"And that's why we need brave, bold investment decisions by this government and not more of the same."
The council's leader, Ann-Marie Barker, has said she welcomed the publication of the report and that it represented "a pivotal moment in understanding the decisions and actions of the past" which had contributed to the council's current situation.A small town in County Fermanagh is the final resting place for 82 young airmen.
They lie in neat rows of Commonwealth war graves in both the Roman Catholic church cemetery and the Church of Ireland cemetery in Irvinestown.It is the largest group of World War Two Air Force graves in Northern Ireland.More than half of those who died are buried thousands of miles from their homes in Australia, Canada and New Zealand.
But how did they come to be there?It is a reminder of the role the area played in the Battle of the Atlantic between 1941 and 1945.
Lough Erne was a base for RAF Coastal Command flying boats protecting Allied shipping convoys in the Atlantic.
A secret deal with the Republic of Ireland allowed the planes to fly through Irish airspace.Both mothers said the stress from the legal proceedings – which took more than two years - had been cited as a factor in the break down of their relationship.
The court heard the biological mother suffered from anxiety, depression and suicidal thoughts made worse by the case.The judgement - made in 2023, but only just published - said Mr Albon claimed he wanted to "protect the welfare" of the child when he was actually "wholly self-centred".
Judge Furness concluded: "They chose a sperm donor who advertised that he would leave it up to the mother as to whether there should be any contact."There was evidence from his own social media material that Albon has indicated that to be the position."