Children of Evgeny Kuyvashev. Current publications. Start of work

Evgeny Vladimirovich Kuyvashev is the current governor of the Sverdlovsk region, state adviser of the Russian Federation II class, member of the United Russia party. In 2007-2011, he served as the head of the administration of Tyumen, before that he was the head of the administration of Tobolsk (2005-2007) and the village of Poikovsky (2000-2005).

The childhood of Evgeny Kuyvashev

Evgeny Kuyvashev was born on March 16, 1971 in a small village called Lugovskoy. This territory was part of the Khanty-Mansiysk Autonomous Okrug. His family was not particularly wealthy, so immediately after graduating from a local school, Evgeny Vladimirovich went to work as a mechanic at Surgutremstroy, a huge trust located not far from the village. Upon reaching the age of 18, he served two years in the ranks of the Soviet army.

Evgeny Kuyvashev's education

Immediately after demobilization in 1990, Evgeny Kuyvashev entered the Tobolsk medical school named after Volodya Soldatov and three years later held a diploma of an orthodontist in his hands.

In 1999, Evgeny received another document on higher education, now on a legal profile, issued by the Moscow Military Institute of the Federal Border Service of the Russian Federation.

In 2002, the politician attended lectures on management at Yale University, but he does not have a document confirming this fact.

Political career of Evgeny Kuyvashev

After receiving secondary specialized education, Evgeny Vladimirovich moved to the Neftyugansky district of the Khanty-Mansi Autonomous Okrug, to the village of Poikovsky, where for some time he worked as a dental technician. Then the young man with an active civic position was noticed by the city authorities, after which he was promoted to the post of deputy head of the Afghan Veterans Union branch on commercial issues. Later, Kuyvashev had to work as a concrete mixer operator, as well as a high-altitude fitter and legal consultant.

Interview with Evgeny Kuyvashev (RBC-TV)

In 1997, Kuyvashev was marked by a transfer to the administration of the Poikovsky village, where he took the chair of the assistant to the head of Eduard Khudainatov, who, in turn, moved to serve in the Presidential Administration. Evgeny Kuyvashev continued the landscaping activities of his predecessor. As a result of his efforts, in 2004 Poikovsky was recognized as the most comfortable village in the country.


Simultaneously with managerial activities, Kuyvashev taught at the Poikovsky branch of the Tyumen State University, specializing in the theory of state and law and municipal law.

The exact date of Yevgeny Kuyvashev's entry into United Russia is unknown, but in 2003 he was already mentioned in the press as an activist of the ruling party. According to him, this is the only political organization that is fully consistent with his views on a fair and equal society.


For two years (2004-2005) he served as Deputy Head of the Department of the Federal Bailiff Service in Moscow. His political career was rapidly gaining momentum, and at the end of November 2005, by decision of the deputy corps of Tobolsk, Evgeny Kuyvashev was approved for the post of head of the city administration.


Two years later, on July 5, 2007, he headed the administration of Tyumen after the election of the former mayor, Sergei Smetanyuk, to the State Duma. Kuyvashev's innovations were perceived by the townspeople ambiguously. On the one hand, he tried to do a lot to develop the local economy and improve the lives of the population, but on the other hand, he did not bring to its logical conclusion any of the many undertakings. In particular, the decision to install glass doors in the offices of officials affected only ordinary employees of the administration, but the offices of the top "city management" remained untouched.


In January 2011, Evgeny Kuyvashev joined the representative office of the President of Russia with the appointment of Deputy Presidential Plenipotentiary Envoy for the Urals Federal District. Eight months later, he himself became a plenipotentiary, replacing Nikolai Vinnichenko.

Evgeny Kuyvashev checked the prices in the markets of Yekaterinburg

On May 14, 2012, Evgeny Kuyvashev was sent to the Sverdlovsk region to become the acting governor of the region. On May 29, 2012, after the legislative initiatives of Vladimir Putin and the vote of the deputies of the Legislative Assembly, Evgeny Vladimirovich Kuyvashev officially took the chair of the governor of the Sverdlovsk region.


Evgeny Kuyvashev's personal life

Evgeny Kuyvashev is married and has a son and a daughter. His wife Natalya is known in Russia not only as the wife of the governor, but also as a successful business woman. She is a co-owner of the Three Glasses wine boutique in the historical center of Tyumen. Being the mistress of an elite alcohol store is Natalia's old dream; for this, she studied at the capital's sommelier school. In May 2016, Evgeny Kuyvashev reported to the Legislative Assembly of the Sverdlovsk Region on the results of the past year and plans and prospects for the future. According to his report, in the period from 2012 to 2015, more than 8 million square meters of housing were put into operation, production volumes and the average level of wages increased by 1.3 times. He also noted that over the years the economy of the Sverdlovsk region has received 1.5 trillion rubles as investments. Predecessor: Sergey Ivanovich Smetanyuk Successor: Alexander Viktorovich Moor (acting) November 30, 2005 - July 5, 2007 Predecessor: Evgeny Mikhailovich Vorobyov Successor: Ivan Filippovich Olenberg Birth: March 16(1971-03-16 ) (48 years old)
Lugovskoy settlement, Khanty-Mansiysk Autonomous Okrug, Tyumen Oblast, Russian SFSR, USSR The consignment: United Russia Education: Tobolsk medical school
Moscow Military Institute of the Federal Border Service Profession: dentist
lawyer Website: Awards:

Evgeny Vladimirovich Kuyvashev(born March 16, p. Lugovskoy, Khanty-Mansi Autonomous Okrug, Tyumen region, RSFSR, USSR) - Russian statesman, governor of the Sverdlovsk region (since 2012). Previously, Plenipotentiary Representative of the President of the Russian Federation in the Urals Federal District (2011-2012), head of the administration of Tyumen (2007-2011) and Tobolsk (2005-2007).

