San Francisco Tech Workers Urge Industry To Help Homeless, 'Be Part Of The Solution'
'Be Part Of The Solution': San Francisco techies urge industry to help homeless. Prop C, which would tax high-earning businesses in the city to help combat homelessness, has divided the industry. Oct. 26, 2018, The Guardian.
Picket signs and chanting activists are not an uncommon sight in San Francisco, a city known for its protests and advocacy. But what set the dozens who marched down Market Street on Thursday apart from the typical rallies that sprout from the citys streets was that many of those waving the giant inflatable poop emojis and dollar bills work in the very industry they had gathered to shame: the tech industry.
With the tech industry torn on a November election ballot measure that would tax high-earning San Francisco businesses and redirect millions of dollars to help combat homelessness and companies such as Lyft, Stripe, and Twitter CEO, Jack Dorsey, funneling hundreds of thousands of dollars against the measure tech workers have entered the fray to make it known where they stand on the measure known as Proposition C.
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Im out here because I know the face that tech has in San Francisco, said Sam Heft-Luthy, 24, a product manager at a company he declined to name. Its the face that Jack Dorsey wears, its the face that were seeing right now with Jack Dorsey, with (Stripe CEO) Patrick Collison, all coming out against Prop C. I know that both as a citizen of San Francisco who wants to see this homeless crisis change and as a person who is currently employed in tech, there is an outsized impact in coming out and saying that when these billionaires who own these companies are speaking out against these important measures, they dont do so with my voice.
The tech workers mingled with activists from the Coalition on Homelessness, one of the main architects behind Prop C, outside the Twitter building on Market, chanting, Yes on C, no on greed! and passing out leaflets about the ballot measure to passersby. The poop emojis they waved all wore pink Lyft mustaches, and some were decorated with the smiley face emoji with money-sign eyes.
The measure would implement an average 0.5% gross receipts tax on company revenues over $50m, raising an estimated $250-$300m in additional venue that would go toward housing the homeless, providing housing assistance, and bolstering mental health services. - More...
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2018/oct/26/prop-c-tech-workers-san-francisco-homeless