NJ Cops Oct18 | Page 32

Trustee Worthy Through his experience as a correctional police offi cer, State Delegate and elected offi cial, Ray Heck has established the cred to guide the new PFRS ■ BY MITCHELL KRUGEL Aptitude and acumen required of trustees for the new PFRS board, as defined in Chapter 55 the governor signed in July, are detailed and voluminous. As the NJ State PBA-endorsed candi- date for the law enforcement trustee, NJ State Corrections Lo- cal 105 State Delegate Ray Heck presents distinct and unique credentials. He used to be an exterminator. Heck can identify nearly ev- ery species of bug, including 12 types of cockroaches. A friend of Local 105 Executive Vice President Bill Sullivan had termites in his house. Bill called Ray, who told him to have the friend text some photos. After seeing the photos and a couple of bagged samples, Heck advised about exactly how to treat the disturbance. Heck can name all 26 bones in the hand. Google this, and the answer will come back with 27. But Heck contends that one is cartilage; not really a bone. During a recent Local 105 contract negotiation session, Heck directed the attorney for the state about a savings that could be had regarding gear. If the uniform allowance were divided between maintenance and weather gear, tax could be avoided. “The attorney said, ‘yeah, yeah, you’re right,’” Sullivan recount- ed. “Ray had him dumbfounded.” When the 40-hour training bill for state correctional police officers was in front of the Senate Budget Committee, Heck approached to testify for the third time, revving up one of his renowned, well-thought-out and detailed speeches. Before he even started, the committee voted for the bill, noting, “We’re all 32 NEW JERSEY COPS ■ OCTOBER 2018 in your favor, Mayor Heck.” Yes, in his spare time, Heck is the mayor of Millstone Bor- ough, having been re-elected to the unpaid position three times. From bugs to bones to bills to everything financial, Ray has developed acute expertise and a growing reputation throughout the State PBA as one of its wise men. “He’s like a walking dictionary,” Sullivan remarks about his longtime colleague. “With his vast knowledge and attention to detail, he will make sure of everything. I was talking to him about the PFRS manual. He said it’s missing a lot. He stressed ideas about how to fix the language and clarify things.” Even before considering becoming a trustee candidate, Heck read through Chapter 55 10 times because he wanted to know every intricacy. He explained that whether working with a school budget, a municipal budget or the Local 105 budget, you treat a dollar like a million dollars because according to his philosophy, “Investing a dollar, $1 million or $1 billion comes with responsibility and liability.” To be sure, Ray Heck has unique qualifications to be a PFRS trustee. “As we assume internal control of the pension system, we must have the oversight to clearly manage it effectively and ef- ficiently,” Heck pledges as his mission statement. “It’s our obli- gation to make sure this does not fail, and I want my legacy to the PBA to be making sure this is done correctly.” The climb When you’re a candidate for PFRS trustee, you have to talk