Biography

After serving in the army in 1991, he briefly worked as a physical education methodologist at the Technological Transport Administration in Surgut. In the same year he entered the Tobolsk medical school named after Volodya Soldatov; graduated from college in 1993 with a degree in orthodontist. After receiving his education, he worked in the Poikovsky village of the Nefteyugansk region of the Khanty-Mansiysk Autonomous Okrug, first as a dental technician, then as a deputy head of the Afghan Veterans Union on commercial issues, a concrete mixer operator, a high-altitude installer, and a legal adviser.

In 1997, Kuyvashev went to work in the Administration of the Poikovsky village, where he worked first as an assistant to the head of Eduard Khudainatov, then as his deputy, and after Khudainatov's transfer to work in the Presidential Administration in 2000, he took his place. In 1999, Kuyvashev graduated with a degree in law. Information appeared in the media about contradictions in Kuyvashev's biographical data of the 1990s - early 2000s, and his higher education at the specified institute was questioned. As a result of inquiries to the prosecutor's office, the fact of receiving higher education was confirmed - Kuyvashev received a bachelor's degree in "jurisprudence" in absentia and in 1.5 years (in 1998-1999).

In parallel with his work in the administration, Kuyvashev taught the theory of state and law, municipal law at the Poikovsky branch of the Tyumen State University.

Many media outlets also report that in 2002 Kuyvashev graduated from Yale University with a degree in management. At the same time, Kuyvashev himself in the media commented on information about his studies at Yale University: “I did not study at Yale - I just listened to lectures there. I didn’t study, I don’t have a diploma.”

From 2004 to 2005 he was deputy head of the bailiffs department in Moscow.

On November 30, 2005, he was unanimously approved by the deputies of the Tobolsk City Duma as the head of the administration of Tobolsk.

On June 14, 2007, Kuyvashev applied for a competition to fill the post of head of the Tyumen administration after the resignation of the former mayor, Sergei Smetanyuk. July 5 of the same year was elected to the desired position by the Tyumen City Duma.

From January 29, 2011, he served as Deputy Plenipotentiary Representative of the President of the Russian Federation in the Urals Federal District. On September 6, 2011, he was appointed Plenipotentiary Representative of the President of the Russian Federation in the Urals Federal District, replacing Nikolai Vinnichenko in this post.

From May 14, 2012 - Acting Governor of the Sverdlovsk Region. On May 24, 2012, Russian President Vladimir Putin submitted the candidacy of Yevgeny Kuyvashev to the Legislative Assembly of the Sverdlovsk Region to empower the Governor of the Sverdlovsk Region. The candidacy was supported by a majority vote of the deputies of the Legislative Assembly of the Sverdlovsk Region, and on May 29, 2012, Yevgeny Kuyvashev officially assumed the office of governor of the region.

Legislative initiatives

In August 2012, E. Kuyvashev put forward a legislative initiative on mandatory licensing of the activities of all organizations involved in the rehabilitation of drug addicts. In his opinion, such licensing is a matter of citizens' security. At this time, on his behalf, the state rehabilitation center "Ural without drugs" was created in the region. The decree on its creation was signed on July 3, 2012. It was mentioned in the media that the logo of the state center "Ural Without Drugs" turned out to be very similar to the logo of the city's well-known public organization "City Without Drugs" Foundation, headed by E. Roizman.

Criticism

Information appeared in the press about Kuyvashev's informal connection with energy businessmen Artyom Bikov and Alexei Bobrov, who were called his sponsors. However, Kuyvashev himself denies this connection: “It's not my fault that they have assets in all the regions where I worked. Wherever you start working, Bikov and Bobrov are already there.

Journalist Aksana Panova, former editor-in-chief of the Ural Internet agency Ura.ru, accused of a number of criminal cases, calls E. V. Kuyvashev the "customer" of her persecution.

On April 21, 2014 at 12.00 bus, tram and trolley bus drivers staged a "Signal" action. They buzzed for about 15 seconds throughout Yekaterinburg, calling on E. Kuyvashev and the Government of the Sverdlovsk Region to pay the public transport enterprises a 1.5 billion debt for transporting passengers on privilege.

A family

Married, has a son and a daughter.

class rank

welfare

In 2011, the income of E. V. Kuyvashev, who worked as the presidential envoy, amounted to 3.7 million rubles, the income of his wife was 3.1 million. According to an expert interviewed by the Komsomolskaya Pravda newspaper, E. V. Kuyvashev's watch costs about 700 thousand rubles.

Having become the governor of the Sverdlovsk region, Evgeny Kuyvashev bought an apartment in Yekaterinburg worth about 13.5-16.5 million rubles.

Write a review on the article "Kuyvashev, Evgeny Vladimirovich"

Notes

Chairmen of the regional executive committee
(1934-1991) Chairmen of the Regional Council (1990-1993) Heads of administration (1991-1995)
and governors (since 1995) Prime Ministers (since 1991) Chairmen of the Regional Duma (1994-2011) SEP Chairs (1996-2011) Chairmen of the Legislative Assembly (since 2011)

