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Rosslyn Noonan

Rosslyn Noonan
Wellington City Councillor
In office
1980–1986
Personal details
Born 1946
Political party Labour
Spouse(s) Michael A. Noonan
Children 2
Alma mater University of Auckland
Profession Trade unionist

Rosslyn 'Ros' Joy Noonan (neé Shaw, born 1946) was a New Zealand politician and trade unionist. She was an organiser for several trade unions and the Labour Party and served for a time in local government. Later she would serve as New Zealand's Human Rights Commissioner.

Rosslyn Noonan was born in 1946 to journalist parents. Her father was Trevor Shaw who worked as a reporter for The New Zealand Herald. Much of her early childhood was spent overseas, first in Nigeria and the then in the Belgian Congo before returning to New Zealand and finishing school at Auckland Girls' Grammar.

She later married Michael A. Noonan, a prominent New Zealand filmmaker and producer with whom she had two children.

Noonan joined the Labour Party in her youth and while studying at Auckland University joined the famous Princes Street branch. She was the first in her family to attend university where she studied history and focused on the emergence of trade unions and wrote her MA thesis on the unemployed riots of 1932 during the Great Depression. Her history professor was Michael Bassett, himself later a Labour MP.

In 1980 Noonan unsuccessfully contested the Wellington mayoralty against Sir Michael Fowler. Despite losing the mayoralty, she was elected for two terms as a councillor on a Labour ticket between 1980 and 1986. During her time on the council she led the opposition to proposals to privatise city council housing. Arguing that the provision of low-cost, affordable housing was of enormous benefit to the city which had flow-on benefits to ratepayers Wellington ended up keeping the state housing, one of the few councils that did so.

Noonan was involved with trade unionism and entered the field herself via the Kindergarten Teachers' Association. From there she launched her career with the unions and worked for the New Zealand Educational Institute, including eight years as its national secretary from 1988 to 1996. She then left for a position as the human rights coordinator for Education International, an international teachers' organisation in Brussels.


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