Rod Welford

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Preceded byAnna Bligh
Succeeded byGeoff Wilson (Education)
Anna Bligh (Arts)
Rod Welford
Minister for Education and the Arts
In office
28 July 2005  26 March 2009
PremierPeter Beattie
Anna Bligh
Preceded byAnna Bligh
Succeeded byGeoff Wilson (Education)
Anna Bligh (Arts)
Attorney-General of Queensland
Minister for Justice
In office
22 February 2001  28 July 2005
PremierPeter Beattie
Preceded byMatt Foley
Succeeded byLinda Lavarch
Minister for Environment and Heritage
In office
29 June 1998  22 February 2001
PremierPeter Beattie
Preceded byBrian Littleproud
Succeeded byDean Wells
Minister for Natural Resources
In office
29 June 1998  22 February 2001
PremierPeter Beattie
Preceded byLawrence Springborg
Succeeded byStephen Robertson
Shadow Minister for Environment and Heritage
In office
27 February 1996  29 June 1998
LeaderPeter Beattie
Preceded byDoug Slack
Succeeded byVince Lester
Member of the Queensland Legislative Assembly
for Everton
In office
19 September 1992  21 March 2009
Preceded byGlen Milliner
Succeeded byMurray Watt
Member of the Queensland Legislative Assembly
for Stafford
In office
2 December 1989  19 September 1992
Preceded byTerry Gygar
Succeeded bySeat abolished
Personal details
BornRodney Jon Welford
(1958-09-30)30 September 1958
Brisbane, Queensland, Australia
Died28 June 2025(2025-06-28) (aged 66)
PartyLabor
SpouseRosemary Anne Walters
Alma materUniversity of Queensland
OccupationSolicitor, Barrister

Rodney Jon Welford (30 September 1958 – 28 June 2025) was an Australian politician from Queensland. He served as a Labor Party Member of Parliament in the Legislative Assembly of Queensland from 1989 to 2009.

Welford was born in Brisbane on 30 September 1958. He attended St Paul's Anglican School in Bald Hills.[1]

He was a prominent solicitor of the Supreme Court of Queensland and barrister of the High Court of Australia prior to entering parliament. His qualifications are Bachelor of Arts (First Class Honours), Bachelor of Laws, Graduate Diploma in Legal Practice, Graduate Diploma in Industrial Relations and a Master of Science (Environmental Management) and Certificate in Permaculture Design.[citation needed]

Welford was active in his community as a member of the Royal Life Saving Society Australia and a branch, state and national medal winner for his Surf Life Saving Club Burleigh Heads Mowbray Park on the Gold Coast. He was the first honorary State Education Officer of the Surf Life Saving Association and Technical Director of the Royal Life Saving Society in the early 1980s. He also worked as a professional lifeguard for the Gold Coast City Council while completing university studies.[citation needed]

Also during his university studies Welford served on the student union of the University of Queensland.[2]

Political career

Welford entered state parliament as the member for Stafford at the 1989 state election. He switched to the district of Everton at the 1992 state election, which he held until his decision not to stand for re-election at the State election in 2009.[3]

Welford served in a number of portfolios in the Labor governments of Premiers Peter Beattie and Anna Bligh. He was the Minister for Environment and Heritage and Minister for Natural Resources from 1998 to 2001. He was the Attorney-General and Minister for Justice from 2001 to 2005. He was the Minister for Education and Minister for the Arts from 2005 to 2009, as well as the Minister for Training from 2006 to 2009.[citation needed]

Before serving as a State Minister, he had led a Ministerial Review of Sports Funding (1990–91) leading to the creation of the Queensland Academy of Sport and chaired the Government Sustainable Energy Advisory Group (1994–95), a joint government-industry committee, which undertook projects providing the foundation for subsequent government grants programs to subsidise the installation of household solar water heaters and remote area solar power systems.[citation needed]

As a minister, his focus on active policy development attracted recognition for innovative policy initiatives. For example, while responsible for the environment and natural resources portfolio, he established the Queensland Environmental Protection Agency, took action to protect biodiversity and reduce greenhouse emissions by introducing ground-breaking legislation to stem broadscale land clearing, created the first large scale water efficiency program in the nation, legislated to protect environmental health of river systems and forged a historic Regional Forest Agreement between the government, timber industry and conservation movement which secured sustainable timber production while expanding the national park estate by more than 400,000 hectares. He was the Australian State Government representative at the United Nations Commission for Sustainable Development in 2000.[citation needed]

After politics

Personal life and death

References

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