An excerpt characterizing Kuyvashev, Evgeny Vladimirovich

Petya was now a handsome, ruddy fifteen-year-old boy with thick, red lips, like Natasha. He was preparing for the university, but lately, with his comrade Obolensky, he secretly decided that he would go to the hussars.
Petya ran out to his namesake to talk about the case.
He asked him to find out if he would be accepted into the hussars.
Pierre walked around the living room, not listening to Petya.
Petya tugged at his hand to draw his attention to himself.
- Well, what's my business, Pyotr Kirilych. For God's sake! One hope for you, - said Petya.
“Oh yes, your business. In the hussars then? I'll say, I'll say. I'll tell you everything.
- Well, mon cher, well, did you get the manifesto? asked the old count. - And the countess was at the mass at the Razumovskys, she heard a new prayer. Very good, she says.
“Got it,” Pierre replied. - Tomorrow the sovereign will be ... An extraordinary meeting of the nobility and, they say, ten thousand a set. Yes, congratulations.
- Yes, yes, thank God. Well, what about the army?
Ours retreated again. Near Smolensk already, they say, - answered Pierre.
- My God, my God! the count said. - Where is the manifesto?
- Appeal! Oh yes! Pierre began looking in his pockets for papers and could not find them. Continuing to flap his pockets, he kissed the hand of the countess as she entered and looked around uneasily, obviously expecting Natasha, who did not sing anymore, but did not come into the drawing room either.
“By God, I don’t know where I’ve got him,” he said.
“Well, he will always lose everything,” said the countess. Natasha entered with a softened, agitated face and sat down, silently looking at Pierre. As soon as she entered the room, Pierre's face, previously cloudy, shone, and he, continuing to look for papers, looked at her several times.
- By God, I'll move out, I forgot at home. Certainly…
Well, you'll be late for dinner.
- Oh, and the coachman left.
But Sonya, who went into the hall to look for the papers, found them in Pierre's hat, where he carefully put them behind the lining. Pierre wanted to read.
“No, after dinner,” said the old count, apparently foreseeing great pleasure in this reading.
At dinner, at which they drank champagne for the health of the new Knight of St. George, Shinshin told the city news about the illness of the old Georgian princess, that Metivier had disappeared from Moscow, and that some German had been brought to Rostopchin and announced to him that it was champignon (as Count Rastopchin himself said), and how Count Rostopchin ordered the champignon to be released, telling the people that it was not a champignon, but just an old German mushroom.
“They grab, they grab,” said the count, “I tell the countess even so that she speaks less French.” Now is not the time.
– Have you heard? Shinshin said. - Prince Golitsyn took a Russian teacher, he studies in Russian - il commence a devenir dangereux de parler francais dans les rues. [It becomes dangerous to speak French on the streets.]
- Well, Count Pyotr Kirilych, how will they gather the militia, and you will have to get on a horse? said the old count, turning to Pierre.
Pierre was silent and thoughtful throughout this dinner. He, as if not understanding, looked at the count at this appeal.
“Yes, yes, to the war,” he said, “no!” What a warrior I am! And yet, everything is so strange, so strange! Yes, I don't understand myself. I do not know, I am so far from military tastes, but in these times no one can answer for himself.
After dinner, the count sat quietly in an armchair and with a serious face asked Sonya, who was famous for her skill in reading, to read.
– “To the capital of our capital, Moscow.
The enemy entered with great forces into the borders of Russia. He is going to ruin our dear fatherland, ”Sonya diligently read in her thin voice. The Count, closing his eyes, listened, sighing impetuously in some places.
Natasha sat stretched out, searchingly and directly looking first at her father, then at Pierre.
Pierre felt her eyes on him and tried not to look back. The countess shook her head disapprovingly and angrily at every solemn expression of the manifesto. She saw in all these words only that the dangers threatening her son would not end soon. Shinshin, folding his mouth into a mocking smile, obviously prepared to mock at what would be the first to be mocked: at Sonya's reading, at what the count would say, even at the very appeal, if no better excuse presented itself.
Having read about the dangers threatening Russia, about the hopes placed by the sovereign on Moscow, and especially on the famous nobility, Sonya, with a trembling voice, which came mainly from the attention with which she was listened to, read the last words: “We ourselves will not hesitate to stand among our people in this capital and in other states of our places for conference and leadership of all our militias, both now blocking the path of the enemy, and again arranged to defeat it, wherever it appears. May the destruction into which he imagines to cast us down upon his head turn, and may Europe, liberated from slavery, glorify the name of Russia!
- That's it! cried the count, opening his wet eyes and halting several times from snuffling, as if a flask of strong acetic salt was being brought to his nose. “Just tell me, sir, we will sacrifice everything and regret nothing.”
Shinshin had not yet had time to tell the joke he had prepared on the count's patriotism, when Natasha jumped up from her seat and ran up to her father.
- What a charm, this dad! she said, kissing him, and she again looked at Pierre with that unconscious coquetry that returned to her along with her animation.
- That's so patriotic! Shinshin said.
“Not a patriot at all, but simply ...” Natasha answered offendedly. Everything is funny to you, but this is not a joke at all ...
- What jokes! repeated the Count. - Just say the word, we will all go ... We are not some kind of Germans ...
“Did you notice,” said Pierre, “that he said: “for a meeting.”
“Well, whatever it is…
At this time, Petya, whom no one paid any attention to, went up to his father and, all red, in a breaking voice, now rough, now thin, said:
“Well, now, papa, I will say decisively - and mother too, as you wish, - I will say decisively that you let me go into military service, because I can’t ... that’s all ...
The countess raised her eyes to heaven in horror, clasped her hands and angrily turned to her husband.
- That's the deal! - she said.
But the count recovered from his excitement at the same moment.
“Well, well,” he said. "Here's another warrior!" Leave the nonsense: you need to study.
“It’s not nonsense, daddy. Obolensky Fedya is younger than me and also goes, and most importantly, anyway, I can’t learn anything now, when ... - Petya stopped, blushed to a sweat and said the same: - when the fatherland is in danger.
- Full, full, nonsense ...
“But you yourself said that we would sacrifice everything.
“Petya, I’m telling you, shut up,” the count shouted, looking back at his wife, who, turning pale, looked with fixed eyes at her younger son.
- I'm telling you. So Pyotr Kirillovich will say ...
- I'm telling you - it's nonsense, the milk has not dried up yet, but he wants to serve in the military! Well, well, I'm telling you, - and the count, taking the papers with him, probably to read it again in the study before resting, left the room.
- Pyotr Kirillovich, well, let's go for a smoke ...
Pierre was confused and indecisive. Natasha's unusually brilliant and lively eyes incessantly, more than affectionately addressed to him, brought him to this state.
- No, I think I'm going home ...
- Like home, but you wanted to have an evening with us ... And then they rarely began to visit. And this one is mine ... - the count said good-naturedly, pointing to Natasha, - it’s only cheerful with you ...
“Yes, I forgot ... I definitely need to go home ... Things ...” Pierre said hastily.
“Well, goodbye,” said the count, leaving the room completely.
- Why are you leaving? Why are you upset? Why? .. - Natasha asked Pierre, defiantly looking into his eyes.
"Because I love you! he wanted to say, but he did not say it, blushed to tears and lowered his eyes.
“Because it’s better for me to visit you less often ... Because ... no, I just have business to do.”
- From what? no, tell me, - Natasha began decisively and suddenly fell silent. They both looked at each other in fear and embarrassment. He tried to smile, but could not: his smile expressed suffering, and he silently kissed her hand and went out.
Pierre decided not to visit the Rostovs with himself anymore.

