Guro Fjellanger (26 January 1964 – 16 April 2019)[1] was a Norwegian politician for the Liberal Party. She served as Minister of the Environment in the first cabinet Bondevik from 1997 to 2000. She was a private consultant and a board member of several government agencies and organisations, and a member of two government-appointed commissions.
Early life
Fjellanger was born in Bergen as the daughter of Håkon Fjellanger, a professor, and Jorunn Carlsen, an interior decorator.[2] She grew up in Stokmarknes[3] and graduated high school in 1984. She later earned a degree in history from the University of Oslo in 1990.[2]
Career
In 1985, Fjellanger was appointed as secretary of the Young Liberals, the youth wing of the Liberal Party. From 1986 to 1988 she chaired the organization. In 1988, she became vice president of the organization Nei til EU,[2] which opposes Norwegian membership in the European Union.[relevant?][citation needed] She was then secretary-general from 1991 to 1995.[2]
In 1994 Fjellanger became a member of the central committee of the Liberal Party. She served as her party's information director in 1995, and was vice president of the party from 1996 to 2000. In 1996 she also worked briefly as a manager in the Norwegian Society for the Conservation of Nature.[2]
She was a member of two government-appointed commissions on the regulation of medical research and protection against discrimination of the disabled.[2]
Personal life
Guro Fjellanger was born with spina bifida, a dysfunction of the spinal cord which inhibits normal walking. She learned to walk to a certain degree, she later used a wheelchair exclusively. When she became Minister of the Environment she became the first Norwegian government minister with a disability.[3] In 2007 she notably won a lawsuit against the state, who in 2004 had refused to grant her insurance coverage with Norwegian Public Service Pension Fund.[7]
In a November 2018 op-ed for Dagbladet, Fjellanger wrote that she has "not been constantly, seriously ill for the past 54 years though [she has] lived with spina bifida." She revealed that she had cancer and recently contracted serious infections and atrial fibrillation.[8] She died on 16 April 2019, aged 55.[4]
^"Forbrukerrådets styre" (in Norwegian). Norwegian Consumer Council. 4 November 2008. Archived from the original on 10 March 2009. Retrieved 16 January 2009.