Northern Ireland Business Brexit Working Group - Neighbourhood Retailer https://neighbourhoodretailer.com The authoritative voice of the grocery industry in Northern Ireland Fri, 17 Jun 2022 13:06:04 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.5.2 https://neighbourhoodretailer.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/05/cropped-NR-SIte-Icon-2-32x32.png Northern Ireland Business Brexit Working Group - Neighbourhood Retailer https://neighbourhoodretailer.com 32 32 178129390 Northern Ireland Business Brexit Working Group calls for substantive talks on NI Protocol https://neighbourhoodretailer.com/northern-ireland-business-brexit-working-group-calls-for-substantive-talks-on-ni-protocol/ Fri, 17 Jun 2022 13:06:04 +0000 https://neighbourhoodretailer.com/?p=22306 Northern Ireland Business Brexit Working Group has called for substantive talks on the NI Protocol, saying a protracted impasse is not in the interests of

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Northern Ireland Business Brexit Working Group has called for substantive talks on the NI Protocol, saying a protracted impasse is not in the interests of businesses.

The group, a collaboration of 14 industry bodies, was commenting on the recent publications from the UK and the EU on the Ireland/Northern Ireland Protocol.

“The Protocol has impacted us all in different ways but we remain firmly committed to an agreed outcome that delivers stability, certainty, simplicity and affordability,” a spokesperson said.

“It is important to acknowledge that despite the challenges since the Protocol and the Trade and Cooperation Agreement entered into force, our exports have grown considerably and standstill arrangements have helped simplify the movement of consumer goods to Northern Ireland.

“We have always been clear that the full implementation of obligations under the Protocol was going to present great challenges. As early as June 2020, in our first joint report, we articulated that derogations, mitigations and compensations were required in order to make the Protocol function. This message was repeated to the UK and EU officials throughout the transition period and beyond. It is therefore a matter of deep regret that the events of this week have come to pass.

“We have taken time to study the UK’s bill, the EU’s response and its non-papers on SPS and customs. On the bill, for key agrifood sub-sectors and exporters, there are significant concerns about the introduction of an all-encompassing dual regulatory regime.

“There is much to be explored in the respective UK green/red lane and EU express lane proposals, not least for consumer-facing supply chains which need solutions to regulatory divergence as well as simplified bureaucracy. However, that can only be progressed through a meaningful engagement process.

“On the EU response, we were particularly disappointed to see the regressive step on parcels.

“We would remind both the UK and the EU that Northern Ireland’s households saw the greatest relative fall in discretionary spend in the UK at the start of this year1, and this week we learned that Northern Ireland’s firms are the least optimistic of any UK region about activity in 12 months’ time2 . The protracted political impasse is not in the interests of Northern Ireland’s businesses and communities.

“Unilateral action is not at our request, and in these times, the parties have a responsibility to reach an agreement with a sense of urgency. We need to see the UK and EU engage in substantive talks on resolving issues raised by stakeholders in Northern Ireland.

“We also need the UK and the EU to engage with those stakeholders in finding workable solutions. We remain confident an agreed way forward can be found but that starts by putting Northern Ireland, its people and its business at the centre of the debate.”

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Hats off to the retailers who stepped up: former NIRC director Aodhán Connolly on a decade in retail https://neighbourhoodretailer.com/hats-off-to-the-retailers-who-stepped-up-former-nirc-director-aodhan-connolly-on-a-decade-in-retail/ Tue, 03 May 2022 13:24:05 +0000 https://neighbourhoodretailer.com/?p=21028 As former director of Northern Ireland Retail Consortium Aodhán Connolly heads for Europe to lead the Brussels office of the Stormont Executive, he reflects on

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As former director of Northern Ireland Retail Consortium Aodhán Connolly heads for Europe to lead the Brussels office of the Stormont Executive, he reflects on how Northern Ireland’s retail sector has weathered the storms of his time in the role.

Aodhán Connolly says it’s been a privilege to helm the Northern Ireland Retail Consortium over the last 10 years – but admits it’s been far from peaceful.

Now heading to the continent to take up the role of director at the Brussels Office of the Stormont Executive, he runs through the rollercoaster of landmark moments since he took up the reins at NIRC back in 2012.

From Large Retailer Levy to online shopping, and from the childrenswear guidelines to the arrival of the pandemic, there is no shortage of landmark moments in his 10-year journey.

“It’s been a complete Groundhog Day every time we talk about business rates,” he admits.

