So it's still chiral because the electron pairs of the nitrogen are fixed and can't scramble?
You need to go back to the definition. Chirality is a property of a whole molecule, not a single atom. The presence of "chiral" centres does not necessarily confer chirality to the molecule (e.g. ribitol, galactitol etc.
meso compounds in general). For this reason, I prefer the term "asymmetric centre" to "chiral centre".
A molecule is chiral if it has a non-superimposable mirror image. Draw the mirror image of your compound, are they superimposable?
A short cut is to look for a plane or centre of symmetry - if either of these are present, the molecule is achiral. Can you see any planes of symmetry in your molecule?