Petya, after receiving a decisive refusal, went to his room and there, locking himself away from everyone, wept bitterly. Everyone did as if they had not noticed anything when he came to tea silent and gloomy, with tearful eyes.
The next day the Emperor arrived. Several of the Rostovs' servants asked to go and see the tsar. That morning, Petya spent a long time dressing, combing his hair and arranging his collars like the big ones. He frowned in front of the mirror, made gestures, shrugged his shoulders, and finally, without telling anyone, put on his cap and left the house from the back porch, trying not to be noticed. Petya decided to go straight to the place where the sovereign was, and directly explain to some chamberlain (it seemed to Petya that the sovereign was always surrounded by chamberlains) that he, Count Rostov, despite his youth, wants to serve the fatherland, that youth cannot be an obstacle for devotion and that he is ready ... Petya, while he was getting ready, prepared many beautiful words that he would say to the chamberlain.
Petya counted on the success of his presentation to the sovereign precisely because he was a child (Petya even thought how surprised everyone would be at his youth), and at the same time, in the arrangement of his collars, in his hairstyle and in a sedate, slow gait, he wanted to present himself as an old man. But the farther he went, the more he entertained himself with the people arriving and arriving at the Kremlin, the more he forgot to observe the degree and slowness characteristic of adults. Approaching the Kremlin, he already began to take care that he was not pushed, and resolutely, with a menacing look, put his elbows on his sides. But at the Trinity Gate, in spite of all his determination, people who probably did not know for what patriotic purpose he was going to the Kremlin pressed him against the wall so that he had to submit and stop, while at the gate with a buzzing under the arches the sound of carriages passing by. Near Petya stood a woman with a footman, two merchants and a retired soldier. After standing for some time at the gate, Petya, without waiting for all the carriages to pass, wanted to move on before the others and began to work decisively with his elbows; but the woman standing opposite him, on whom he first directed his elbows, angrily shouted at him:
- What, barchuk, pushing, you see - everyone is standing. Why climb then!
“That’s how everyone will climb,” said the footman, and, also beginning to work with his elbows, squeezed Petya into the stinking corner of the gate.
Petya wiped away the sweat that covered his face with his hands and straightened his collars, soaked with sweat, which he arranged as well as the big ones at home.
Petya felt that he had an unpresentable appearance, and was afraid that if he presented himself to the chamberlains like that, he would not be allowed to see the sovereign. But there was no way to recover and go to another place because of the tightness. One of the passing generals was an acquaintance of the Rostovs. Petya wanted to ask for his help, but considered that it would be contrary to courage. When all the carriages had passed, the crowd poured in and carried Petya out to the square, which was all occupied by people. Not only in the area, but on the slopes, on the roofs, there were people everywhere. As soon as Petya found himself on the square, he clearly heard the sounds of bells and joyful folk talk that filled the entire Kremlin.
At one time it was more spacious on the square, but suddenly all the heads opened, everything rushed somewhere forward. Petya was squeezed so that he could not breathe, and everyone shouted: “Hurrah! hooray! hurrah! Petya stood on tiptoe, pushed, pinched, but could see nothing but the people around him.
On all faces there was one common expression of tenderness and delight. One merchant's wife, who was standing near Petya, was sobbing, and tears flowed from her eyes.
- Father, angel, father! she said, wiping her tears with her finger.
- Hooray! shouted from all sides. For a minute the crowd stood in one place; but then she rushed forward again.
Petya, not remembering himself, clenching his teeth and brutally rolling his eyes, rushed forward, working with his elbows and shouting "Hurray!", as if he was ready to kill himself and everyone at that moment, but exactly the same brutal faces climbed from his sides with the same cries of "Hurrah!".
"So that's what a sovereign is! thought Petya. – No, I can’t apply to him myself, it’s too bold! but at that moment the crowd staggered back (from the front the policemen were pushing those who had approached too close to the procession; the sovereign was passing from the palace to the Assumption Cathedral), and Petya unexpectedly received such a blow to the ribs in the side and was so crushed that suddenly everything became dim in his eyes and he lost consciousness. When he came to his senses, some clergyman, with a tuft of graying hair behind him, in a shabby blue cassock, probably a sexton, held him under the arm with one hand, and guarded him from the oncoming crowd with the other.
- Barchonka crushed! - said the deacon. - Well, so! .. easier ... crushed, crushed!
The sovereign went to the Assumption Cathedral. The crowd leveled off again, and the deacon led Petya, pale and not breathing, to the Tsar Cannon. Several people took pity on Petya, and suddenly the whole crowd turned to him, and there was already a stampede around him. Those who stood closer served him, unbuttoned his frock coat, seated cannons on a dais and reproached someone - those who crushed him.
- That way you can crush to death. What is this! Murder to do! Look, my heart, it has become white as a tablecloth, - said the voices.
Petya soon came to his senses, the color returned to his face, the pain disappeared, and for this temporary inconvenience he received a place on the cannon, with which he hoped to see the sovereign who was due to go back. Petya no longer thought about filing a petition. If only he could see him - and then he would consider himself happy!
During the service in the Assumption Cathedral - a joint prayer service on the occasion of the arrival of the sovereign and a prayer of thanksgiving for making peace with the Turks - the crowd spread; sellers of kvass, gingerbread, poppy seeds, which Petya was especially fond of, appeared shouting, and ordinary conversations were heard. One merchant's wife showed her torn shawl and reported how expensive it was bought; another said that nowadays all silk fabrics have become expensive. The sexton, Petya's savior, was talking to the official about who and who is serving with the bishop today. The sexton repeated the word soborne several times, which Petya did not understand. Two young tradesmen were joking with yard girls gnawing nuts. All these conversations, especially jokes with girls, which for Petya at his age had a special attraction, all these conversations now did not interest Petya; ou sat on his cannon dais, still agitated at the thought of the sovereign and of his love for him. The coincidence of the feeling of pain and fear, when he was squeezed, with the feeling of delight, further strengthened in him the consciousness of the importance of this moment.

