Victoria Carter

Victoria Carter ONZM
Personal details
Born England
Nationality New Zealand
Alma mater University of Auckland
Occupation Company director and Businesswoman

Victoria Carter ONZM is a former New Zealand politician. She is now a professional company director and businesswoman.

Early life

Carter, born in England, came to New Zealand with her mother, journalist Valerie Davies. Her stepfather is journalist Pat Booth.[1]

Education and early career

Carter holds a law degree from the University of Auckland[2] and has a varied background in public relations, marketing, and governance. Carter has served on the boards of Kidicorp, Turner’s Auctions, New Zealand Thoroughbred Racing, Auckland Racing Club, and JUCY group.[3][4][5] She was extensively involved with the Auckland Kindergarten Association from 1995 to 2005, as Chair (4 years), Deputy-Chair (3 years), and Councillor (3 years), ending up as the President of the Association.[6][7]

Political career

Carter was elected as an Auckland City Councillor in 1998 for the Hobson ward.[8] Carter was the first independent trustee to be elected to the Auckland Energy Consumer Trust in 1997, but had to resign from this position when elected to Auckland City Council.[9]

She served as Chair of City Attractions at Auckland City Council and led the public private partnership that saw the indoor arena at Quay Street built.[10] Carter also restarted the Auckland Arts Festival which she chaired until June 2015.[11]

Later career

Carter left politics in 2003 to pursue business opportunities, co-founding Cityhop, New Zealand’s first car sharing company with JUCY Group led by brothers Tim and Dan Alpe.[12][13]

Awards

In 2013 Carter was named in the inaugural Forty Over 40 list acknowledging women who are disrupting and reinventing, and was the only Australasian selected.[14] She was a finalist in the arts category of the Women of Influence awards in 2013 and 2014.[15]

In the 2016 New Year’s Honours list Victoria was made an Officer of the New Zealand Order of Merit for service to arts, business, and the community.[16]

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/19/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.