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Limerick City and County Council Chief Executive Conn Murray to step down

  • 12-06-2019 6:56pm
    #1
    Registered Users Posts: 383 ✭✭


    Limerick City and County Council Chief Executive Conn Murray to step down



    Media Release, Wednesday 12th June 2019




    Limerick City and County Council has today confirmed that its Chief Executive Conn Murray is to leave the role once his existing contract expires on August 14 next.



    Mr Murray confirmed his decision in a letter to newly appointed Mayor of the City and County of Limerick, Cllr Michael Sheahan, councillors and staff this morning.



    In the letter, Mr Murray stated that it had been an honour and a privilege to serve as Chief Executive of Limerick City and County Council over the past seven years but the time had come to move on.



    “I have had the pleasure of serving the public in many different capacities over the last 40 years as I developed my career in local government. The last seven years back in Limerick have, on a personal and professional level, been the most rewarding,” he stated.



    “It has been an honour to provide a vision and direction for Limerick City and County Council and help create the relationships, partnerships and strategic direction that have been a real strength of the collaboration between our stakeholders and partners.



    “As of 14th of August 2019, my contract of employment with Limerick City and County Council ends and the time is right for me to move on. I do so with a great sense of satisfaction over what we have achieved together. We have an exceptional executive team, committed and dedicated staff and a body of elected members determined to turn many more positive pages in Limerick’s great story.”



    Responding to the announcement, Mayor Sheahan said: “While we respect the decision of Conn Murray to move on to pastures new and wish him well on this new phase of his life, we do so with heavy hearts as, in the fullness of time, he will be recognised as among the key architects of the incredible economic renaissance that Limerick has undergone over the past five years or more.

    “When he came back here seven years ago, he was met with a city and county that was getting back on its feet and divided from an administrative perspective. In the interim, he has not so much overseen, but led the amalgamation of the local authorities, and with it the biggest single change-management programme in local government history. Simultaneously, he put in place the building blocks for an unprecedented economic upturn that has transformed the city’s economic, social and cultural profile. For our citizens and those who come here afresh to live and work in the Mid-West, it is in no small part because of the visionary leadership Conn Murray gave this city and county at a critical time in its history.”

    Mayor Sheahan said that the key statistics from Mr Murray’s period in charge speak for themselves. “We have, in the past five years, seen over 15,000 new jobs and €2billion of planned investment bound for Limerick. The blueprint for this success has been ‘Limerick 2030: An Economic and Spatial Plan for Limerick’ – a once in a generation plan delivered by Conn that has steered the recovery of our city and county, a recovery that has urban centres across the nation and beyond looking on in envy.

    “Initiatives like Limerick Twenty Thirty, which is going to be transformative for the city, advancing the Regeneration programme, the creation of the largest economic unit in any local authority and implementing the Ireland’s first National City of Culture programme all came under his watch.”



    He added: “It’s been a remarkable period for the city and county and while we had our challenges, as all local authorities do, at no stage could we doubt the fact that we had the right person in the right place at the right time in Limerick. It was a time that we needed courage and creativity and Conn Murray brought this in abundance.



    “His loss will be cushioned by the shape he leaves the local authority in. He will, however, be sorely missed and but his name is writ large in the annals of this proud city and county as one of our finest"

    About Conn Murray: He began his career in his native Co. Meath and worked in a number of local authorities, including Tipperary, Limerick, Cork, Waterford and Louth. In August 2012 he was appointed Dual Manager of both Limerick City Council and Limerick County Council before taking up his role as Chief Executive of the new amalgamated Limerick City and County Council in 2014. He is currently a Board member of the Land Development Agency, the Housing and Sustainable Communities Agency, a member of Board of Governors of Mary Immaculate College, a member and former chairperson of the County & City Management Association and currently chair of CCMA Housing Committee. He served on the National Fire Directorate and the Board of Local Government Management Agency. He was also chair of the Change Management Committee of the Local Government Management Agency for a number of years and serves on the Local Authority National Council and the Oversight Group on Haddington Road.