TASS-DOSIER. On September 11, 2017, the election commission of the Sverdlovsk region announced that the election of the governor of the region, held on September 10, was won by the acting head of the region, Yevgeny Kuyvashev (United Russia). After processing 100% of the protocols, he received 62.16% of the votes. The second place was taken by the managing director of PJSC "Plus Bank" Alexei Parfenov from the Communist Party (11.64%). Evgeny Kuyvashev has been the head of the Sverdlovsk Region since 2012.

Evgeny Vladimirovich Kuyvashev was born on March 16, 1971 in the village of Lugovskoye in the Khanty-Mansiysk region of the national district of the same name (now the Khanty-Mansiysk Autonomous Okrug, KhMAO).

In 1993 he graduated from the Tobolsk Medical School named after I.I. Volodya Soldatova (now has the status of a college) with a degree in orthodontist, in 1999 - in absentia, the Moscow Military Institute of the Federal Border Service of the Russian Federation (now the Moscow Border Institute of the FSB of Russia) with a degree in jurisprudence. In 2010, he underwent professional retraining at the Tyumen State University under the program "State and Municipal Administration".

In 1989 he worked as a mechanic in the trust "Surgutremstroy" (Surgut, Khanty-Mansi Autonomous Okrug).

In 1989-1991 he served in the Armed Forces of the USSR.

In 1991, he worked as a physical education methodologist at the Surgut Department of Technological Transport No. 1.

In 1993. - a dental technician of the medical and sanitary part of the urban-type settlement of Poikovsky, Nefteyugansk district, Khanty-Mansiysk Autonomous Okrug.

In 1993-1994, he was Deputy Chairman for Commercial Affairs of the Nefteyugansk Branch of the Union of Afghan Veterans.

From 1994 to 1996, he worked as a concrete mixer operator and rigging rig worker in the Salym rigging department of Yuganskneftegaz joint-stock company.

In 1996-1997, he held the position of a legal adviser in the repair and maintenance department in Poikovsky.

In 1997-2000, he was assistant to the head of administration, first deputy head of the Poikovsky administration, Eduard Khudainatov (in 2010-2012, he was president of the Rosneft company).

In 2000-2005, he served as head of the village administration. At the same time he taught municipal law, the theory of state and law at the Poikovsky branch of the Tyumen State University.

In 2005 he moved to Moscow. From January to November 2005, he was Deputy Head of the Main Directorate of the Federal Bailiff Service for Moscow - Deputy Chief Bailiff of Moscow Alexander Komarov. Nikolai Vinnichenko has been the head of the Federal Bailiff Service since 2004.

In November 2005, Evgeny Kuyvashev returned to the Tyumen region. November 30 of the same year was elected head of the administration of Tobolsk. The deputies of the city duma unanimously voted for his candidacy. Kuyvashev headed the administration of Tobolsk until July 2007.

In 2007-2011 he was the head of the administration of Tyumen. He was elected by the city parliament on July 5, 2007.

January 29 to September 6, 2011. - Deputy Plenipotentiary Representative of the President of the Russian Federation in the Urals Federal District (UFO) Nikolai Vinnichenko.

From September 6, 2011 to May 14, 2012 - Plenipotentiary Representative of the Head of State in the Urals Federal District. Appointed by decree of the President of the Russian Federation Dmitry Medvedev. Former plenipotentiary in the Ural Federal District Nikolai Vinnichenko became Deputy Prosecutor General of the Russian Federation.

From September 2011 to May 2012 - Member of the Security Council of the Russian Federation.

On May 14, 2012, by decree of Russian President Vladimir Putin, Evgeny Kuyvashev was appointed Acting Governor of the Sverdlovsk Region. Alexander Misharin, who previously headed the region, resigned ahead of schedule for health reasons.

On May 29, 2012, the Legislative Assembly of the Sverdlovsk Region gave Yevgeny Kuyvashev the powers of the head of the region on the proposal of the President of the Russian Federation. 46 out of 49 deputies present voted for his candidacy. On the same day, he officially took office.

On April 17, 2017, Russian President Vladimir Putin accepted the early resignation of Yevgeny Kuyvashev from the post of governor of the Sverdlovsk region and appointed him as the acting head of the region.

He was a member of the Council under the President of the Russian Federation for the development of local self-government (in 2007-2011).

