Chamber of Crafts for Munich and Upper Bavaria

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Coordinates: 48 ° 8 ′ 35.2 ″  N , 11 ° 34 ′ 14 ″  E

Chamber of Crafts for Munich and Upper Bavaria

Logography
position Chamber of Crafts
legal form Professional corporation under public law
founding 1899
Headquarters Munich (Max-Joseph-Strasse 4)
Authority management Franz Xaver Peteranderl (President), Frank Hüpers (Chief Executive Officer)
Servants approx. 350
Budget volume 72,160 T € (2018)
Web presence www.hwk-muenchen.de

The Chamber of Crafts for Munich and Upper Bavaria is one of 53 chambers of crafts in the Federal Republic of Germany and is based in Munich . Germany's largest Chamber of Crafts has around 80,000 member companies, in which around 23,000 or 29% of all apprentices are trained, and is involved in the areas of self-administration and lobbying. Official statistics assign around 290,000 people to the skilled trades in Munich and Upper Bavaria, who generate sales of almost € 32 billion. The craft thus employs 11% of all employees subject to social security contributions and contributes 5% to total sales.

The Chamber of Crafts ensures that the concerns of all craftsmen are represented jointly and in solidarity in politics and the public. The Chamber of Crafts offers advice to its members. The range of services includes all areas of everyday business. From A for labor law to U for environment.

The Chamber of Crafts is also available to entrepreneurs, employees and apprentices as well as young people and their parents in the field of training and further education . It maintains seven training centers in Upper Bavaria and offers numerous courses and seminars.

The Chamber of Crafts is a corporation under public law that performs a variety of tasks for its members. These tasks are stipulated by law in the craft regulations.

organization

The members of the Chamber of Crafts send their representatives to the General Assembly, which consists of 75 people. 50 assembly members represent the self-employed and 25 the employees. Of these members, 63 are directly elected and 12 are elected by the general assembly. The general assembly in turn elects the board of directors from among its members, which consists of the president, 2 vice-presidents (including one from the employee side) and 12 other members.

The management, which consists of full-time employees of the Chamber of Crafts, is also elected by the general assembly. The board is responsible for the administration of the Chamber of Crafts. The Chamber of Crafts is represented externally by the President and the General Manager.

history

On December 11, 1899, the Bavarian State Ministry of the Interior ordered the establishment of chambers of crafts. A chamber with its seat in Munich and a department each in Ingolstadt and Rosenheim was established for the Upper Bavaria district.

In accordance with the ordinance of April 20, 1942, the chamber was transferred to the “ Munich-Upper Bavaria Gauwirtschaftskammer ” on April 1, 1943 together with the Chamber of Commerce and the Chamber of Commerce and Industry for Munich and Upper Bavaria . After the war these were separated again.

In the mid-1950s, the Chamber of Crafts moved into the new building at Max-Joseph-Strasse 4, because the former building of the Chamber of Crafts in Damenstiftstrasse had been destroyed in 1944.

Construction of the seven vocational training and technology centers (BTZ) began in the mid-1970s. In the rooms of the BTZ in Ingolstadt, Altötting, Mühldorf, Rosenheim, Traunstein, Weilheim and Munich, there are above all inter-company apprentice training measures (ÜLU) and numerous further training measures, for example in the field of CNC technology.

Between 1955 and 1996 the Chamber of Crafts for Munich and Upper Bavaria appointed two presidents of the Central Association of German Crafts (ZDH): Joseph Wild (1955–1977) and Heribert Späth (1988–1996). From 1994 to 2014 Heinrich Traublinger was President of the Chamber of Crafts and then Georg Schlagbauer. Franz Xaver Peteranderl took over the presidency on September 14, 2016.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ HWK Munich: Franz Xaver Peteranderl new president. In: www.hwk-muenchen.de. Retrieved December 26, 2016 .