Peter Fassbender Explained

Peter Fassbender
Birth Date:20 December 1946
Birth Place:Germany [1]
Assembly:British Columbia Legislative
Constituency Am:Surrey-Fleetwood
Term Start:May 14, 2013
Term End:May 9, 2017
Predecessor:Jagrup Brar
Successor:Jagrup Brar
Office2:Minister of Community, Sport and Cultural Development of British Columbia
Term Start2:July 30, 2015
Term End2:June 12, 2017
Premier2:Christy Clark
Predecessor2:Coralee Oakes
Successor2:Sam Sullivan
Office3:Minister of Education of British Columbia
Term Start3:June 7, 2013
Term End3:July 30, 2015
Premier3:Christy Clark
Predecessor3:Don McRae
Successor3:Mike Bernier
Office4:Mayor of the City of Langley
Term Start4:December 5, 2005
Term End4:June 17, 2013
Predecessor4:Marlene Grinnell
Successor4:Ted Schaffer
Office5:Langley City Councillor
Term Start5:December 9, 2002
Term End5:December 5, 2005
Party:BC Liberal
Profession:Politician
Spouse:Charlene
Children:Two sons

Peter Fassbender (born 1946) is a Canadian politician, who was elected to the Legislative Assembly of British Columbia in the 2013 provincial election after a career at the municipal level.[2] He was elected to represent the electoral district of Surrey-Fleetwood as a member of the British Columbia Liberal Party. He was appointed by Premier Christy Clark as Minister of Education in June 2013, then Minister of Community, Sport and Cultural Development & Minister Responsible for TransLink in July 2015.

Early profession

Fassbender was born in Germany and emigrated to Canada with his parents in 1952. Since then, he has lived his whole life in Surrey, Aldergrove or Langley. He graduated from Queen Elizabeth High School in Surrey and attended the National Broadcasting School in Vancouver. He got a film librarian job at CHAN Television (now Global) and moved up the ranks to cameraman, and then producer and director. He worked for the advertising agency James Lovick in the early 1970s and eventually became a partner of Frank Palmer at the national firm DDB Canada (formerly Palmer Jarvis).[3] A major focus of his private sector career focused on social marketing campaigns including smoking cessation projects for Health Canada and international marketing activities for Industry Canada. In 1996 and 1997 he was reported to have done volunteer public relations work for the evangelical men's organization Promise Keepers.[4] He is a distant cousin of actor Michael Fassbender.

Politics

After a failed run at a Social Credit nomination, Fassbender served a four-year term (1975 to 1979) during some turbulent years on the Langley school board. During that time, the board pursued a 'back-to-basics' approach that considered the restoration of corporal punishment and banning the novel Go Ask Alice.[5] Fassbender says his approach to education has changed since the 1970s.

Fassbender was elected for the first time to the city council of Langley in 2002, and then as mayor in the 2005, 2008 and 2011 civic elections. He advocated for the growing communities south of the Fraser River as co-chair of the municipal advisory council for Fraser Health and as vice-chair of TransLink's mayors council.

In November 2012, the provincial government appointed Fassbender as chair of the board for the BC Pavilion Corporation, which operates BC Place Stadium and the Vancouver Convention Centre. In addition to dealing with major renovations, the position also dealt with transparency criticism from journalist Bob Mackin.[6] In the 2013 provincial election, he defeated three-term NDP MLA Jagrup Brar and took leave from his mayoral position.

As Minister of Education, one of his priorities was to seek a 10-year labour agreement with the British Columbia Teachers' Federation.

In addition to his ministerial duties, Fassbender sat on the Cabinet Committee on Secure Tomorrow.[7]

In the 2017 provincial election, he lost his re-election as MLA to Jagrup Brar.

In 2018, he ran for his former position as mayor of the City of Langley.[8] He was narrowly defeated, losing to Val van den Broek by around 200 votes.[9]

Notes and References

  1. News: St. Denis. Jen. Peter Fassbender: Higher education. 27 February 2023. Business in Vancouver (magazine). 13 June 2013.
  2. Web site: Riding results: Marvin Hunt and Peter Fassbender carry Liberals to victory in Surrey ridings. Vancouver Sun. 15 May 2013. 27 February 2023.
  3. Web site: Meet Peter. fassbender.ca. 28 April 2014. https://web.archive.org/web/20140428130030/http://www.fassbender.ca/meet-peter/. 28 April 2014. dead.
  4. https://www.scribd.com/doc/228711449/Fassbender-and-Promise-Keepers "11,000 'take charge of family' Christian men plan rally at Coliseum"
  5. Web site: Steffenhagen. Janet. Peter Fassbender and the back-to-basics education movement in the '70s. BC Education Report. Vancouver Sun (blogs). 27 February 2023. 9 June 2013.
  6. News: Stueck. Wendy. B.C. government names Langley mayor as PavCo chair. 28 April 2014. Globe and Mail. 16 Nov 2012.
  7. https://www.leg.bc.ca/mla/40thparl/fassbender-Peter.htm Legislature Bio
  8. Web site: ELECTION: Langley City mayoralty candidate Peter Fassbender . Langley Advance Times . 12 October 2018.
  9. Web site: B.C. municipal election 2018: Langley (City) results . Global News . en.