He is a member of the Council under the President of the Russian Federation for Cossack Affairs (since 2012).

Member of the Presidium of the Political Council of the Regional Branch of the United Russia Party in the Sverdlovsk Region.

In the rating of the effectiveness of the heads of Russian regions, compiled by the Civil Society Development Fund in June 2016, he entered the third group of heads of constituent entities of the Russian Federation ("average rating"). Shares 63-64th places with the head of the Komi Republic Sergey Gaplikov, with whom he scored the same number of points - 53.

The total amount of declared income for 2016 is 3 million 334 thousand rubles, spouses - 9 million 968 thousand rubles.

Active State Councilor of the Russian Federation, 1st class (2011).

Awarded the Order of Honor (2012).

Married, has two children. Wife - Natalia (born in 1974), entrepreneur. He is the director and co-owner of Lelya LLC, which owns the Three Glasses chain of elite wine stores located in Tyumen and Tobolsk. Daughter - Elizabeth (born in 1997), son - Dmitry.

Acting Governor of the Sverdlovsk Region since May 2012. Prior to that, from September 2011 to May 2012, he was the plenipotentiary representative of the President of the Russian Federation in the Urals Federal District, earlier, from January 2011, he was deputy plenipotentiary representative in the same district. Former head of the administration of Tyumen (2007-2011), Tobolsk (2005-2007), Poikovsky village of the Nefteyugansk region of the Khanty-Mansi Autonomous Okrug, Tyumen region (2000-2005). In 2005, he worked as Deputy Head of the Main Directorate of the Federal Bailiff Service for the city of Moscow. He has the rank of a real state adviser of the Russian Federation, II class (2011). Member of the United Russia party.


Evgeny Vladimirovich Kuyvashev was born on March 16, 1971 in the Tyumen region, in the village of Lugovskoy, Khanty-Mansiysk district of the Khanty-Mansiysk Autonomous (until 1977 - national) district (KhMAO).

After graduating from school, Kuyvashev began his career at the Surgutremstroy trust, then served in the ranks of the Soviet army. In 1993, he graduated from the Volodya Soldatov Tobolsk Medical School (since 2001 - college) with a degree in orthodontist.

Later, Kuyvashev moved to the Nefteyugansky district of the Khanty-Mansi Autonomous Okrug, to the urban-type settlement of Poikovsky, where he worked in the local administration since 1997 - he was an assistant to the head of Poikovsky, the first deputy head of the administration of the Nefteyugansky district, Eduard Khudainatov. Subsequently, it was noted that it was Khudainatov Kuyvashev who "brought him into a great life ... and later patronized him."

In 1999, Kuyvashev graduated from the Moscow Military Institute of the Federal Border Service of the Russian Federation (since 2003 - the Moscow Border Institute of the Federal Security Service of the Russian Federation) with a degree in law and in 2000 became the head of the administration of the village of Poikovsky. His predecessor Khudainatov, according to media reports, actively invested in the construction and improvement of the village, thanks to which Poikovsky, according to the local press, became "the second capital of the district, like, say, Leningrad for Russia." The governor of the Khanty-Mansiysk Autonomous Okrug Alexander Filipenko highly appreciated the success of the village. Kuyvashev continued to be engaged in landscaping: it was reported that since 2000, Poikovsky has been recognized three times as "the most comfortable city in the district with a population of more than 25 thousand people," and in 2004 he received the honorary title of "the most comfortable village in Russia." At the same time, Kuyvashev taught the theory of state and law, as well as municipal law at the Poikovsky branch of the Tyumen State University.

In 2002, Kuyvashev received a degree from Yale University in the United States with a degree in management. In 2003, he was mentioned in the press as an "activist of the party" "United Russia".

In January 2005 (according to other sources - back in 2004) Kuyvashev left his post in the Poikovsky administration in connection with the transfer to the Ministry of Justice of the Russian Federation. Press reports on this occasion noted that the official "will head one of the departments of the Federal Bailiffs Service and receive the rank of State Counselor of Justice III class, corresponding to the rank of major general." Indeed, in the same year, Kuyvashev moved to the capital - he was appointed to the post of deputy head of the Main Directorate of the FSPP for the city of Moscow - deputy chief bailiff of Moscow. The department at that time was headed by Alexander Komarov, who in the early 2000s held the post of deputy chief bailiff of the Khanty-Mansi Autonomous Okrug; Nikolay Vinnichenko has been the head of the Federal Bailiff Service since 2004.

In the same year, Kuyvashev left the capital. It was reported that according to the new method of city government introduced in the city of Tobolsk at the beginning of November 2005, the mayor of Tobolsk, Evgeny Vorobyov, became the chairman of the city duma and the head of the municipality, while the administrative powers and "functions of the chief city "manager"" were to be transferred to a new person - the city a manager hired under a five-year contract. United Russia recommended Kuyvashev for this post. The press noted that he "received an invitation" to head Tobolsk at a time when Sergei Sobyanin was the governor of the Tyumen region (on November 14, 2005, he was appointed head of the administration of Russian President Vladimir Putin).

On November 30, 2005, the deputies of the Tobolsk City Duma unanimously voted for Kuyvashev's candidacy for the post of head of the city administration. Later it was reported that in Tobolsk Kuyvashev was also engaged in landscaping, solving problems of housing and communal services, and also "initiated and began to implement targeted programs", trying to make the city "attractive for investors as a tourist center." The press noted that the official managed to "create a good team around him," which continued to work successfully even after he left office.

On July 5, 2007, the deputies of the Tyumen City Duma elected Kuyvashev as the head of the administration of the city of Tyumen. In this post, he replaced Sergei Smetanyuk, who became deputy governor of the Tyumen region Vladimir Yakushev. The media subsequently noted that this appointment also took place, most likely, "not without the participation" of Sobyanin.

