Tim Kurzbach, the son of a mechanic and a housewife, grew up with his younger brother in a Catholic, middle-class family in the
Solingen neighborhood of Ohligs. From 1984 to 1988 he attended the community elementary school on Solingen's Südstraße. Until 1991 he was an
altar server under
Monsignor Heinz-Manfred Jansen in the Catholic church community St. Joseph in Solingen-Ohligs. In 1988, Kurzbach transferred to the Albert-Schweitzer Secondary School in Solingen-Wald, where he graduated with a
vocational school certificate in 1994. When he was in secondary school, he was active in the parish and youth work of St. Joseph in Solingen-Ohligs. In 1996, Kurzbach acquired his advanced technical college certificate (with a focus in
social pedagogy) at the Mildred-Scheel Vocational College in the neighborhood of Solingen-Merscheid. From 1996 to 1997 he lived in
Pamplona,
Spain. From the winter semester of 1997/98 onwards, he studied
social work at the technical college in the German city of
Cologne, obtaining a degree in 2006. From 1998 to 2005, he was Chairman of the German Catholic Youth Association (GCYA) in
Remscheid and Solingen. From 1999 to 2004 he was the District Team Leader of the
German Red Cross (GRC) in Solingen and later, until 2011, of the Red Cross in the entire district of the city of
Düsseldorf. In addition, he worked as Associate Labor Judge on a voluntary basis at the Solingen Labor Court until 2015. Since 2014, he has served as Deputy Chairman of the Catholic Youth Organization "Bergisch Land". Until his election as Mayor of Solingen in 2015, he was a full-time member of the district association of the Solingen Workers' Welfare Association's board. Kurzbach is the father of three sons and lives with his wife, the former
Green Party city councillor Ursula Linda Kurzbach, in Solingen-Ohligs. Kurzbach is a practicing Catholic and active member of the parish of St. Sebastian in Ohligs, where he also works as a lecturer in
church services. Since 2014, he has served as Chairman of the Diocesan Council in the Archdiocese of Cologne, which represents close to 2.1 million
Catholics in the German
Rhineland. Kurzbach is a supporter of
1. FC Köln. == Political career ==