Hailey Branson-Potts, Tribune News Service
Good luck finding Bill Woo’s house. Ask for directions, and he will say: “Brown shingle house with the stop sign and the fire hydrant by the driveway.” He’s on Junipero Avenue, two or three houses north of an intersection — depending on where you start counting. Woo expects you to get lost. Like everyone else in Carmel-by-the-Sea, he does not have a home address. “How do you explain this to someone?” he asked a Times reporter who got lost trying to find his home. “It’s insanity.” In this wealthy town on the Monterey Peninsula, residents use descriptors like: City Hall is on the east side of Monte Verde Street between Ocean and 7th avenues. And they give their homes eccentric names such as Almost Heaven, Faux Chateau and Go Away.
There is no mail delivery — they have to go to the post office.
For more than 100 years, the townsfolk fought to keep it that way, once threatening to secede from California if it imposed addresses. Serendipitous run-ins with neighbours at the post box, they said, were an essential part of their small-town identity. But now, tradition is running up against Amazon and Instacart and mail-order medications. You need a physical address to get a Real ID and to open bank accounts or credit cards. And if you just moved to Carmel-by-the-Sea? Expect to spend hours on the phone, arguing that your house is real when you try to hook up utilities, water and the internet. “The argument is, ‘Oh, we want to keep our place quaint. We meet people at the post office.’... Explain to me how it’s quaint. It’s B.S.!” said Woo, 76, who has lived here for 33 years.
After decades of resistance, the Carmel-by-the Sea City Council is now considering addressing those problems — pun intended. In the coming weeks, an ad hoc committee is expected to recommend whether to formally number houses and businesses. “It’s more than just a convenience,” said Councilwoman Karen Ferlito, a member of the ad hoc committee. “The idea that this makes us unique? I don’t think anybody comes to Carmel visiting because we don’t have street addresses.... Yes, it’s a nice little story. But times have changed since this was a tiny little village with a few artists who met at the post office.” Plus, she said, the town is not abiding by the state fire code, which requires buildings to be numbered.
But old traditions die hard. In a recent Carmel Residents Assn. survey answered by 132 participants, 59% said they did not want addresses, even if it meant the “occasional inconvenience.” “Meeting at the post office has been a way for us to hang together... which is so special in Carmel because we’re small enough we can be a real community,” said Karyl Hall, a septuagenarian who is co-chair of the Carmel Preservation Assn., grew up here and is opposed to addresses. “We have to say, ‘Yeah, it would be more convenient. But it’s one more way in which we become ordinary.’ “ The debate over addresses began in earnest during the COVID-19 pandemic, when people began shopping online more frequently, and remote workers moved to town. But some tourists and residents have long feared that if they have an accident or a medical issue, emergency responders will have trouble finding them, Ferlito said.
“We have an aging population here,” she said. “Time, when you have a heart attack or stroke, matters.” In a letter this month to councilmembers, which Ferlito shared with The Times, one resident said she soon will be having major surgery that limits her mobility. She cannot order meal kits, and getting picked up when she needs a ride is an ordeal. “More often or not,” the woman wrote, “unless I am out in the middle of the street waving, they cannot find me.... This is a legal issue and should harm come to one of these citizens due to your neglect, you would/should be liable.” Woo, a US Army veteran, struggled to get health insurance through the Department of Veterans Affairs a few years back because he could not prove his house was real.
After a clerk tried and failed to find it on Google Maps, she asked: “Are you homeless?” Woo contacted Google, got his home to show up and eventually received coverage. It is especially hard to find houses at night. There are no street lights in residential areas — people keep flashlights by their doors — and few sidewalks. Longtime residents and preservationists say this, too, adds to the uniqueness — and privacy — of Carmel-by-the-Sea, whose founders wanted to keep out the so-called trappings of city life. “We moved here knowing that it’s got some weirdness,” said Nancy Twomey, a Carmel Residents Assn. board member. “But it’s got culture and charm and traditions that we value.” Twomey, retired from a career in high tech marketing, moved from Silicon Valley to Carmel-by-the-Sea, her longtime vacation spot, in 2017.
“It’s weird, and, yes, it’s inconvenient,” she said of the addresses. “But it’s wonderful in its weirdness. It’s like the high heels thing.” Twomey was referring to an old local law — unenforced but still on the books — that bans heels taller than 2 inches without a permit. It was meant to protect the city from lawsuits if people tripped over pavement warped by tree roots. Some respondents to the Carmel Residents Assn. survey said they worried that addresses would lead to at-home mail delivery and the closure of their beloved post office. David Rupert, a spokesman for the US Postal Service, said there are no such plans.
“We’ve been serving the local community since 1889 and we have no intention of changing that,” he said in an email. Like many residents, Mayor Dave Potter said he believes the push for addresses is coming mostly from newcomers and “the Amazon crowd” — who, he added, should shop locally. “Did you move here because you like the character, or did you move here because you want to change the community? We’re unique, and we pride ourselves on that,” Potter said while sipping wine at the Cypress Inn, built in 1929 and once owned by actress Doris Day. There are inconveniences, Potter acknowledged. For two years, he and his wife did not have TV because she got so frustrated trying to set up cable. They played dominoes and read at night, which wasn’t so bad.
Twice, a neighbor’s caviar was wrongly delivered to their house. And they received COVID-19 test kits meant for another neighbour. He dismissed people’s fears that they won’t be found by an ambulance — “That’s bull!” he said — because emergency response times are fast in the one-square-mile town. Carmel-by-the-Sea Police Chief Paul Tomasi said in an email that average response times are two minutes for police and three minutes for firetrucks and ambulances.