The Ocean Beach Street Fair & Chili Cook-Off, the neighborhood’s biggest summer block party, is staring down a serious budget squeeze this year. The free festival, scheduled for Saturday, June 27, usually packs the 4800–5000 blocks of Newport Avenue with vendors, live music and that all-important chili contest. Organizers say the mayor’s proposed city budget could strip away key public-event and arts funding, which might mean higher fees, fewer stages or a scaled-back fair for the tens of thousands who usually roll through.
What the budget would change
Mayor Todd Gloria’s FY27 proposal would significantly cut back municipal arts and culture grants, a move local groups warn could hollow out neighborhood festivals across San Diego. According to KPBS, the plan would pause about $11.8 million in arts funding as part of a broader effort to close a roughly $118 million shortfall in the city’s finances.
What is at risk for Ocean Beach
In Ocean Beach, the hit is pretty straightforward. The Ocean Beach MainStreet Association is bracing for the loss of roughly $15,000 in cultural grant money that helps underwrite the street fair. ABC 10News reports that organizers are already drawing up contingency budgets, while the city’s Creative Communities San Diego allocations show the Ocean Beach Merchants received $15,052 in FY26, according to City of San Diego records. Without that support, organizers say vendor fees could climb and free programming for kids and nonprofits may be on the chopping block.
Budget shockwaves across city events
Ocean Beach is not alone. Neighborhood festivals and big-name city events are also feeling the strain. NBC 7 has reported that Balboa Park’s December Nights could be scaled back or even canceled, while arts leaders have already rallied at City Hall to protest the proposed cuts, KPBS noted…