Note: There are a few ways to use this page. It mixes objective source material with light analysis and first-hand reporting so voters can choose their depth.
Where we add context or opinion, it’s to help busy voters make sense of gaps in local information. Not everyone has time to be a volunteer politico.
Heather Garrison is a lifelong Millville resident and community builder running for City Commissioner. She currently serves as a Community
Builder for the Holly City Development Corporation (HCDC), where she helps coordinate community, economic, and housing initiatives—including
leading monthly food distributions since 2021 that connect families with essential resources. Garrison also serves on the Holly City Family
Center Board of Trustees and has played a central role in neighborhood engagement programs like PlayStreets, which she helped launch in 2016.
Her deep local involvement includes serving as President of Silver Run Elementary’s PTO for eight years (2014–2022), founding and leading a
Millville Girl Scout Troop (2017–present), and working at Silver Run Elementary from 2017 to 2022. She has earned multiple recognitions
for her civic leadership, including the Outstanding Citizen Award from the Millville Chamber of Commerce (2021), the Vocational Service
Award from Tri-County Rotary (2024), and the Pride in Millville: Joyce Vanaman Award for Volunteerism (2024).
Garrison’s campaign centers on restoring community pride, highlighting Millville’s strengths, and ensuring residents feel safe, supported,
and heard. Her long track record of service positions her as one of the city’s most experienced community organizers in this election.
However, while her résumé reflects exceptional civic engagement, her campaign has not yet presented detailed policy positions or a
comprehensive platform. Much of her information remains dispersed across social media and local organizations—underscoring the broader
challenge of translating extensive community work into clear, accessible campaign materials. (Refer to the transparency explanation below
for more details.)
This election is on November 4th, 2025
In this quick “Man on the Street” chat from the Millville Car Show, InformTheVoteNJ talks with Heather Garrison, a candidate for Millville City Commissioner. Garrison shares how the event reflects the community’s energy and explains why she’s running: to highlight Millville’s positive side, change negative narratives, and help shape a safer, more inclusive city. She also gives a snapshot of her background — 22 years living in Millville, raising six children through the public schools, active PTA involvement, and her current work as a Community Builder at Holly City Development Corporation focusing on community and economic development. Whether or not she wins a commission seat, Garrison says she’ll keep working to ensure residents feel safe, heard, and included in shaping their town’s future.
Heather Garrison has demonstrated consistent community-based presence and deep involvement that few candidates can match. Through her role
with the Holly City Development Corporation, she regularly coordinates neighborhood programs and public events, including the monthly
“Chat and Chew” sessions at the Millville Public Library, which invite residents to discuss local issues and build connections in an
informal, welcoming setting. That ongoing forum for public dialogue is comparable, in civic value, to the weekly radio programs hosted
by other candidates—it represents a genuine, sustained channel of engagement outside of election cycles.
Garrison attended the Four Seasons Forum and the InformTheVoteNJ Meet & Greet, and likely participated in the Housing Authority event,
but she did not attend the recorded Candidates Forum. Still, her year-round community engagement far exceeds what most candidates demonstrate
during campaign season. Residents who want to meet her can generally do so without much difficulty—a notable strength in a political
environment where some campaigns operate behind social media walls.
However, while her accessibility is undeniable, transparency in the campaign sense remains limited. Garrison’s Facebook page contains
thoughtful posts, including one about the importance of transparency itself, yet there is still no centralized campaign platform or
clearly documented outline of issue priorities and action plans. Her messaging relies heavily on her reputation and track record rather than detailed plans
or policy proposals. While many voters admire her humility and her “doing the work” mentality, that same approach risks leaving others
unsure of her policy positions when it comes time to vote.
This distinction—between being visible in the community and being transparent as a candidate—is critical. Accessibility fosters trust,
but transparency provides clarity. In a county where many residents don’t follow politics closely and where election coverage remains
fragmented, the absence of structured campaign materials can unintentionally blur the message.
Overall rating: Average (Trending Upwards) — exceptionally accessible through civic work and community presence, but limited by the lack
of formal campaign documentation and clear, centralized communication for voters seeking specifics.
Heather Garrison frames her campaign around the power of community. She says she has witnessed residents rally together for positive change and wants to highlight the good that already exists in Millville. Her goal is to help shift the narrative from negativity to possibility—showing that Millville can be a safe and vibrant place to live, work, and raise a family.
If elected, Garrison says she will work to ensure residents feel safe, heard, and included in shaping how their town develops. She emphasizes that regardless of the election outcome, she intends to continue her community-building efforts through her current work.
Garrison believes that Millville’s reputation can improve if its positive aspects are given more visibility. She says she wants to “help change the narrative” so residents and outsiders alike see Millville as a place with opportunity rather than decline.
While she has not yet outlined specific policy proposals, her stated focus is on building a sense of safety, inclusion, and pride among residents through community and economic development initiatives.
Heather Garrison has lived in Millville for 22 years and is married with six children, all of whom attended the Millville Public School System. She has been active for many years in the Parent Teacher Association and other community activities.
She currently works for the Holly City Development Corporation as a Community Builder, focusing on community development, economic development, and housing. Garrison says her heart is with the city and she wants to see “good things and better things” happen for all residents, not just downtown.
Garrison states that even if she does not win a seat on the Millville City Commission, she will continue working to make residents feel safe, heard, and included through her professional and volunteer roles.