Comments

  • Closed Accounts Posts: 153 ✭✭TheDiceMan2020


    Has someone being putting LSD in Mayor Sheahan's tea? Because he sounds like a rambling cabbage


  • Banned (with Prison Access) Posts: 4,552 ✭✭✭bigpink


    Does he get a golden handshake and pension I wonder?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 16,670 ✭✭✭✭osarusan


    Where is he off to?

    I thought he'd have been a likely candidate for the new directly-elected mayor position.


  • Moderators, Sports Moderators Posts: 12,113 Mod ✭✭✭✭Cookiemunster


    bigpink wrote: »
    Does he get a golden handshake and pension I wonder?

    He's a long term public servant (30+ years) so yes he will get a pension and any lump sum that's payable, which he's fully entitled to.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 5,245 ✭✭✭myshirt


    He's a long term public servant (30+ years) so yes he will get a pension and any lump sum that's payable, which he's fully entitled to.

    If you and I sign a contract whereby I can kick you in the face, I'm fully entitled to kick you in the face, but it doesn't make it right. A huge, huge issue that this country faces but doesn't address is public sector pay bills. They are extortionate. People are fully entitled to call it out.

    It's not Conn Murray's fault however, people shouldn't personalise it. I wish him well. I've crossed swords with him the past, he's a competent individual, unlike a lot of the waste in public service. So best of luck to him. Unfortunately we do not have a strong team of councilors in Limerick though, and when I deal with people looking to invest in Limerick they face palm at how bad the local representatives are. Conn would have made up for how poor they are. However if you didn't have people like James Collins, Maria Byrne, Stephen Keary, Richard O'Donoghue, and a couple of others over the years Limerick would be at a loss. I don't know do people even realise it. Collins in particular does trojan work.


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  • Closed Accounts Posts: 946 ✭✭✭Phileas Frog


    myshirt wrote: »
    If you and I sign a contract whereby I can kick you in the face, I'm fully entitled to kick you in the face, but it doesn't make it right. A huge, huge issue that this country faces but doesn't address is public sector pay bills. They are extortionate. People are fully entitled to call it out.

    Have you lost your reason? You want to deny public servants their entitled pensions?? They're extortionate because there's a lot of public servants.


  • Registered Users Posts: 1,004 ✭✭✭mitresize5


    I assume he decision was expedited by the fact there will be an executive mayor with decision making privileges which would undermine his role completely


  • Registered Users Posts: 812 ✭✭✭Glenomra


    myshirt wrote: »
    If you and I sign a contract whereby I can kick you in the face, I'm fully entitled to kick you in the face, but it doesn't make it right. A huge, huge issue that this country faces but doesn't address is public sector pay bills. They are extortionate. People are fully entitled to call it out.

    It's not Conn Murray's fault however, people shouldn't personalise it. I wish him well. I've crossed swords with him the past, he's a competent individual, unlike a lot of the waste in public service. So best of luck to him. Unfortunately we do not have a strong team of councilors in Limerick though, and when I deal with people looking to invest in Limerick they face palm at how bad the local representatives are. Conn would have made up for how poor they are. However if you didn't have people like James Collins, Maria Byrne, Stephen Keary, Richard O'Donoghue, and a couple of others over the years Limerick would be at a loss. I don't know do people even realise it. Collins in particular does trojan work.

    very fair, very valid.


  • Registered Users Posts: 609 ✭✭✭mdmix


    myshirt wrote: »
    Conn would have made up for how poor they are. However if you didn't have people like James Collins, Maria Byrne, Stephen Keary, Richard O'Donoghue, and a couple of others over the years Limerick would be at a loss. I don't know do people even realise it. Collins in particular does trojan work.

    Can you please explain, what if anything has Maria Byrne done for the city, aside from appearing in the local papers once a week to welcome some minor funding/ initiative that she had no part in?


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