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Paradise California enclave locked in bitter civil war as vital $300,000 suddenly pulled

June 23, 2026
in News
Paradise California enclave locked in bitter civil war as vital $300,000 suddenly pulled

The city of Carmel shelved a $292,947 tourism marketing funding request after residents raised concerns about traffic congestion and overcrowding tied to visitor growth — a move that has enraged some business owners reliant on tourists.

The City Council unanimously approved a $42 million budget for fiscal year 2026-27 during its June 2 meeting but excluded the near $300,000 marketing allocation.

An aerial view of the historic beach town of Carmel and Carmel by the Sea in California.
An aerial view of Carmel-by-the-Sea, whose City Council reneged on a near $300,000 marketing allocation after resident complaint. Joe Sohm/Visions of America/Universal Images Group via Getty Images

“Visitors are welcome here, but tourism also creates unwelcome impacts for our residents. Congestion, pollution, noise and trash are daily realities,” councilmember Robert Delves read from a draft argument.

“They’re angry about it it, frankly. They feel like there’s too much tourism, there’s over-tourism, so they see this kind of incongruity between that and the funding for See Monterey,” councilmember Hans Buder added.

See Monterey is a nonprofit tourism and marketing group responsible for promoting cities in the Monterey Peninsula such as Big Sur and Carmel-by-the-Sea.

La Bicyclette and Little Napoli restaurants in downtown Carmel, California.
La Bicyclette and Little Napoli restaurants in Downtown Carmel. Gado via Getty Images
An indoor shopping area featuring shops like Carmel Belle and craft shops, with a tiled floor and a skylight overhead.
Carmel Bell, a counter-service cafe, in Carmel Instagram/@Carmel.belle

While city council took out the group’s funding, the council plans to work with the organization and continue discussions ahead of the city’s next official meeting July 7.

“We appreciate the opportunity to continue discussions with the city and community partners … and look forward to identifying the best path forward for Carmel and its tourism economy,” See Monterey told Action News 8 in a statement.

Ocean Avenue in Carmel, California at twilight, with buildings and shops illuminated.
For some residents, more tourism is good for business. Universal Images Group via Getty Images

For some residents, the overflow of tourists is necessary for businesses to thrive.

“I’ve been here almost 30 years, and I’ve never stopped hearing that (referring to bad traffic), so that’s always going to be a problem,” a general manager at a Downtown Carmel restaurant told the outlet.

“We need always to be marketing, and to lose that would be huge,” he furthered.

The post Paradise California enclave locked in bitter civil war as vital $300,000 suddenly pulled appeared first on New York Post.

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