Protests Over Twitter Tax
Breaks as Anger Rises in Inequality Valley, California By Joseph Mayton
The city of San Francisco
is running a deficit, urging its government workers to put more of their
personal earnings into health care costs for themselves and their families. But
this deficit, workers argue, could be overcome if major technology companies in
the area weren’t given the immense tax breaks they currently receive.
Across the Bay Area, and
especially as one heads south from San Francisco, labor activists and others
are gearing up for what could become the next hotspot of American activism:
making wealthy tech giants pay their share.
Last Wednesday, hundreds
of members of SEIU Union 1021 and other supporters marched through downtown San
Francisco to Twitter’s headquarters. They picketed for about an hour, calling
for an end to the massive tax breaks the company gets in the name of building a
larger job base for the city.
Twitter, according to the
San Francisco Chronicle, was given some $55 million in tax breaks last year
alone, and many economists and observers believe it will receive even more
breaks in 2014. For workers and Bay Area residents, the numbers are hard to
swallow and anger is brewing.
“What we are seeing is the
foundation for inequality and it is because the large companies in this country
are getting breaks when the average family is not,” said a former Silicon
Valley web designer who, since leaving a Fortune 500 company last fall, has
fought vigorously to educate residents on issues around inequality.
Twitter, of course, is not
the only tech company receiving big tax breaks. Zynga, the maker of Facebook
games like FarmVille, received $6
million in tax breaks in 2011,
according to the San Francisco Examiner. Several other companies, such as
Microsoft and Spotify, are applying for
their own exemptions.
What is arguably a tipping
point in the growing fight against inequality in the Bay Area is the
skyrocketing rent: prices have increased across San Francisco and the
Peninsula, heading south towards San Jose, by some $1,500
across the board in recent years.
Now, families that have
called the area home for decades are being forced to look elsewhere, farther
away from their place of work, in order to meet the basic need of a roof over
their head.
“We can’t pay the rising
rental prices and we know that this is the direct result of these major
companies offering higher salaries and housing stipends to their workers,”
48-year-old accountant Jose Manuel told Occupy.com last week.
Manuel, who is married
with three children, said he and his family lived for eight years in a
three-bedroom house in San Mateo. Then, two months ago, as his lease was
running out for the fourth time, Manuel’s landlord informed him that the rent
was increasing by $750, based on “the market.”
“We couldn’t do that. My
employer has reduced the benefits we receive and this means we are paying more
expenses out of pocket. I can’t compete with someone earning thousands more a
month than we are and who is willing to pay a lot more for the same house,” he
said.
Lately, even Silicon
Valley seems to be taking notice of rising inequality, as companies and
executives step forward to say all the right things – though many activists
believe the tech firms’ PR is a way of deflecting angst away from companies and
onto government.
Emmett Carson, chief
executive and president of the Silicon Valley Community Foundation, said in a
recent interview with the Chronicle that housing is, and continues to be, a
pressing issue in the Valley.
“If prices continue to
rise, the people at the bottom end of the income pile either double up in
housing…they move further out, or, they take a larger share of their already
limited income to try to find housing,” Carson said.
“And a healthy economy has
to have housing, for everyone that lives in that community,” he continued. “For
all the jobs in the economy, there needs to be a place for people to live. Just
having economic success alone is not going to work out.”
But that type of rhetoric
offers little solace to those facing eviction or massive increases in rental
prices as a direct result of rising inequality fueled by regional tech giants
like Twitter, Google and Facebook – companies which are not even paying their share
in taxes.
A residential building
owner who holds property throughout the Bay Area told Occupy.com that landlords
know the market – and they are willing to boot out families in order to earn
more money while rents are soaring. This, he said, “leads to many families and
others who have honest jobs and make a decent living on the outside, unable to
pay for their current homes.”
“They have to move farther
and farther away to maintain the same quality housing. This is because of the
tech companies and the much higher salaries and incentives they offer,” he
said.
Adding to the rising
popular anger is the fact that local governments are pushing initiatives to
force workers to pay more out-of-pocket costs, while the tech behemoths get
huge tax breaks – evading payment on hundreds of millions of dollars that would
easily cover the shortfalls currently faced by workers.
“We are here to protest
and make it heard that workers are not going to sit by and allow our housing
costs to go up, our health care needs not met, while these big companies get
the breaks that the average citizen needs,” said one protester while
demonstrating against Twitter last week.
“To give in to this
situation would be like committing suicide. This is the next war in America. A
war for the people.”
But with no evidence
pointing toward a decline in – or even a healthy debate over – the tax breaks
companies are currently receiving, anti-gentrification action by Bay Area
residents, workers and activists who demand more affordable housing are gathering
momentum.
What may have begun small,
with isolated protests against Google buses that shuttle workers from San
Francisco to Silicon Valley each day, escalated last week with the
demonstration at Twitter – and according to angry residents, the protests are
just a beginning if their voices are not heard.
“We have the support of a
vast majority of concerned citizens in the Bay Area and across the country,”
said Manuel. “If we have to take matters into our own hands, we will and we
will fight against the injustices that are causing families to struggle.”
This article was published at NationofChange
at: http://www.nationofchange.org/protests-over-twitter-tax-breaks-anger-rises-inequality-valley-california-1392739135. All rights are reserved.
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