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Staff Reporter, 19 Apr
Hit show Derry Girls has been quoted on the final day of the conference
marking the 25th anniversary of the Good Friday Agreement.
The head of the Northern Ireland Civil Service, Dr Jayne Brady, said
she was joined by US President Joe Bidenâs special envoy to Northern
Ireland, Joe Kennedy III, at a mural depicting the main characters of
the TV series set in 1990s Derry last week.
Closing a speech at the final day of the Queenâs University conference,
Dr Brady said her visit to the mural brought back the words of
character Erin Quinn.
âIt made me think of the brilliant and very moving Agreement episode
and something very poignant that Erin said: âThings canât stay the
same. And they shouldnât. No matter how scary it is, we have to move on
and we have to grow up because things, well, they might just change for
the betterâ,â Dr Brady told the crowd in the Whitla Hall.
Dr Brady said it has been her âprivilegeâ to work with Mr Kennedy and
his team âto see first-hand his vision for our partnershipâ.
Mr Kennedyâs remit as envoy is focused on stimulating economic growth
in Northern Ireland.
Last week, President Biden said hundreds of US investors were poised to
invest but were cautious due to the lack of a powersharing executive at
Stormont.
Dr Brady said: âThe road to 2050 and beyond requires innovation on an
unprecedented scale unlocking a unique opportunity to drive growth and
inclusion.
âWhen we think of the next 25 years, our aim should be to create a
place where everyone will have the best possible opportunities in life,
and well-paid fulfilling employment, while transforming and
decarbonising our economy.â
Dr Brady said Northern Ireland is âconsistently rated the happiest
region in the UK and have the lowest crime rateâ â a remark that
prompted applause from the crowd.
âBut as President Biden said on his visit here last week â the simple
truth is that peace and economic opportunity go together.
âAnd our next mission is to ensure that the benefits of the peace
dividend are felt by everyone who lives here.
âBecause the sad fact is that the legacy of our past still clings to
us. We are struggling to deal with persistent societal problems,
low-paid work, low economic productivity, and multi-generational
poverty.
âNot all our communities have experienced the benefits of peace, and
even after 25 years of peacebuilding and investment our job is not yet
done,â the head of Northern Irelandâs Civil Service said.
âAll of this means that when our economic and social resilience is
tested by global challenges such as elevated inflation, of all the
areas on these islands Northern Ireland is hit the hardest.
âAnd if the last couple of years have taught us anything, itâs that
there will be another crisis. At least one,â she said.
The Stormont institutions collapsed last year when the DUP withdrew
support as part of its protest against the post-Brexit Northern Ireland
Protocol.
Civil servants are controlling government departments after ministers
left office at the end of October when a deadline to restore the
executive passed.
Dr Brady said people who live and work in Northern Ireland have âan
inbuilt resilience â a stoic resolve, as each crisis hitsâ.
She said: âHowever, I would counsel that we should not stake the future
dependent on our childrenâs resilience.
âRather we should build a society and economy resilient to the next
crisis. And that means addressing the long-term structural weaknesses
that have dogged us for decades.
âAnd as difficult and stubborn as these are, these are the problems
that demand our focus.
âNow, more than ever, we must find out voice, claim our place in the
world, and renew our commitment to working together to address the
inequalities that persist.â