Willibald Stacherl

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Willibald Stacherl (born January 7, 1947 in Windisch-Minihof , Minihof-Liebau municipality ) is an Austrian politician ( SPÖ ). Stacherl was a member of the Burgenland Landtag from 1999 to 2010 .

education and profession

Stacherl was born as the son of construction worker Karl Stacherl from Windisch-Minihof. He attended elementary school in Windisch-Minihof and secondary school in Jennersdorf . He then learned the profession of bricklayer , completing the vocational school in Pinkafeld . Stacherl passed the journeyman's examination in 1966 and worked as a bricklayer in Jennersdorf and Graz between 1963 and 1970 . Stacherl graduated from the building trade school in Graz from 1969 to 1971 and was a draftsman in Graz and Munich from 1970 to 1974 . After training at the technical college for construction technology in Munich between 1974 and 1975, Stacherl worked from 1976 to 1978 as a designer and then until 1981 as a site manager for various Munich construction companies. He then moved back to Burgenland and was employed as a sales assistant at Bausparkasse Oberwart between 1981 and 1982 . In 1983 he became district secretary in Jennersdorf.

politics

Stacherl was a local councilor of Minihof-Liebau between 1982 and 1986 and was elected vice mayor in 1987. From October 1987 he was mayor of the municipality, but did not stand in the 2007 municipal council elections in Burgenland . Stacherl has been the SPÖ district chairman of Jennersdorf since 1999 and was sworn in as a member of the Burgenland state parliament on March 17, 1999. He was spokesman for security, blue light organizations and civil protection in the SPÖ state parliament club. Stacherl did not stand in the state elections in Burgenland in 2010 and left the state parliament on June 24, 2010.

Individual evidence

  1. ^ ORF Burgenland Politics: "New candidates for the Landtag", January 27, 2010

literature

  • Johann Kriegler: Political manual of Burgenland. III. Part (1996-2001). Eisenstadt 2001 (Burgenland Research; 84), ISBN 3-901517-29-4 .

Web links