Sylvia Daniel

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Sylvia Daniel (* 11. September 1950 in Affinghausen ; † 27. May 2010 in Hannover ) was a German temporary employment - entrepreneur and founder .

Live and act

Born in a small town at the beginning of the economic miracle , Sylvia Daniel completed an apprenticeship as a hotel manager. In 1984 she founded with her husband Martin White, the ZAG - temporary employment company GmbH , the nationwide expanded to around 90 offices and approximately 10,000 time workers employed.

In addition, the entrepreneur and her husband were also involved in social areas. In 2007 they founded the ZAG Foundation Pro Chance , whose statutory task as a non-profit foundation is primarily to support children and young people in the Hanover region . Pro Chance is one of the largest private foundations in Germany.

Sylvia Daniel, described by former employees as an “entrepreneur with a lot of heart and soul”, had a say in the operational business of ZAG to the end, before she died at the age of 59 after a serious illness.

Honors

According to a council resolution of December 9, 1999, future names of streets, paths, squares and bridges in the Lower Saxony state capital Hanover are to be named predominantly after women, since as of August 2011 only 157 of the 3486 locations of this type in Hanover are named after women and 1208 were named after men. Sylvia Daniels was suggested as one of many others to which a corresponding location could be dedicated.

literature

  • Lars Ruzic: Sylvia Daniel died. The Hanover region has lost a formative entrepreneur. The co-founder and owner of the ZAG temporary employment company, Sylvia Daniel, died last week at the age of 59 after a serious illness , in: Hannoversche Allgemeine Zeitung (HAZ) from June 2, 2010; last accessed online on November 12, 2014
  • Christine Kannenberg, Sabine Popp (ed.), Luise F. Pusch , Annette Volland (research): Sylvia Daniel , in: Important women in Hanover. A help for future naming of streets, paths, squares and bridges after female personalities , ed. from the City of Hanover, Department for Women and Equality, Department of Planning and Urban Development, Hanover: City of Hanover, August 2011, p. 48

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. a b c d e Christine Kannenberg, Sabine Popp (Red.), Luise F. Pusch, Annette Volland (research): Hildegard Braukmann (see literature)
  2. a b c Lars Ruzic: Sylvia Daniel died ... (see literature)
  3. Uwe Bodemann, Brigitte Vollmer-Schubert: Introduction , in: Christine Kannenberg, Sabine Popp (Red.), Luise F. Pusch, Annette Volland (research): Sylvia Daniel , in: Important women ... (see literature)