Horst-Dieter Weyrauch

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Horst-Dieter Weyrauch (* 1936 ) is a German local politician. From 1991 to 1994 he was mayor of the district town of Wernigerode am Harz .

Life

The trained electrical machine builder qualified as an engineer for marine electronics, as an engineer for automation technology and as a graduate engineer. Weyrauch has held several managerial positions in the VEB Steremat "Hermann Schlimme" in Berlin-Lichtenberg since 1964 , most recently as the state head of the Technical Control Organization (TKO) of the Office for Standardization, Metrology and Goods Testing (ASMW). He was also involved in the Chamber of Technology (KDT) and had been KDT chairman at VEB Steremat since February 1981.

In 1976 he joined the CDU and became chairman of the CDU local group in Berlin-Karlshorst. In November 1981 he succeeded Dietrich Voigtberger as acting chairman and in May 1982 chairman of the CDU district association Berlin-Lichtenberg. In December 1989 he was a delegate at the special party conference of the CDU in Berlin. On February 25, 1990 he was from the III. Meeting of the CDU party executive as a candidate of the CDU for the Volkskammer elections on March 18, 1990 in the Berlin constituency. The 14th place on the list was not enough for a seat in the People's Chamber.

From May 1991 to 1994 he was mayor of Wernigerode.

Weyrauch promoted choral singing and music that accompanied his life. After the end of the Second World War he was in the preparatory choir of the St. Thomas Choir .

He moved to Potsdam , where he worked as an administrative manager in the city administration. a. 2005 became a founding member of the building association Neue Synagoge.

Awards

literature

  • Christine Trosin: Audience with the mayor , in: Neue Wernigeröder Zeitung , 2 (1991), No. 12, pp. 3-4

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Berliner Zeitung of April 1, 1989
  2. New Times of April 22, 1981
  3. Neue Zeit from September 8, 1981
  4. ^ New Times of January 2, 1980
  5. Neue Zeit of November 4, 1981 and May 26, 1982
  6. Neue Zeit from December 15, 1989
  7. ^ New Times of March 8, 1990
  8. Neue Zeit from June 28, 1985