government on medium-term economic and industrial strategy. He now focuses mainly on development barriers facing the post-Communist economies of Central and Eastern Europe (and the impact on them of Structural Funds), and regularly acts as a consultant to government ministries in many of these countries.

Padraic White, former managing director of IDA Ireland, is chairing the Louth Economic Forum. Since leaving the IDA, Padraic has advised Governments around the world on the promotion of foreign direct investment as a senior consultant for FIAS (the Foreign Investment Advisory Service, part of the World Bank) and the Phare programme for new EU member states. He was the first chairman of the Railway Procurement Agency (RPA) from 2002-2007, during which time the agency was responsible for the successful launch and operation of the LUAS light rail service in Dublin.

Feargal McCormack is Managing Partner of award winning FPM Accountants LLP, which he established in Newry in 1991. He recently served on the Independent Review Panel on the Location of Public Sector Jobs in Northern Ireland. He is the Chairman of the International Centre for Local and Regional Development. He is aformer Chairman of the Ulster Society of Chartered Accountants and he is an executive Member of the Newry Chamber of Commerce and Trade.

Aidan Gough is responsible for developing the strategic direction of InterTradeIreland as it seeks to deliver its legislative mandate. He is a graduate of Queen’s University Belfast with an MBA and MSc in Economics. Prior to joining InterTradeIreland, Aidan was Director of the Northern Ireland Economic Council. He has chaired two steering committees overseeing ICLRD applied research studies: Spatial Strategies on the Island of Ireland: Development of a Framework for Collaborative Action (2006) and the Newry-Dundalk Twin City Region: Supporting the implementation of Cross-border Collaborative Frameworks (2009).

Module 2:Evidence Informed Planning

Preliminary Schedule

Tuesday 9th February: 4pm–7pm, Clarye O’Hares Room, Canal Court Hotel, Newry (dinner available from 7pm)

INTRODUCTION
4:00-4:10
Introduction to Module 2; Prologue on indicators and the policy cycle
TRAINING SESSION 1 – Understanding the spatial planning policy agenda
4:10-4:25
Demographic realities and environmental directives: Locating the environment in current policy: Niall Cussen, Senior Planning Adviser, Department of the Environment, Heritage and Local Government
4:25-4:35
Q&A with Niall Cussen
4:35-4:50
Promoting local economic development strategies in the context of a severe economic recession Locating the regional economy in current policy: Conor Patterson, Chief Executive of Newry & Mourne Co-operative & Enterprise Agency and President of the Newry Chamber of Commerce
4:50-5:00
Q&A with Conor Patterson
COFFEE BREAK
5:00-5:20
TRAINING SESSION 2 – Making it happen: spatial planning policy into practice
5:20-5:40
Mapping evidence in spatial planning: Justin Gleeson, Project Manager of the All-Island Research Observatory (AIRO) based in the National University of Ireland Maynooth
5:50-6:25
Identifying indicators for prioritising action in spatial planning: working groups
6:25-6:45
Evidence-informed planning in the Newry-Dundalk region: key indicators and action agenda for sharing information and addressing gaps: plenary discussion
6:45-6:55
Observations on making cross-border spatial planning happen in the Newry-Dundalk region: Tom Hanney, Southern Joint Secretary, North-South Ministerial Council
6:55-7:00
Closing remarks; confirmation of arrangements for Module Three.

Welcome to the Library

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The ICLRD Training site library is an online resource for participants. Course reading materials, related materials, and presentations will be posted or linked. Please contact the staff with suggestions for useful material.

Newry-Dundalk

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Module 5: An Action Agenda

3:15-3:30pm Module registration: tea/coffee available on arrival
3:30-3:45pm Welcome; Reflections on Modules 1-4; Introduction to Module 5: defining the challenges for developing the Twin-City and wider region
3:45-4.45pm Working Group presentations (20 minutes per group followed by 10 minutes for panel discussion)

  • Green / sustainable / renewable energies
  • Tourism and Recreation
4:45-5:00pm Coffee break
5:00-6:00pm Working group exercise

Delivering an action agenda for the Twin-City and wider region

See enclosed exercise and consider the following questions:

  • What are the vital ingredients of an over-arching vision for cooperation in the Twin-City and wider region?
  • Does this three-tiered structure provide the necessary framework for initiating, supporting and growing future projects in the Twin-City and wider region?
  • Does it allow for local leadership within the public and private sectors to advocate for and champion an action agenda?
  • Can it address short-term actions and also provide longer-term guidance on strategic initiatives?
  • Should the preparation of a regional agreement, outlining key areas for joint working including more formalised structures, be considered?
6:00-6:30pm  Plenary session

Making it Happen: A Road-Map for Action

Facilitated by ICLRD; based on presentations, responses from panel and working group exercises

6.30-6.45pm Evaluating the Executive Training Programme
6:45-7:00pm Reflections on Module 5; Future review of progress; Presentation of Certificates; Module 5 close

Presentations – Module 5 An Action Agenda

1. Neale BlairBringing Together an Action Agenda

2. Working Group presentationTourism and Recreation

3. Working Group presentationGreen / Sustainable / Renewable Energies

Reading Materials

Module 5

Reading list for Module 5: Bringing Together an Action Agenda (PDF).

Recommended Reading

 Support Documents

 Post Module 5 Report

 

Presentations – Module 4 Engaging the Community

1. Neale BlairEngaging the Community in Shaping and Delivering Local Strategies

2. Brendan BartleyCase study(s) of Community Participation

3. Prof Greg LloydPutting the Community in Planning and Service Delivery: lessons from the UK for the Twin-City Region

Presentations – Module 3 Making it Happen

1. Neale BlairMaking It Happen – A Sustainable Economy in the Twin-City Region

2. John BradleyRight Here, Right Now: Understanding Possible Economic Futures Based on Current Realities on the island of Ireland and the Twin-City Region