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Helena Rögnerová: No battle is lost in
advance
Written by: Monika Mudranincová
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Photo: David Holas
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When Helena Rögnerová (48) became
the director of the Motol Teaching Hospital, she called on then-health
minister David to resign, and later defeated senate chairwoman
Libue Beneová by a full 50% margin, thus becoming an independent
senator. After not quite three years in the senate, she says
that she has to learn patience and the art of consensus.
ALTHOUGH Rögnerová originally wanted to study medicine, she wound
up graduating in economics. But she never gave up her original
calling, and until 1989 she worked as a health administrator. In
1996, her victory in the tender for the directorship of the largest
state hospital, with over 4,000 employees, surprised just about
everyone. She had no influential lobbyists behind her, and she
was the first woman-manager to be named to such a position. After
finding her bearings, she introduced crisis management and did
away with unethical practices. "At Motol, corruption was a
big problem," Rögnerová explains. It didn't take her long
to run into problems. The energetic director accused Ivan David,
then health minister, of irregular behavior and of insisting on
using a catering company that was more expensive than others. She
brought the matter to public attention and proposed that the minister
resign.
In 2000 she decided run for the senate as an independent candidate
on the Quad Coalition slate against Libue Beneová, then the senate's
chairwoman, in her own district. She wore shorts and rode a bicycle
when she went to address her voters, covering about 1,000 kilometers
during her campaign. Her human approach gained her a seat in the
upper chamber of the parliament. "At the beginning I couldn't
get used to the never-ending discussions and the fact that everything
takes much longer than I was used to," she recalls, pointing
out that community politics differs greatly from a senator's duties.
Nonetheless, she managed to found a Club of Independents and push
through the law on the EU accession referendum. "The idea
of a senator as some sort of ombudsman is deeply rooted in people," she
explains. "Unfortunately, no single person can help everyone
from a district with 100,000 inhabitants. I try to facilitate their
communication with local authorities and show them how to exert
their rights."
What does her future have in store? "I don't rule out running
for the senate again in 2006, but if it doesn't work out I'd be
happy to take a job as a manager," she says optimistically.
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