Martina Nowara

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Martina Nowara (born January 4, 1961 in Innsbruck ) is an Austrian politician for the Austrian People's Party (ÖVP). She has been a member of the Tyrolean state parliament since March 2018 .

Martina Nowara

Life

After completing elementary and secondary school in Innsbruck, Martina Nowara attended the HBLA for business professions in Innsbruck . She then worked as an office worker, as a secretary for the Tyrolean social service at the children's day-care center in Innsbruck and as an employee at Wüstenrot Bausparkasse . Since 2001 she has been the administrator of the Innsbrucker Menu Service (IMS) of the Innsbruck social services. Since 2004 she has been a councilor at the Tyrol Chamber of Labor . At the Theater InnStanz association she acts as a deputy director. She is an advisory board member of the Tyrolean Association of Tenants and Apartment Owners (TMW).

politics

Since 2003 she has been deputy chairman of the ÖVP Reichenau , since 2004 she has been the managing director of the Austrian Workers' Union (ÖAAB) Innsbruck -Stadt, where she has also been the deputy city director of the ÖVP women since 2008 . She has been a member of the regional management of ÖVP Frauen Tirol since 2014. On March 28, 2018, she was in the constituent state parliament session of the XVII. Legislative term as Member of the Tyrolean Parliament sworn in , where it in the Committee on Labor, Health, Care and Social Affairs and the Committee on society, is a member of the Committee on Petitions, education, culture and sports. She replaced Josef Geisler after moving to the Platter III state government .

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. a b Entry on Martina Nowara on the website of the Tyrolean Parliament
  2. a b c d meineabektiven.at: Martina Nowara . Retrieved April 15, 2018.
  3. ^ IMS - Innsbruck Menu Service . Retrieved April 15, 2018.
  4. ^ Chamber councilors of AK Tirol ( Memento from April 15, 2018 in the Internet Archive ). Retrieved April 15, 2018.
  5. Theater InnStanz Executive . Retrieved April 15, 2018.
  6. Tiroler Tageszeitung: 16 newcomers get involved for the first time: This is what the new state parliament looks like . Article dated February 26, 2018, accessed March 4, 2020.
  7. orf.at: For the first time a woman at the head of the state parliament . Article dated March 28, 2018, accessed April 15, 2018.