Former union leader turns to real estate
- Share via
Julie Blumberg, a longtime resident of Newport Beach, recently
celebrated her 50th birthday with 17 of her friends, including some
from middle school.
An active and industrious woman, Blumberg, while a student at UCLA
in the early 1970s, had her Volkswagen Beetle placarded with a beetle
board advertising Don Emilio Tequila so she could earn gas money. She
was also put in charge of 65 Teamsters while working for Zellerback
Paper Company in the late 1970s and succeeded as a woman working with
them.
Even though she no longer works with the Teamsters, she is still
busy with real estate and community activities.
The birthday girl sat down with the Pilot’s Luis Pena this week
and talked about the last half-century.
Where did you grow up?
Newport Beach. I consider myself a Newport Beach native even
though my daughter, the teenager, denies it because I was born in
Corona 50 years ago this past month. My dad was the first optometrist
in the fledgling little town of Corona back then. As his business
grew over the years, he endured the commute, watching the beet and
bean fields and orange groves disappear as the years passed. In 1962,
our family moved to Bayshores, and that’s where my mother and sister
still reside. My brother Jeff and his wife and daughter still live in
the area. Some of my fondest memories were spent at the beach. When I
was just a toddler, people would come up to my parents and ask how
old I was, because they were [shocked] at how this tiny little
berry-brown toe head could walk in the sand at the oceanfront. When
we moved to Bayshores, the big treat was to walk across Coast Highway
to Wil Wright’s for peppermint crunch ice cream, and to the bait and
tackle for fishing supplies. Also, Mom would pack us a pirate’s
picnic and we would grab some friends and row over to Shark Island to
play on the sand dunes. In time, it was developed into Linda Isle.
During my high school years, I would ride my 10-speed over to Lido
Isle, meet friends, then continue over to the peninsula, and hang out
at the oceanfront. Bike rides to Huntington and Laguna, stopping for
a date shake, rounded out the beach scene. When I started to drive,
my dad let me drive his turquoise 1956 T-Bird with portholes and
continental kit. I remember getting my first ticket, turning left off
of 17th Street onto Newport Boulevard, taking a friend home to Lido.
I think everyone I know has been cited in Costa Mesa for a moving
violation.
What kind of childhood did you have?
It was ideal. My parents sacrificed a lot to bring us to the beach
city to be raised because they were looking for the best future for
us and it certainly had become that. We all stayed and loved the
Newport Beach community.
How did you end up in the Newport-Mesa area?
My parents purchased a beach cottage on 25th Street the same year
that I was born. So I call myself a Newport Beach native. I was the
youngest of three and our family would spend our summers at the beach
to avoid the heat of inland Corona.
What are your greatest accomplishments in life?
I wouldn’t classify any one accomplishment as great, but I can
reflect upon a few milestones through the years. In the summer of
1971, I backpacked from Kings Canyon, over the Kearsarge Pass and
down into Bishop on the other side of the High Sierras. It was the
culmination of a summer class led by Bill Burge and Don Echternach,
two inspiring science teachers from Newport Harbor High School. I am
proud to say that I am a UCLA graduate, but my career firsts are more
significant. In the late ‘70s I worked for Zellerbach Paper Company,
which afforded me numerous bold moves on their part, putting me, a
female, in charge of 65 Teamster truck drivers and dock workers.
After their initial shock wore off, and the drivers tested me, they
learned that I could comprehend the nuances of their job, and that I
would go the extra distance for them. I rarely had a driver turn me
down when we needed that extra delivery handled, to remain
competitive and superior in customer service. Although I was on the
management side of the bargaining table, the drivers rarely had a
grievance after I stepped in to manage the trucking department. As
corporate acquisitions led to downsizing, Zellerbach offered me a
mini parachute, so I opted out for a shorter commute, this time to
manage the private trucking operation at Beatrice/Hunt-Wesson, in
Fullerton. Another first for their Teamster drivers, but I captured
their attention with my management style, and we became a family.
