We are delighted to announce that The Executive Office has appointed Martin McDonald as the new Chairperson of the Community Relations Council.
Mr McDonald will be joined by new Board Members Dr Maire Braniff, Rory Campbell, Claire Harris, John McCallister, Sheila McClelland, Michael McDonnell, Audrey Simpson and Nisha Tandon. All appointments will be for three years.
Mr McDonald said:
Tremendous thanks go to the outgoing Board for their hard work and dedication over the past number of years. I look forward to working with the new Board of CRC as we work to build united communities together.”
Personal Profiles Of The New CRC Board Members
Martin McDonald
Martin has over 40 years of experience in public service, commencing his career with local government in 1973. He later went on to work in the Town & Country Planning Service and in 1990 joined the Department of Agriculture and Rural Development as a Rural Area Co-ordinator under the Northern Ireland Rural Development Programme. Martin is well recognised as a key figure in the development and implementation of major rural/community development initiatives. He joined the NI Rural Development Council as Chief Executive in 1999 and retired in 2011. He has also worked with the International Fund for Ireland, acting as their agent through RDC, for projects and programmes under the Fund's 'Sharing this Space' strategy.
Martin was a member of the NI Heritage Lottery Fund since 2011 and acted as Interim Chair between 2013 and 2016. He also acts as a non-executive director on the NI Fisheries Harbour Authority and The Southern Health and Social Care Trust. Martin is a former director and Chair of Newry Credit Union.
Martin was awarded an MBE for Services to Regeneration in the 2011 Queen's Birthday Honours List.
Dr Máire Braniff
Máire is a senior lecturer in Political Science at Ulster University. Between 2016 and 2018, Máire was the Director of INCORE, Ulster University’s International Conflict Research Institute. Máire’s particular expertise is on the intersections between peace, memory and violent conflict, and how they impact upon communities, on individuals, and on relationships with power. Máire holds a BA in Politics and European Studies, an MA in International Politics and a PhD from Queens University Belfast. Máire was awarded a British Academy Rising Star Award for Engagement in 2016-17.
Rory Campbell
Rory is a tech and commercial lawyer with Forde Campbell, a law firm he set up in 2007. He has been advising the public sector, social housing providers and charities on corporate governance since 1994, and is regarded as a leader in his field by legal sector bibles, Legal 500 and Chambers. Rory has been a Board member of CRC since 2013 and has chaired its Audit Committee since 2016. Rory is also a board member of Arts & Business NI and a keen supporter of the Rathlin Development Community Association.
Claire Harris
Claire is the Impact Consultant for The Graduate School at Queen’s University Belfast and a co-founder and Director of Tell It in Colour C.I.C. Claire completed her undergraduate degree with Queen’s University and an MPhil in Conflict Resolution and Reconciliation with Trinity College. She has since worked, both locally and globally, in the field of conflict transformation. She has worked for The Young Foundation and Belfast Interface Project, of which she now sits on the Board. Claire is a member of the World Economic Forum’s Global Shapers Belfast Hub and was named on the Northern Ireland 40 under 40 list for 2018. Claire’s work centres on social innovation and participatory engagement.
John McCallister
John lives near Rathfriland, County Down. After studying at Greenmount College (CAFRE) he returned home to start his farming career. After many years of involvement with Young Farmers Clubs of Ulster serving in different roles he was elected YFCU President from 2003-05. With a passion for politics, John was then elected as a UUP Member of the Legislative Assembly (MLA) in March 2007 and re-elected in 2011 for the South Down constituency. He was the first MLA in have a Private Members Bill passed by the Assembly becoming the Caravans Act 2011 and the only member to pass a second Private Members Bill in 2016 when the Assembly and Executive Reform (Assembly Opposition) Act 2016 was passed. He served on ten different Assembly Committees and the British Irish Parliamentary Assembly. John served as Deputy Leader of the UUP between 2010 and 2012. He co-founded NI21 and was Deputy Leader for one year.
After leaving the Assembly in 2016 John now works for YFCU and Ulster Farmers Union heading up a Land Mobility Programme and was appointed as a Human Right Commissioner in 2017.'
Sheila McClelland
Sheila is Chairperson of the Consumer Council and was previously the Chief Executive of Carrickfergus Borough Council until the reform of local government and the amalgamation of the council area into Mid and East Antrim DC on 1 April 2015. Sheila had been a career public servant with previous roles in the Northern Ireland Assembly in which she held a number of positions including Head of Outreach and Education, Keeper of the House, Head of Corporate Services and Clerk to the Finance and Personnel Committee during the period 2001 to 2011. She was Private Secretary to the Minister for Regional Development in the period 1999 to 2001, and prior to devolution, was the Departmental and Travelling Private Secretary to the Minister for the Environment. In January 2014 Sheila was appointed to the board of Northern Ireland Co-operation Overseas (NICO) (DETI/Invest Northern Ireland). Sheila is a member of the Heritage Lottery Fund (Northern Ireland Committee).
Michael McDonnell
Michael is Chief Executive of the Choice Housing Group, a registered Housing Association and charity. Michael qualified as a Chartered Accountant in 1989 and has worked in leadership roles within both the private and not-for-profit sectors across the British Isles before entering the housing sector. Previously, he served in a voluntary capacity as a non-executive director for a local enterprise agency and as a school governor. Michael is currently a voluntary Board member of Housing Rights, the leading charity providing independent housing advice across Northern Ireland.
Audrey Simpson
Audrey was formerly the Director of the Family Planning Association and was awarded the OBE in 2005 for promoting women’s healthcare in Northern Ireland. In 2011 she was awarded a Doctor of Philosophy from the University of Ulster. She was a Commissioner with the Equality Commission for Northern Ireland between 2003 and 2008 and has worked extensively in the voluntary and community sector including being Chair of the Community Development Health Network.
Nisha Tandon
Nisha is a social entrepreneur, founder and director of ArtsEkta. She is also a member of Belfast City Council's Festival Forum strategy sub-group and is Northern Ireland representative for Voluntary Arts BAME Advisory UK Panel. In 2016, she was appointed to the UK board of Voluntary Arts. Nisha is a founding member of 'Stronger Together', a collaboration of organisations working in the field of racial equality. In 2014, Nisha was the first Asian women from Northern Ireland to be awarded the UK Asian Women of Achievement Award and was awarded an OBE for services to the minority ethnic sector in the 2014 Queen's Honours List. In 2015, she won the British Indian Award for 'Indian Spirit in the Community'. Nisha has also been awarded the Chief Officers Third Sector award for Leading Growth & Innovation.