Facebook engineers struggling with sky-high rents ask Mark Zuckerberg for help

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Facebook engineers struggling with sky-high rents ask Mark Zuckerberg for help


Facebook engineers struggling with sky-high rents ask Mark Zuckerberg for help
Ester Bloom
Friday, 3 Mar 2017 | 3:06 PM ET

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You might think that, once you get through all the interviews and score a coveted position as a white-collar employee of a billion-dollar company, you'll be set. But if your job means living in the Bay Area, you may find that, even with a generous salary, you're having a hard time getting by.

According to a write up in The Guardian, well-paid tech workers are struggling to pay for housing since the rents in and around San Francisco "by one measure are now the highest in the world." In 2015, according to SmartAsset.com, the cost of living there was "62.6% higher than the U.S. average." In 2016, the same site found that you'd need to make at least $216,129 a year to afford the rent on an average two-bedroom apartment.

Recently, some employees went so far as to ask their boss for help: "Facebook engineers last year even raised the issue with founder Mark Zuckerberg, asking whether the company could subsidize their rents to make their living situation more affordable, according to an executive at the company who has since departed."

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Justin Sullivan | Getty Images
Apple Vice President of Worldwide Online Stores, Jennifer Bailey, speaks about Apple Pay during Apple WWDC on June 8, 2015 in San Francisco, California.

The article recounts the frustrations of tech workers making between $100,000 and $700,000 a year and yet finding themselves rent-burdened, unable to save and commuting for hours each day. In one colorful example, an Apple employee lived until recently in a garage in Santa Cruz, using a bucket as a toilet.

Purchasing real estate there can feel nearly impossible too. One digital marketing exec and her husband say they make a million dollars a year and yet can't afford to buy a house. As she puts it, "The American dream is not working out here."



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Executive Edge: Zuckerberg's 2017 resolution


Indeed, as described by The Guardian, the area sounds less like America and more like a post-war society struck by hyperinflation. One tech worker, who gave up and moved out, describes "mundane day-to-day costs, like spending $8 on a bagel and coffee or $12 on freshly pressed juice."

Still, many of the tech workers cited in the article are self-aware enough to acknowledge that, despite these privations, they are the fortunate ones. The situation is far more dire for those making less exceptional salaries.

"You are caught in this really uncomfortable position. You feel very guilty seeing such poverty and helplessness," added Michelle, the 28-year-old on a six-figure wage. "But what are you supposed to do? Not make a lot of money?"
 

Quiet Magician

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Make a 6 figure wage yet still complain about rent for that garage apt or that $12 coffee you're buying every morning

But you're making 6 figures tho :yeshrug:

Cost of living there is absurdly high. 8k to 10k a month rent is common and factor in transportation, food, insurance and all the other bills and your six figure salary leaves you with shyt.
 

GPBear

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Breh, fukk all these people.

My parents were teachers in Richmond, Oakland, schools in the Bay during the 90s when there was talks to make ebonics an official language...

We had to move because housing prices didn't match up with school teachers salaries. My dad grew up in the bay, born in berkeley in 1957.

Now it's 20 years later and the kids who upped the housing prices in the first place are complaining about it...I can't tell you how offensive that is to me.
You kicked me out of my childhood home...by upping its prcies...and now you want it to be cheaper, for yourself.

Why couldn't my family ask for housing subsidies? They were public school teachers in the Bay. They were more beneficial to the community as a whole than 10 apple engineers.


And on top of this, SF real estate developers are starting to buy up land around here, so housing prices around here are going to escalate and I'll have to move out again, even though I don't live in Portland. So that the computeer engineers at Intel can have their developed gated communities out in the country where I live.
 
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