“Ten years ago when I started at NIRC we were talking about how the business rate system was inequitable towards retailers, and it still is. We’ve an antiquated system of rates that is no use to man nor beast and actually stifles investment.

“As well as that, we had things like the horsemeat scandal in 2012 and those were long weeks, working to reassure the public. But these last few years have been taken up by Brexit and the Protocol and Covid, and at the end of it the war in Ukraine.

“But as anyone who knows me will tell you, I’m a bit of a workaholic anyway. It’s been one of the most wonderful experiences of my life, being able to effect real tangible change, not just for the retail industry but for households and consumers across Northern Ireland – that’s been a real privilege.”

Skill set

Surprisingly, he had no experience of retail when he started in the role.

“I had lots of experience in hospitality, working in restaurants and bars, going to Unite, and there’s a similar skill set when it comes to everything from using POS to dealing with customers,” he says.

“One of the things I did with the Retail Consortium was spending a lot of time in the shops and talking to people other than just managers to try and see what the experience of the employees was. The industry is only as strong as the people working in it and that was very important.

“I was advising the Retail Consortium for a couple of years when I was working for Chambre Public Affairs and then in August 8th 2012, I joined the Retail Consortium.

“It was strange because there had been a British Retail Consortium and a Scottish Retail Consortium for many years but there hadn’t been one in Northern Ireland.

“At that stage there was a lot of legislation that was coming through as the Assembly was flexing its legislative muscle and that meant we were seeing things that could affect retaiL. The biggest of those was the Large Retailer Levy, and really that was one of the reasons the Retail Consortium was set up, to deal with that levy.”

Strong sector

As something of an unexpected legacy of the Troubles, Northern Ireland has always had a strong independent retail offer, Aodhán says.

“You’ve got to remember that other than Boots and M&S, the major grocers really didn’t come in until after the Good Friday Agreement and we were a growth market. In fact, we’re still not at saturation point in Northern Ireland – there are still places where you have to travel quite a while to get a good grocery offer,” he says.

“We were seeing changes in consumer behaviour – we were really starting to see Northern Ireland catching up with things like online where we were behind.

“I started advising the British Retail Consortium in 2010/2011 and we were still well behind the rest of the UK then.

“But what we saw that Christmas 2012, especially January 2013, was this huge spike in online and mobile click, and that was quite simply because one, there was a roll out of broadbands and internet services, but more importantly it seems that every man, woman and their goat got a smartphone and suddenly it was more accessible for people to shop around.

“That’s been good and bad, depending on how you look at things. What we’ve seen is economic Darwinism in the fact that those retailers, whether independent or multiples, who weathered the storms, that recovery after the 2008 crash and the problems we’ve had after these last five  years or so – it’s the people that can adapt but adapt without losing their USP have been those who have been the most successful.”

Pandemic challenge

The pandemic has probably been one of the biggest challenges Northern Ireland’s retail sector has ever faced, and Aodhán pays tribute to the way in which staff stepped up.

“They say you can tell the mettle of a man or a woman by how they act over a crisis, and I think the fact that all of the retailers stepped up during Covid has been… As far as getting deliveries for vulnerable people, even some of the small franchisee retailers were providing delivery services and looking in on the neighbours, that sort of  stepping up and really delivering for the community and working together,” he says.

“I was on many, many calls with the Northern Ireland Executive with different ministers, not only as far as keeping our customers safe but keeping shelves full and explaining to people that there was no need to panic buy.

“But the real heroes were the staff who went in day and daily , the essential workers, should that be from the warehouses right through to front of house staff. I tip my hat to them.

“Over Covid and then with the Protocol coming in, retailers and logistics worked really hard together.”

Careless talk

One thing he cautions against that has come to the fore over the past couple of years is the danger of careless talk.

“There were people saying that grocery supply chains were within five days of collapse over Covid, then they said the same over the Protocol and then they said the same over the Ukraine stuff and the P&O stuff,” he says.

“And to be honest, one of the biggest lessons that I would say to anyone is stick with the facts, do not scaremonger and realise that your words have consequences.

“That’s something that I’ve learned through bitter experience over the 10 years. People who have a public platform have a responsibility and that’s hugely important.”

Aodhán says he is still amused to see himself labelled as a Brexit expert.

“The BBC had a headline about me taking a new job and they called me a Brexit expert, which is wonderful and I’m very flattered,” he says.