Talking about Kuyvashev's achievements as city manager of Tyumen, the press, in particular, pointed out that it was thanks to his efforts that the city was included in the federal program "Energy Saving Quarter" to stimulate energy saving. The media also noted that under Kuyvashev "the construction of the Tyumen embankment entered the final stage." Under Kuivashev, a unified transport card was introduced in Tyumen for all municipal transport - despite the fact that this measure was perceived by the population "ambiguously" due to the difficulties both with paying for trips by the "beneficiaries" themselves, as well as with reimbursement of money to carriers for the passage of this categories of citizens. At the same time, information was published in the media, according to which the transport map was developed and implemented by the Tyumen Transport System OJSC company, which since January 2008 was managed by Alexei Rakov, the younger brother of Anastasia Rakova (from 2001 to 2005 she was Sobyanin’s assistant as the governor of the Tyumen region, and Since 2006, she has served as his deputy as head of the secretariat of the head of the presidential administration of the Russian Federation). Another widely reported initiative by Kuyvashev was the installation of glass walls and doors in the offices of city administration officials, which was supposed to limit bureaucracy and help reduce corruption. However, the sources of the publication "URA.Ru" noted that the city manager's step was "populist": only the rooms of ordinary employees, and not the deputies of the mayor's office or department directors, became glass.

In 2010, Kuyvashev underwent professional retraining under the program "State and Municipal Management" at the Tyumen State University. On January 29, 2011, by order of the head of the presidential administration, Sergei Naryshkin, he was appointed deputy to Nikolai Vinnichenko, who in December 2008 took the post of presidential plenipotentiary in the Urals Federal District (in this post, Kuyvashev replaced Alexander Beletsky).

At that time, they wrote in the regional press that the new deputy Vinnichenko would oversee economic issues, which Sergei Sobyanin was once involved in, being the first deputy plenipotentiary Pyotr Latyshev. It was noted that Sobyanin developed an "impressive program" for the development of the district, which provided for the "involvement of all six" Ural "subjects" in a single system of economic relations. However, he did not have time to implement it, because he held his post for only half a year, and only the Ural Industrial - Ural Polar corporation was created. The press assumed that Kuyvashev would continue the implementation of the program. Indeed, in April 2011, he was elected chairman of the corporation's supervisory board. However, in the same month, there were reports in the press about problems with financing the project and attracting investors, and it soon became known that the Russian Ministry of Finance refused to allocate money for expensive construction projects of the Industrial Urals - Polar Urals from the country's budget for 2012.

In June 2011, "a certain initiative group from Tyumen" filed an application with the local Investigation Department of the Investigative Committee of the Russian Federation about Kuyvashev, who was still a city manager, exceeding his official powers when making a decision to postpone the construction of an underground pedestrian crossing. However, the regional department of the Investigative Committee of Russia refused to open a criminal case.

In August 2011, Kuyvashev was appointed investment commissioner of Russian President Dmitry Medvedev in the Urals Federal District. His duties included "comprehensive assistance to entrepreneurs in the implementation of private investment projects" on their territory. And on September 6, 2011, by presidential decree, Kuyvashev was appointed presidential plenipotentiary in the Urals Federal District. At the same time, Vinnichenko was transferred as an envoy to the Northwestern Federal District. Commenting on the appointment of Kuyvashev, the media again reported that the official was "close to a native of the region" Sobyanin (since October 2010 - the mayor of Moscow). It was also noted that Khudainatov, since September 2010, the head of the Rosneft company, could have influenced the success of an official's career. The press of the Urals District also called the new plenipotentiary "Vinnichenko's man." Noting that the latter was a classmate of Medvedev (they studied together at Leningrad State University), some political scientists, assessing the personnel changes made, concluded that the head of state wanted to strengthen his influence in the regions.

On May 14, 2012, by decree of Putin, who shortly before returned to the post of president of Russia, Kuyvashev was relieved of his post as presidential plenipotentiary in the Ural Federal District and appointed acting governor of the Sverdlovsk region instead of Alexander Misharin, who was dismissed on the same day.

By presidential decree in May 2011, Kuyvashev was awarded the rank of a real state adviser of the Russian Federation, II class. According to media reports, the official loves "old domestic films", in particular, "Officers" and "Love and Pigeons", "reads a lot of press", including on the Internet. It was also noted that he himself does not like to use the word "official", preferring to call the employees of the state apparatus "specialists".

Kuyvashev is married to Natalya Kuyvasheva. It was reported that she studied at the Moscow sommelier school "Enotria" and in 2009 opened a boutique of elite wines "Three glasses" in the historical center of Tyumen.

https://www.site/2012-12-02/belye_pyatna_v_biografii_kuyvasheva_zainteresovali_ne_tolko_nas_no_i_administraciyu_prezidenta_dokum

“There are significant gaps in the description of work activity”

White spots in the biography of Kuyvashev interested not only us, but also the presidential administration. The documents

There are many white spots in the biography of the Sverdlovsk Governor Yevgeny Kuyvashev. Giving his image of mystery, they hide the answer to the main question: what events in the late 1990s - early 2000s so twisted the spring of Mr. Kuyvashev's fate that in just fifteen years he had come a long career path, ascended from the operator of a concrete mixer to the head of one of the largest regions of the country. The site tried to study one of the stages in the life of Yevgeny Kuyvashev - his studies at the Moscow Border Institute of the FSB of the Russian Federation. It turned out that the more you research the past of the Sverdlovsk governor, the more questions arise.

Studying at school and university is an important stage in the life of any person. When journalists study the biography of a politician, they cannot pass by this point, because it is here that many life principles and behavioral attitudes are formed, which then determine the style of behavior of a politician. Numerous friends immediately appear who - as we well know from the examples of Vladimir Putin and Dmitry Medvedev - can become the basis of the personnel policy of major leaders.