Difficult drivers became team players; mechanics took pride in
maintaining the vehicles, rather than fixing them after they broke.
We became the proud private fleet, with a new corporate identity
emblazoned on the side. In 1991, I became the first female president
of the Southern California Private Fleet Council, and subsequently
was honored as their “man of the year.” I reflect on those years, and
truly cherish the opportunity afforded me by those companies and the
camaraderie that evolved from my rapport with all of my employees.
If you could re-do one moment or incident in your life, what would
it be?
I will preface this embarrassing revelation with the fact that I
was a typically levelheaded teen, but while attending a fraternity
mixer, it happened to be my 21st birthday. I was challenged to drink
21 tequila sunrises and I did. As I look back now, as a parent, it is
easy to see how good kids can be sidetracked and make stupid
mistakes. Fortunately, I lived to tell the story. The redeeming point
to the story is that I was able to relay my concerns about peer
pressure to my daughter, coming from an actual experience that could
have resulted in catastrophic consequences.
What profession other than yours would you like to have tried?
Well, I haven’t told you about my current profession; those were
my past professions and my current profession was making my passion,
which is real estate -- a new career and I started that about 10
years ago. It’s a perfect fit, since I love shopping, and what better
thing to shop for than real estate. I recently sold a fabulous view
home in Monarch Beach, to a client from Chicago. I am now searching
the coastal area for another investment for him. My fantasy career is
to update a centuries-old farmhouse in Burgundy, then hire a renowned
chef to teach cooking classes, and wine pairings, then have my
friends and acquaintances come visit. If I built a golf course, I may
even get my husband to come. I’d like to be an artist in my old age,
go over to France and paint landscapes. When I go on vacation, the
souvenirs that I treasure most are the pieces of art that I pick up
on trips. I just love going into art galleries and seeing local
artists work and paintings of the countryside and the vineyards and
whatever. So, I just would love to hook up with the ladies over on
wherever, 42nd at the cannery, and start taking classes and go on one
of those little trips to the South of France and paint. So I am going
to do that when I have time in my life.
What are some differences between a typical day in your life now
versus a day in your life 20 years ago?
Twenty years ago, I was still commuting to downtown L.A. with a
baby at home and just running the necessary career fast track. After
1990, I was able to retire from management the corporate-type world
and pursue a more fun career, which has been real estate. Now I spend
my mornings reading the Daily Pilot, drinking my coffee and planning
my day, which can include landscape committee for my neighborhood,
Newport Hills Garden Club, that I am president of. I am very busy now
with extracurricular activities that don’t let me focus enough on
enjoying the new golf clubs my husband gave me for Christmas that I
haven’t tried out yet.
What do you do for fun?
For fun, I travel. I enjoy working in my garden. I anticipate
taking time to learn how to golf and I spend evenings burning the
midnight oil working on my treasured photo albums, which take me back
to special trips, special friends and special times. I am currently
working on a photo album for myself and for my sister and my brother
for a history of my father’s war years -- he was a B-24 Liberator
pilot in World War II. He got shot down over Austria. So the end of
April, I am leaving for Austria with my Horace Ensign seventh-grade
teacher who kept my report from seventh grade on Austria. And fate
just has it that the two of us are going to travel there together
next month and see where my dad got shot down.
What is the greatest lesson that you’ve learned in your life?
Count your friends as blessings. I am so privileged to count among
my friends all age ranges, from the children in my neighborhood that
accompany me when I walk my dog to my ex-elderly neighbor who just
turned 90. And backward, through acquaintances through my garden
club, assistance league, my seventh-grade teacher, neighbors and
college friends. I feel fun times and trying times are meant to be
shared and I like to share just the fun out of everyday experiences
with the many friends that I have.
What do you treasure most?
First, of course, is my one and only daughter, and my husband of
14 years who originally admired me for my success in business, but
now encourages me to prioritize my many commitments so that I can
take time to practice swinging those new clubs that he gave me for
Christmas. Because [family is] my reason for my enthusiasm for life,
for trying new experiences and living life to its fullest.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.