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Cobh Community College representatives launch Gas Networks
Ireland Cork/Belfast Leadership Programme
Gas Networks Ireland Launches Co-operation Ireland Partnership
On Tuesday, 2nd October, Gas Networks Ireland launched the 2018 Co-operation Ireland
Cork/Belfast Leadership Programme in the Gas Networks Ireland headquarters in Cork, as
part of its three-year partnership with Co-operation Ireland, with participants from Cobh
Community College and Irish boxer Christina Desmond. Co-operation Ireland is the only cross
border project of its kind.
Since its establishment in 1979, Co-operation Ireland has worked with local youth organisa-
tions and the Cork Sports Partnership to facilitate leadership programmes for Cork youths.
The programme is designed to encourage participants, all aged between 15 and 16, to ac-
tively engage in their communities, developing their confidence and providing them with the
tools to become positive role models in their community. Participants are recruited by their
teachers and leaders in their local youth groups.
As part of the leadership project, all participants carry out a social action project to tackle
a problem they identify in their community. In the first year of the partnership, Cobh Com-
munity College identified the issue of exclusion in their school as one that needed attention.
Although exclusion is a non-physical form of bullying, its effects can be just as damaging. To
counteract this problem, Cobh Community College implemented a buddy system.
Ian O’Flynn, Head of Commercial, Gas Networks Ireland, comments: “Gas Networks Ireland
is delighted to host the 2018 launch of the Cork/Belfast Leadership Programme in the Gas
Networks Ireland headquarters here in Cork. The programme provides a platform for local
communities in Cork and Belfast to develop the leaders of the future. Partnership with local
communities is a focal point at the core of Gas Networks Ireland’s Corporate Responsibility
Strategy. We are now in our fifth year of working with Co-operation Ireland and are delighted
to support a project that develops positive relations among Irish young people and communi-
ties on a cross-community and cross-border basis.’
The leadership programme is run, under the same terms, in Belfast and the programme
brings the groups, from both sides of the border, together so they can learn about each
other’s traditions and cultural backgrounds, helping to build a society which is based on toler-
ance and acceptance of cultural differences.