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Victoria Carter
New Zealand politician and businesswoman From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Victoria Mary Carter ONZM is a former New Zealand politician. She is now a professional company director and businesswoman.
Early life
Victoria Carter,(nee Davies-Booth) was born in England, her parents are journalist Valerie Davies [1] and now retired Colonel in the British Army, Col Nicolas Davies. Her grandfather was the Vicar of St Mary's Church, Twickenham, Rev WJ Davies.
Carter came to New Zealand with her mother and brother in 1970, after her parents separated. Her mother later married journalist, Pat Booth.[2]
She went to nine schools including Parnell School, Ararimu, Pukekohe High School and Baradene College.
In 1990, Victoria married John Carter, a former legal partner of McElroy Milne and later Carter & Partners. Victoria and John have two sons.
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Early Career
Carter holds a law degree from the University of Auckland[3] and has a varied background in public relations, marketing, and governance.
Before graduation she worked at Butler White & Hanna. Rob Fenwick offered her a job in financial public relations at Allan Fenwick McCully. She later became PR director for McConnell Dowell group of companies, including InterPacific, Trustees Executors and National Insurance.
In the mid 80's Carter began her own public relations firm acting for clients including Television New Zealand, Farmers Trading, Bayleys Real Estate and other property clients.
In 1995 Victoria Carter was seconded to the board of the Auckland Kindergarten Association, going on to be Vice President and ending up as the President of the Association until 2005. [4][5] The AKA was the largest educational organization outside of the tertiary sector. Carter advocated for increased funding [6] and raised the awareness of the changing face of Auckland with kindergartens having so many ethnicities and cultures within them. [7][8]
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Political career
Victoria Carter was elected as an Auckland City Councillor in 1998 when she top-polled in the Hobson ward.[9] A year earlier, 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.[10]
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.[11] Carter also restarted the Auckland Arts Festival which she chaired until June 2015.[12]
Carter deliberately left politics in 2004 saying she wanted to go back into business. She then co-owned a CBD hotel and co-founded a business.[13]
Later career
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Carter co-founded Cityhop, New Zealand’s first car sharing company with JUCY Group.[14][15] JUCY later exited Cityhop and Carter and her son grew the business before selling to Toyota Financial Services in November 2018. [16]
She still speaks about the value of car share to cities battling congestion[17] [18]
In May 2018, after many years on the committee, Victoria Carter was elected as the first female President of the Northern Club.[19]
Carter has served on over 25 boards including Kidicorp, now Best Start, New Zealand's largest childcare provider, Turner's Auctions, NZ Thoroughbred Racing, Auckland Racing Club and JUCY Group. She has been a Council appointee to the Auckland Regional Amenities Funding Board since 2017 and is presently Chairperson.[20]
When Deputy Chair of NZTR, Carter was appointed to the Asian Racing Federation and the IFHA. She has spoken at several Asian Racing conferences and IFHA meets. In Korea she gave a keynote speech on 'why racing needs more women,' presenting research on how diversity results in more collaboration, innovation and transformation.
In Paris 2019, she spoke on consumer and political perceptions of horse racing and its impact. In Cape Town at the 38th Asian Racing Conference in 2020 Victoria Carter spoke about the mental health of jockeys, the demands on them, the loneliness and the part regulators could play. She then led a panel with leading jockeys Michelle Payne, Anthony Delpech and psychologist Kirsten van Heerden. Anthony Delpech opened up about how hard it is.[21]
In September 2019 Minister of Transport Phil Twyford appointed her to the Board of Waka Kotahi, NZ Transport Agency. She chaired the People & Culture committee.[22]
Carter is also an Independent director of Ngati Awa Group Holdings, the commercial arm of Ngati Awa runanga in the Bay of Plenty. In 2020 Carter began what became a very long crusade and court case to ‘save Laura Fergusson a much loved gym, pool, home and facility in Auckland for the physically disabled.’[23] Unfortunately the land was sold and residents were moved out. [24]
In 2023 Carter succeeded in getting change and became Chair of Laura Fergusson Trust.[25] and she got a gym programme and rehabilitation home for the physically disabled off the ground.
In 2023 she began a regular column in Businessdesk called Failfile. Failfile interviews well-known and interesting people and explores their disappointments, embarrassment and knowledge.
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Honours and awards
In 2013 Carter was named in the inaugural Global Forty Over 40 list acknowledging women who are disrupting and reinventing, and was the only Australasian selected.[26]
She was a finalist in the arts category of the Women of Influence awards in 2013 and 2014 for her work with the Auckland Arts Festival.[27]
In the 2016 New Year Honours, Carter was appointed an Officer of the New Zealand Order of Merit for service to arts, business, and the community.[28]
In 2024 Baradene College awarded Victoria Carter the ‘Cor Unum Alumnae Meritae award which pays tribute to a Sacre Coeur alumna who has embraced the philosophy of the Sacred Heart in her everyday life.[29]
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Publications
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City needs to think outside of the Square NZ Herald April 2015
No great city says let’s have more cars. NZ Herald August 2017
Our house was once in a leafy street NZ Herald October 2017
Carsharing makes you happier, healthier and wealthier Stuff January 2019
Women bring new thinking to Boards NZ Herald July 2019
Climate emergency takes a front seat NZ Herald July 2019
How Prince Philip taught me compassion NZ Herald May 2021
Rebuilding parenting skills might help kids get a better start NZ Herald January 2023
Tackling today’s problems NZ Herald January 2023
Bringing Banks to account Newsroom Feb 2023
https://newsroom.co.nz/2023/02/07/bringing-banks-to-social-account/
Two wealthy women, 200M give or take Newsroom January 2023
https://newsroom.co.nz/2023/01/22/victoria-carter-a-tale-of-two-women/
Why failing is good Businessdesk July 2023
https://businessdesk.co.nz/article/business-advice/the-fail-file-victoria-carter
Best of Failfile 1 Businessdesk December 2023
https://businessdesk.co.nz/article/business-advice/best-of-fail-file-part-one
5 wishes for 2024 Newsroom December 2023
https://newsroom.co.nz/2024/01/04/victoria-carter-the-birds-and-the-bees/
Best of Failfile 2 BusinessDesk January 2024
https://businessdesk.co.nz/article/business-advice/best-of-fail-file-part-two
Best of 2024 Failfile BusinessDesk December2024
https://businessdesk.co.nz/article/fail-file/best-of-fail-file-2024-part-one
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References
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