Plummer remains busy, active and positive
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June Casagrande
Ruthelyn Plummer doesn’t know how much time she has left, and in a
way that’s a good thing. Just as well to focus on researching the
family genealogy that has her so intrigued, to focus on lunching with
friends, shopping with her son and the occasional bridge game. Just
as well to accept the diagnosis of terminal pancreatic cancer without
seeing it as a looming, dooming deadline.
“Hey, I’ve got a lot to live for,” she said from the sofa of her
sunny Costa Mesa mobile home, her fashionable pink pants
complementing her bright floral top as she sat with her knees pulled
up to her chin like a teenager.
Plummer, an eighth-generation Californian, born and raised in
Newport Beach, has left a permanent imprint on her native city.
Twelve years on the City Council, a stint in the mayor’s seat and a
lifetime in community activism have earned her a certain immortality.
A number of little parks in the West Newport area owe their
existence, in part, to Plummer. Resident-only parking in her
neighborhood of Newport Island, which corrected a longtime problem
with visitors’ cars clogging the streets in summer months, also ranks
on her list of accomplishments. She worked for years to help women
get into politics in Newport Beach and beyond. And she also fought
against allowing skateboarders and bicyclists on the 8-foot-wide
cement walkway along the beach on West Newport.
“I had to be a mean mama on that one,” she said. “But that’s for
pedestrians. And I bet that’s saved the city a lot of money in
liability over the years.”
The secret to her success on the council, said Plummer, now 79,
was to keep a low profile.
“I stayed out of the headlines,” she said. “If you had four votes
on the council, you were probably going to accomplish what you set
out to do.”
Plummer ran for the council in 1980 on a platform of improving her
district, West Newport. At the time, the city was regularly making
deals with developers on the other side of the bay, handing over
development rights in exchange for commitments for infrastructure
improvements, park development and other projects for the city.
“I thought, why not use some of that money to help out poor little
West Newport and the Peninsula?” Plummer recalled.
It was a message that resounded with voters and colleagues alike.
“Her district was the oldest part of town and the many little
things she accomplished there made a huge difference,” said former
Mayor Evelyn Hart, who was elected to the council two years before
Plummer and served with her for 12 years. “She pushed for improved
bush shelters, street improvements, she really insisted on getting
public restrooms put in at the beach near the Huntington Beach
border. She really made the entrance to our city much nicer.”
But Plummer’s role in local government, including a term as mayor
from 1989 to 1990, is but a single chapter in her remarkable life.
For example, it has been widely reported that Plummer was a riveter
for McDonnell Douglas during the World War II, but not many people
know why.
“It was right after I got out of high school and I really wanted
to work the graveyard shift,” she recalled, a shadow of mischievous
youth haunting her smile. “And here’s why I wanted to work the
graveyard shift: I would come home at maybe seven in the morning and
put on my bathing suit and go to the beach all day. I’d get some
sleep on the beach, spend time with my friends, then come home and
sleep for a little while. Then I’d get up and go to the Rendezvous
Ballroom, where I’d stay until about 11 at night when it was time to
go to work again. When you’re a teeny bopper, you do wild things.”
That teeny bopper is still alive and well and lurking in the
spring in Plummer’s step, even as her life winds down into a lower
gear. She moved to Costa Mesa after being diagnosed with pancreatic
cancer to be closer to family and friends. Two of her six children,
sons David and Clay Smith, are near enough to help her with grocery
shopping and getting around town.
“Everything considered, I’m very lucky,” she said.
* JUNE CASAGRANDE covers Newport Beach and John Wayne Airport. She
may be reached at (949) 574-4232 or by e-mail at
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