D Thursday, October 29, 2009 METRO E3.99 Corpse Bride E5.99 Poohs Heffalump Halloween Movie E7Monsters vs. Aliens Annual 2010 E7.99 Twilight E16.99 Scooby-Doo! The Mystery Begins *Offer applies to stickered stock bearing this sticker . For a limited period, while stocks last. Individual titles that appear elsewhere in-store, outside of this campaign, may be priced differently. Prices may vary online. Corpse Bride - CORPSE BRIDE and all related characters and elements are trademarks of and Warner Bros. Entertainment Inc. Winnie The Pooh Heffalump Halloween Movie - BVHE. All Rights Reserved. ABC Studios. Twilight - 2009 Summit Entertainment LLC. All Rights Reserved. 2009 E1 Entertainment. All Rights Reserved. Coraline - Film 2009 LAIKA, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Artwork 2009 Universal Studios. All Rights Reserved Scooby-Doo The Mystery Begins - 2009 Warner Bros. All Rights Reserved. hmv exclusive sleeve E16.99 Coraline - 2 DVD 2D/3D limited edition On air: Claire Byrne and Fergus Finlay State not doing enough to ease budget-cut pain BY ROSS McDONAGH Straight talk: Fergus Finlay, Chief of Barnardos, at the Legends In Your Lunchtime series Picture: Patrick OLeary PUBLIC sector pay cuts are going to hurt but the Government is not doing enough to ease the pain, ac- cording to the chief executive of one of Irelands lead- ing charities. Fergus Finlay was speaking as the latest speaker in the award winning public event series Legends In Your Lunchtime, presented by National College Ireland, Newstalk 106-108fm and Metro. Mr Finlay, of charity Barnardos, said that while pay cuts were inevitable, the Government should be doing more to keep channels of dialogue open. The whole process of consultation that withered on the vine about a year ago shouldnt have been allowed to wither on the vine, he said. People at work should have been engaged in a dialogue with their Govern- ment throughout the entire period. We are now looking at a situation where the Govern- ment is probably going to try to impose a pay cut on the public sector in the Budget... but it will be a pay cut that will be met by bitterness and resentment, and it shouldnt be that way. Mr Finlay said that while he understood peoples an- ger, taking to the streets was not the answer. This is about pay, and what the country can afford... At the moment theres a dialogue of the deaf going on, people are shouting at each other and not talking to each other, and thats extremely unhealthy. Its not the unions fault, its the Governments fault. Mr Finlay said public sector workers are not being given the chance to provide any input into decisions being made, which forces them on to the battle lines. He said the only way to get an ailing organisation out of trouble was to be open and honest about the prob- lems, and discussing solutions with everybody in- volved, adding: No attempt has been made to have any kind of dialogue of that sort since our crisis started. Mr Finlay also said the economic downturn posed a double challenge for charities: increased demand for services and fewer donations from a cash-strapped pub- lic. The demand on services, not just for us but for every charity in Ireland, is increasing rapidly. Eamonn Fallon, chief of Daft Media speaks on November 11 followed by Sinn Fin President Gerry Adams on December 2. If you want to attend, you need to register at www.ncirl.ie. index.html2.html3.html4.html5.html6.html7.html8.html9.html10.html11.html12.html13.html14.html15.html16.html17.html18.html19.html20.html21.html22.html23.html