“But Brexit and the Protocol is not one monolithic homogeneous thing. Customs is a many tentacled thing, as is SPS. I think that’s one of the things, should it be on the Protocol, should it be on Covid, should it be on supply chains in general, there are a lot of people who oversimplify things, whereas my understanding as far as what I know is I know some of it, but there’s a helluva lot more for me to learn.”

Frictionless trade

While Brexit is a contentious subject, what all political parties are agreed upon is the need for frictionless trade between Great Britain and Northern Ireland, he says.

“I think one of the things the Protocol did that I’ll be eternally grateful for was it gave me the chance to convene the Northern Ireland Business Brexit Working Group, and it was one of the privileges of my life to be able to work with those members, people like Kirsty McManus from the IOD, Stephen Kelly from Manufacturing NI, Stuart Anderson from the NI Chamber and Roger Pollen from the FSB,” he says.

“If you’d told me five years ago that I’d be standing shoulder to shoulder with the UFU and the NI Food and Drink Association when we’re usually taking potshots at each other, I wouldn’t have believed you.

“But we built up some trust, we built up some common goals and a vision of where we wanted to get to and most of all we built up some friendships.

“Personally, if there’s one good thing that came out of all those debates it s the friendships and the business groups working together in a way that never had happened before, and the fact that that is going to continue on with Stuart Anderson as the convener after I’ve left is a great comfort to me.

“I set it up in 2019 because the narrative in Westminster and in the EU was that Northern Ireland was sorted under the Protocol. The group came together to try and get amendments and it was the first time in about 14 years that all five of the major political parties agreed on amendments.

Working together

“Now it didn’t pass, but that’s not the reason for the amendments – the reason of the amendments was to get a debate, and the fact that that group has met with vice presidents and presidents, foreign ministers and has been quoted by different people… We even heard that some of the leaders at the G7 were mentioning some of the work that we’d done on the Protocol, like Biden and Merkel, so you can’t get much more of an example of the strength of people working together than that.”

As for the future health of Northern Ireland’s high street, Aodhán points out that the most successful high streets across the world have been people-based – “It’s about destination retailing, it’s about getting people to spend their time as well as their money.

“For some places it’s a high street that is vibrant at night with offices and a good hospitality and retail mixture.

“For other areas it’s because they have things like people living over the shops which creates a very strong community basis, but as well as that you’ve got ready-made footfall.

“But to do that there needs to be capital investment and there needs to be facilities, and those facilities need to include things like doctors’ surgeries and schools and other things that are needed to make it a community, rather than just a place that you go, as my mum would say, for your messages.”

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Stuart Anderson appointed new Head of Public Affairs at NI Chamber https://neighbourhoodretailer.com/stuart-anderson-appointed-new-head-of-public-affairs-at-ni-chamber/ Fri, 29 Apr 2022 09:49:29 +0000 https://neighbourhoodretailer.com/?p=20923 Stuart Anderson has been appointed as Head of Public Affairs at Northern Ireland Chamber of Commerce and Industry (NI Chamber). As part of a new

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Stuart Anderson has been appointed as Head of Public Affairs at Northern Ireland Chamber of Commerce and Industry (NI Chamber).

As part of a new member service, Stuart will lead NI Chamber’s direct interactions with politicians, helping to shape the legislative agenda and supporting elected representatives to create the right conditions for business and economic growth.

A qualified lawyer in Northern Ireland and the Republic of Ireland, Stuart worked in leading commercial law firms in Belfast and Dublin for more than 10 years. Now an experienced expert on business policy and public affairs, he is also the current Convenor of the Northern Ireland Business Brexit Working Group.

His recent appointment complements the work already delivered by the Communications & Policy team and will enable many more members across all sectors to benefit from its lobbying work. Stuart will work directly with NI Chamber members in all sectors, identifying their challenges and bringing forward their ideas as part of a very collaborative approach between industry and policy makers.

Welcoming him, Ann McGregor, Chief Executive, NI Chamber said: “Stuart brings a wealth of knowledge and experience to this new role, which will benefit our members enormously.

“Advocacy has always been an important part of NI Chamber’s offering and as our direct engagement with policy makers increases, Stuart will facilitate these interactions, making sure that our members’ voices are heard and acted upon every day.”

Stuart Anderson, Head of Public Affairs, NI Chamber added: “I am delighted to join the NI Chamber team, establishing a new department at what is a really important time in the business policy landscape.

“Since I joined in April, we have already welcomed positive engagement with officials and politicians in Northern Ireland, Westminster and further afield. I look forward to meeting and working with members across Northern Ireland as we do this important work.”

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