Marie Hayes, left, with former New Jersey Lt. Gov. Kim Guadagno and Cape May County Freeholder Director Gerald Thornton at a recent Women in Leadership Conference at Stockton University. (Photo Credit Cape May County Government website)
By Tim Kelly
Cape May County Freeholder Marie Hayes is branching out.
The Ocean City resident, who is marking her sixth year on the Freeholder board, is also serving on and assuming leadership roles on two prestigious bi-partisan legislative groups.
She is doing so, she says, to help take her advocacy for the county well beyond the Cape.
“It’s humbling to be a freeholder and to have the opportunity to work with my legislative peers on both sides of the aisle,” Hayes said. “There is strength in numbers and having a unified voice.”
At a reorganization meeting in January, Hayes was named first vice president – and moved to the front of the line to become the first president representing Cape May County – of the New Jersey Association of Counties (NJAC). The statewide, bi-partisan group is comprised of representatives from all 21 New Jersey counties.
She is the first Cape May County legislator, and the first woman from the county, to serve on the NJAC Executive Board in such a leadership capacity for the organization.
The group’s mission, she said, is to advocate for policy and legislation with a single, unified message, which in turn makes all of the county governments operate better.
“In order to be more efficient and effective, it helps sometimes to stand together,” she said. “We might not agree all the time on every aspect of every issue. However, we are talking and reaching across the aisle to understand issues from all sides and in the end, better represent our home counties and the taxpayers.”
Hayes, a Republican, is also the vice president of the Southern New Jersey Freeholders Association (SJFA), another bi-partisan group centered on helping representatives of the counties south of Trenton be heard on South Jersey-centric issues.
“In the minds of some (North Jersey) legislators, South Jersey isn’t forgotten,” Hayes said. “But it often is not the first priority. This group is a strong voice for (South Jersey) considerations, which are many times different from those of the North.”

Marie Hayes, second from right facing camera, is sworn in with fellow Executive Board members as vice president of the Southern New Jersey Freeholders Association. (Photo courtesy of Lloyd Hayes)
Hayes now appears to be well on her way toward achieving more global leadership and representation for the Cape.
“I love Cape May County,” she said. “We have so many advantages here. We can advance and make things even better. That is what I’m grateful to have the opportunity to try to do.”
Marie and her husband, Lloyd, have a son, Henry Lloyd, and two daughters, Megan and Danielle, a son-in-law, Vince, and six grandchildren.