The Newport Beach Chamber of Commerce named Heather its Citizen of the Year for 1986.
“One of her favorite quotes was ‘Either lead, follow or get the hell out of the way,’” said her son John Heather. “That was the mantra she lived by.”
Heather, the wife of a cardiologist, moved to Southern California in the 1950s and settled in Newport Beach in 1957.
She took her first political office in 1971 when she accepted an appointment to the Planning Commission, for which she served as chairwoman from 1976 to 1978. From there, she moved on to the City Council, where she served for eight years.
A close friend and political ally of former Mayor Evelyn Hart and former Assemblywoman and State Sen. Marian Bergeson, Heather won a reputation as a hard-nosed fighter who sometimes resorted to inspired means to gain support for her causes.
In the late 1970s, when she and Bergeson spearheaded a successful drive to remove silt from the bay, the pair raised awareness by selling buckets of the silt for $5, Bergeson said.
Heather showed her toughness in another way in the 1980s, when she sought — and won — reelection after a stroke and other health problems.
Upon stepping down from the City Council in 1986, she endorsed Clarence Turner, who would go on to become Newport Beach’s mayor, for her seat.
“Jackie was a doer,” Bergeson said. “She was there to get a job done.”
In addition to protecting the environment, Heather often supported development in Newport Beach.
As a councilwoman, she backed the Promontory Point housing project on the bluffs and approved the hotels that later became the Island Hotel and the Fairmont Newport Beach.