In the case of Evgeny Kuyvashev, such a study is not an easy task. Just a few days after the approval of Evgeny Vladimirovich as the governor of the Sverdlovsk region in May 2012, blogs and social networks began to discuss the official curriculum vitae, which was presented to the deputies of the Legislative Assembly of the Sverdlovsk region.

From it it was clear that after school, Evgeny Kuyvashev did not enter the university, instead he went to serve in the army, worked, studied as a dental technician in Tobolsk, and received higher education later. And not just anywhere, but immediately at the Moscow Military Institute of the FSB of the Russian Federation. And if we assume that Kuyvashev studied there for the five years necessary to obtain a diploma (such a period of study in the specialty "jurisprudence" at this university), then he should have entered his studies in 1994. At the same time, in the years 1994-1996, as can be seen from the same certificate, Kuyvashev worked in Poikovsky as a concrete mixer operator and a tower erector, and how he managed at that time to study at an institute that assumed the barracks of students and 30-day entrance fees - it is not clear .

Naturally, the points of the new governor's biography aroused suspicion. It is possible, but rather difficult, to imagine a concrete mixer operator from a northern village (with all due respect to this profession) who suddenly decided to enter the Moscow Border Institute of the FSB. It is easier to assume that after the forced start of Kuyvashev's political career in 1996, he was somehow "helped" with obtaining a diploma.

We will interpret any doubts in favor of the hero of the publication. Perhaps he really entered the university and studied there - for example, in absentia and remotely, coming to Moscow to take exams. We tried to find out whether such a form of education is possible at the Moscow Border Institute of the FSB. Unfortunately, it is difficult to simply call the university or study its official website - the institute subordinated to the Chekists is not too open to inquiries from outside. However, wherever there is brief information about the university, there is a line "Young men are in the barracks."

It was possible to contact the university only through a written request. First, we received the following answer (hereinafter, "URA.Ru" is mentioned due to the fact that some of the materials were collected during the work of the author in another media):

It would seem almost a sensation: at the university, which, according to the official certificate, the Sverdlovsk governor graduated from, there is no data on such a graduate and they specifically specify that he could not study remotely. However, the phrase “required data is not available” can be interpreted differently: in an oral conversation, a representative of the university said that data on graduates are classified and transferred to the specified archive for storage.

Some time after receiving the first letter, we received a call from the border institute again and were told that a letter with clarification had been sent. It actually came and looked like this:

The answer is exhaustive, even with the diploma number, but the very fact of sending a second letter alerted me, as if the FSB institute had suddenly realized it. And we tried to find Yevgeny Vladimirovich's classmates who could remember such a student. Using the search of the VKontakte social network, we found several dozen people who graduated from the same university in 1999, many of them from the same specialty. We addressed all of them with a question about the student Kuyvashev, but only a few answered. Their remarks deserve attention.

This ended the conversation.

It says that some form of distance learning could still take place.

The site failed to find information about the Modern Humanitarian University, which would officially provide such an opportunity. At the same time, there are several universities with the name "Modern Humanitarian University", one of them has a branch in Tyumen, and among the faculties there is also a law faculty. Hypothetically, Evgeny Kuyvashev could study there, and finish his last year at the MPI FSB of the Russian Federation.

We turned to the administration of the Sverdlovsk governor for comments. Deputy head of administration Ilya Ananiev explained that "everything that is in the official sources of the biography of Yevgeny Vladimirovich should not be questioned." “It should be borne in mind that he was quite recently the presidential envoy to the Urals Federal District,” says Ananiev. - This position implies the highest access to work with classified documents and the highest security clearance. The post of plenipotentiary implies the toughest (under the microscope) review and verification at the federal level. It takes quite a long time, sometimes up to six months, and only after all the nuances and the removal of all questions from the special services, a person is appointed. As a rule, information is raised by special services, and in our case it is the Federal Security Service (since the envoy has constant contact with the first person of the country), the FSB, the Ministry of Internal Affairs, the tax office - in general, a person is checked from the moment of birth to the present day. Therefore, any irregularities in the biography are excluded. A person with even the slightest question in his biography would immediately be clicked out of the reserve, ”says Ananiev.

It can be added here that during the check of Yevgeny Kuyvashev, when he was appointed to the post of plenipotentiary, the Office of the President of the Russian Federation for Civil Service and Personnel had questions regarding the biography of Yevgeny Vladimirovich (however, judging by the appointment, they were removed). So, in a secret note addressed to the head of the department Dubik S.N. it is said that “in the personal file submitted for consideration, as well as in the materials for agreeing on the admission of Kuyvasheva E.V. to information constituting a state secret, there are significant gaps in the description of the candidate's work activity ... "

The note says that according to the diploma provided, Kuyvashev studied at the Border Institute from 1994 to 1999, got access to state secrets and, according to the contract, had to continue serving at the frontier posts of the Caucasus. However, he terminated the contract and resigned from the border service (it is noted that in 1999 the entire graduate of his university was sent to participate in the counter-terrorist operation in Chechnya; there is no data on such a period in Kuyvashev's life).

In the second part of the note, Kuyvashev is also reminded of his studies at Yale and “uncontrolled” trips outside the Russian Federation. The author of the document asks for permission for additional verification with the involvement of the FSB of the Russian Federation.

Judging by the fact that Kuyvashev became the plenipotentiary and then the governor of Sverdlovsk, this test went well for him and there was nothing in his biography that would discourage the Kremlin curators. Kuyvashev's diploma is not fictitious, however, most likely, it was not obtained in a completely standard way. Such blind spots in the past, unimaginable for a politician in any developed democracy, will limit Yevgeny Kuyvashev's potential as a public politician.

Similar posts