Third Follett Ministry

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The Third Follett Ministry was the fourth ministry of the Government of the Australian Capital Territory, and was led by Labor Chief Minister Rosemary Follett and her deputy, Wayne Berry. It was sworn in on 6 April 1992 following the incumbent Labor minority government winning a plurality of seats in the Australian Capital Territory Legislative Assembly at the 1992 election.

First arrangement

This covers the period from 6 April 1992 (when the Ministry was sworn in)[1] until 13 April 1994 when Wayne Berry stood down as Deputy Chief Mnisiter and was replaced by David Lamont.

Office Minister

Chief Minister
Treasurer

Rosemary Follett

Deputy Chief Minister
Minister for Health
Minister for Industrial Relations
Minister for Sport

Wayne Berry

Minister for Education and Training
Minister for the Arts
Minister for the Environment, Land, and Planning

Bill Wood

Attorney-General
Minister for Housing and Community Services
Minister for Urban Services

Terry Connolly

Second arrangement

This covers the period from 13 April 1994[2] until the 1995 ACT general election. There was one minor change during this period when, on 20 May 1994, the arts ministry was expanded to include heritage, with Wood remaining as minister.[3]

Office Minister

Chief Minister
Treasurer

Rosemary Follett

Deputy Chief Minister
Minister for Housing and Community Services
Minister for Urban Services
Minister for Industrial Relations
Minister for Sport

David Lamont

Minister for Education and Training
Minister for the Arts (until 20 May 1994)
Minister for the Arts and Heritage (from 20 May 1994)
Minister for the Environment, Land, and Planning

Bill Wood

Attorney-General
Minister for Health

Terry Connolly

References

  1. "Notification of Appointment of Ministers NI 1992 No 1". ACT Gazette (ACT Legislative Assembly). 1992-1. 1992-04-06. Retrieved 2010-08-19. 
  2. "Notification of Appointment of Ministers NI 1994 No 1". ACT Gazette (ACT Legislative Assembly). 1994-1. 1994-04-13. Retrieved 2010-08-19. 
  3. "Notification of Appointment of Ministers NI 1994 No 2". ACT Gazette (ACT Legislative Assembly). 1994-02. 1994-05-20. Retrieved 2010-08-19. 
Preceded by
Second Follett Ministry
Third Follett Ministry
1992-1995
Succeeded by
First Carnell Ministry
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