CA, US & World
Coachella Mayor Frank Figueroa Confronts Indian Wells City Council Over Data Center Criticism
INDIAN WELLS, California — In a rare and striking display of cross-valley political discourse, Coachella Mayor Dr. Frank Figueroa took his message directly across municipal lines on Thursday evening, June 18, 2026, addressing the Indian Wells City Council to defend his city's sovereignty and recent legislative decisions. Figueroa’s unexpected appearance at the council chambers was prompted by a highly critical public op-ed written by Indian Wells Mayor Toper Taylor, which took aim at the Coachella City Council for terminating a multi-million-dollar development agreement for a massive proposed data center project.
Addressing his municipal colleagues, Figueroa emphasized that while the cities are interconnected by shared trails, shopping centers, and friendships as part of a unified Coachella Valley, regional etiquette dictates that local councils do not meddle in the internal governance of neighboring towns. Figueroa stated that when he learned an op-ed about a Coachella project was authored by the leadership of Indian Wells, it came as a shock, reiterating that the leaders of Coachella intimately understand the distinct needs of their own community. The dispute highlights growing regional friction over industrial infrastructure development, specifically the localized environmental tolls of hyperscale data centers versus their broader promise of regional economic expansion.
The political feud erupted after Coachella leaders formally withdrew from an agreement with Stronghold Power Systems, effectively halting plans for a 450-acre technology campus and municipal utility project on the city's eastern side. In a subsequent opinion column published in The Desert Sun, Mayor Taylor strongly condemned the move, arguing that Coachella had squandered a generation-defining economic opportunity capable of injecting millions of dollars in annual municipal revenue. Taylor doubled down on his critique in a previous public statement, comparing the project to a historical manufacturing milestone by declaring that the status quo in Coachella is not working and that this was the city's Tesla moment, analogous to when Fremont, California, became a manufacturing powerhouse by approving Tesla's production plants.
During his formal response inside the Indian Wells council chambers, Figueroa forcefully rejected that characterization, framing the cancellation as a vital course correction that honors the democratic will of the electorate. Figueroa countered that the decision to terminate the contract reflected the intense, valid opposition of hundreds of local families who packed recent town halls to voice concerns over the massive industrial project's severe projected strain on the desert's fragile water tables, its heavy electricity consumption, and its localized noise pollution. Figueroa argued that local leaders have a primary duty to protect their residents' immediate quality of life over speculative corporate profits.
Following the lively meeting, Mayor Taylor maintained a diplomatic stance regarding the unusual cross-city confrontation. In an official statement, Taylor noted that the City of Indian Wells warmly welcomed Mayor Figueroa to the council session, adding that the city firmly supports freedom of speech and actively encourages healthy debate on matters of profound regional significance. Despite the localized pushback from Indian Wells, the political momentum against tech-campus zoning in the eastern valley appears to be hardening. Figueroa confirmed that the Coachella City Council is scheduled to reconvene in less than 45 days to officially debate and vote on implementing a permanent, long-term ban against all future data center developments within their city limits.
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By: NBC Palm Springs
June 19, 2026


