Harman Patil (Editor)

Karen Heck

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Preceded by
  
Dana W. Sennett

Succeeded by
  
Nicholas Isgro

Karen Heck multifilespressheraldcomuploadssites2201306

Occupation
  
Community activist, women's rights activist, non-profit administrator

Awards
  
Women of the Year (co-winner), Maine Federation of Business and Professional Women's Clubs (2002) Maine Women's Hall of Fame (2008)

Residence
  
Waterville, Maine, United States

Swoopware skydive karen heck s skydive


Karen Heck (born 1952) is an American community activist, women's rights activist, non-profit administrator, and politician. She was Mayor of Waterville, Maine from 2012 to 2014. She was inducted into the Maine Women's Hall of Fame in 2008.

Contents

Early life and education

Karen Heck was born in New York to Carroll Gustav Heck, a Bethlehem Steel engineer, and his wife June Platz Heck. She has two sisters.

She earned a B.A. in government from Colby College in 1974 and an M.S. in human development from the University of Maine in 1979.

Career

In the 1980s Heck worked for the Kennebec Valley Community Action Program in the areas of family planning, reproductive rights, and universal health care. In 2000 she co-founded, together with Lyn Mikel Brown and Lynn Cole, the Hardy Girls Healthy Women research organization. She currently works for The Avalon Group in Waterville, a business and management consulting firm in the area of women's and girls' health, and is a senior program officer for The Bingham Program in Augusta, a philanthropic organization that funds health and medical programs in the state.

Mayor of Waterville

In 2011 Heck ran for mayor of Waterville as an independent, backed by a campaign staff of five young women operatives. She defeated Democratic mayor Dana W. Sennett, who had been elected in June of that year to fill former mayor Paul LePage's remaining term after his ascension to governor of Maine, and Republican Andrew Roy, a disc jockey. She garnered 54 percent of the vote in the three-way race, with 2,021 votes out of a total 3,778 ballots cast. Among her accomplishments were the formation of a committee that initiated improvements at Waterville Robert LaFleur Airport, and Community Convergence, a question-and-answer forum for city residents.

Winery and distillery

Heck and Bruce Olson are co-owners of Tree Spirits, an Oakland-based winery and distillery. The company has won international competitions since 2011 for its wines and distilled spirits made from locally sourced apple, pear, and maple syrup, and is the sole distiller of absinthe in New England.

Memberships

Heck is a past president of the Waterville Rotary and the Coalition and Family Planning Providers group. She was a co-chair of the Maine Choice Coalition. She has served on the boards of the Maine Women's Fund, Safe Abortions for Everyone, Waterville Rape Crisis Assistance, Women's Development Institute, SAFE, Inc., and the Maine Center for Economic Policy. She has volunteered for the Mid-Maine United Way, the Mid-Maine Homeless Shelter, and the Waterville Boys and Girls Club, and campaigned for women running for state office.

Awards and honors

Heck shared the 2002 Women of the Year award from the Maine Federation of Business and Professional Women's Clubs with Brown and Cole, her co-founders at Hardy Girls Healthy Women, and received the 2006 Achievement Citation Award from the Maine Statewide American Association of University Women. She was inducted into the Maine Women's Hall of Fame in 2008.

References

Karen Heck Wikipedia