Irene Vorrink Explained

Honorific-Prefix:Her Excellency
Irene Vorrink
Office:Minister of Health and Environment
Term Start:11 May 1973
Term End:19 December 1977
Primeminister:Joop den Uyl
Predecessor:Louis Stuyt
Successor:Leendert Ginjaar
Office1:Member of the Senate
Term Start1:16 September 1969
Term End1:11 May 1973
Parliamentarygroup1:Labour Party
Birthname:Irene Vorrink
Birth Date:1918 1, df=y
Birth Place:The Hague, Netherlands
Death Place:Leek, Netherlands
Nationality:Dutch
Party:Labour Party (from 1946)
Otherparty:Social Democratic
Workers' Party
(1936–1946)
Partner:Petrus Hugenholtz
(1954–1996)
Children:Koos Zwart (1947–2014)
Father:Koos Vorrink (1891–1955)
Alma Mater:University of Amsterdam
(Bachelor of Laws, Master of Laws)
Occupation:Politician · Civil servant · Jurist · Journalist · Editor · Nonprofit director

Irene Vorrink (7 January 1918 – 21 August 1996) was a Dutch politician of the Labour Party (PvdA).[1]

She was born on 7 January 1918 in The Hague as the daughter of the Dutch socialist leader Koos Vorrink. She studied law until 1943 and held several legal functions, before she became a member of the Senate for the PvdA in 1969.[2]

In 1973 she became Minister of Health in the cabinet Den Uyl. A major issue was the legislation concerning drugs, which she achieved in 1976 together with Minister of Justice, Dries van Agt. The Netherlands has since then employed a distinction between hard and soft drugs.[2]

She also took the leading role in attempting to establish a legal basis for the fluoridation of drinking water. Though fluoridation to prevent tooth decay had been occurring in many areas across the Netherlands for years, the Supreme Court ruled in 1973 that it should be specifically provided for in the Water Supply law. Her bill to do so did not find support in the House of Representatives outside her own party, and was dropped.[3]

From 1978 until 1979 Vorrink was an alderman in the city of Amsterdam.[2] A 16 MW nearshore wind farm in the IJsselmeer was named after her in 1996.[4] [5]

External links

Official

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Vorrink, Irene (1918-1996). Huygens ING. 12 November 2013. 20 February 2019. nl.
  2. Web site: Mr. I. (Irene) Vorrink . nl . Parlement.com . 21 June 2016.
  3. De drinkwaterfluoridering : tandartsen, staat en volksgezondheid in Nederland, 1946-1976. 23 September 2009. 301-302, 304-306. HA Edeler. nl.
  4. Web site: Irene Vorrink - Fully Commissioned Offshore Wind Farm - Netherlands 4C Offshore . www.4coffshore.com . https://web.archive.org/web/20201129010513/https://www.4coffshore.com/windfarms/netherlands/irene-vorrink-netherlands-nl28.html . 29 November 2020 . live.
  5. Web site: Great Expectations . . 8–9 . September 2010 . In 1996, a second and larger Dutch offshore project came online. The IreneVorrink farm had installed capacity of 16.8MW and carried an investment cost of €1.2 million/MW – almost half the cost of the earlier project. Energycosts showed a similarly impressive reduction down to €0.054/kWh .