By
The New York Times
In
Liberal San Francisco, Tech Leaders Brawl Over Tax Proposal to Aid Homeless
Jack
Dorsey, chief executive of Twitter and Square, is among the technology
executives who have been fiercely opposed to a Nov. 6 ballot measure that would
impose a new tax on companies.
CreditCreditJose
Luis Magana/Associated Press
By
Kate Conger
For months, technology companies in San
Francisco have fought a local ballot proposition that would impose taxes on
corporations to fund initiatives to help the homeless.
But
last week, that unified front crumbled when Marc Benioff, chief executive of
Salesforce, the online software company that is the city’s largest private
employer, broke from the pack. “Homelessness is all of our responsibility,” he
tweeted. Then the billionaire committed $2 million to passing the tax measure
and criticized his fellow tech moguls for not caring.
Now
San Francisco’s tech community is in an uproar over the initiative, which is
known as Proposition C and will be on the ballot on Nov. 6. Venture capitalists
and companies including the online payments start-up Stripe are lobbying and
donating money to defeat the tax. And Jack Dorsey, chief executive of Twitter and
Square, who opposes the measure, has publicly bickered with Mr. Benioff. On
Friday, Mr. Dorsey tweeted, “We need to have
long term solutions in place, not quick acts to make us feel good for one
moment in time.”
The
vitriol among tech executives over the proposition has become “awkward,” said
Scott Wiener, a Democratic state senator who represents San Francisco and
surrounding areas and who is against the tax. Still, he praised the companies
for becoming more involved in local politics.
The
dispute over Proposition C raises the question of what responsibilities tech
companies have for problems in their own backyards. Tech firms often receive
blame for exacerbating inequality and driving up property values with their
hefty employee pay packages, contributing to homelessness. The question of what
these companies may owe their hometowns is magnified because many of them have
taken advantage of local tax breaks to spur their own growth.
The
debate is playing out beyond San Francisco and Silicon Valley. In Seattle,
Amazon objected in May to a city tax
that would have funded services for the homeless. After intense opposition,
Seattle officials scuttled it.
In
San Francisco, some tech companies, including Mr. Dorsey’s Twitter, used tax breaks
in 2011, which the city offered to keep them from moving away. In 2012, San
Francisco also adjusted its tax code by switching from a payroll tax to a gross receipts tax,
a change that favored the tech industry, which spends extravagantly to recruit
top engineers.
Many
of the tech companies that are against Proposition C declined to comment on the
record. Opposing a measure that is aimed at reducing homelessness is tricky for
the firms, especially in a city that has the seventh-largest homeless population
in the nation, behind cities such as New York and Los Angeles.
But
in public comments, Mr. Dorsey and others have argued that San Francisco
officials, and not the companies, are best equipped to deal with homelessness.
They have said that the city has a new mayor, London Breed, who was elected in
June partly on her promise to combat the issue,
and that she needs time to deliver on her campaign. Ms. Breed opposes the
measure.
“I’m
down to help in any way I can, as long as the mayor has the accountability,”
Mr. Dorsey said in an interview. He added that he was not worried about being
perceived as opposing support for the homeless, “because it feels like the
right thing to do to get into the nuance and bring out more of the concerns.”
Those
in favor of the new tax argue that they are not asking tech companies to come up
with a strategy to save the homeless. Instead, they said, they simply want to
raise taxes on the firms to fund resources. The extra money from the
proposition could total $300 million a year and would effectively double the
city’s budget for addressing homelessness.
“You’re
either for the homeless or you’re not,” Mr. Benioff said in an interview.
“Everyone is willing to say it’s a terrible problem and it’s getting worse, but
only so many are willing to write a check to make it better.”
Proposition
C was put together by the Coalition on Homelessness, a local nonprofit group.
The measure is designed to fund short-term shelters, permanent housing and
mental health services for the homeless with a gross receipts tax and a payroll
tax on companies above a certain size. The city estimated
that nearly half of the businesses that would be affected by the tax are in
tech and finance.
Sam
Lew, policy director of the Coalition on Homelessness, said the proposition was
a “no-brainer” because the funding would provide housing.
The
measure qualified for the city ballot in July. Polling conducted by the
opposition campaign in early September indicated that 56 percent of likely
voters favored the tax, but that number decreased to 47 percent when they
received opposition messaging.
Interested
in All Things Tech?
The
Bits newsletter will keep you updated on the latest from Silicon Valley and the
technology industry.
In
August, an executive at Dolby Laboratories, which makes entertainment systems,
sent an email to more than 30 technology companies in San Francisco about the
measure, asking if they planned to take a stand on it. Other companies on the
email included Salesforce, Stripe, Twitter, GitHub, Uber, Lyft, Zendesk, Slack
and Yelp.
Marc
Benioff, chief executive of Salesforce, who favors the measure, said in an
interview: “You are either for the homeless or you’re not.”
CreditJerod
Harris/Getty Images for I.Ampuls
Executives
at Salesforce and Stripe said they would most likely oppose the measure,
according to the emails, which were obtained by The New York Times.
In
one email, Darryl Yee, Salesforce’s tax chief, said: “I grew up in SF and very
much want to address the homeless problem, but the city’s budget already seems
pretty healthy, especially when you consider we’re only a population of 800K.”
Michael
Yip, Stripe’s head of tax, wrote back that tech companies might make sizable
charitable donations to homelessness causes instead, “in hopes that this will
be enough to sway the Mayor to publicly oppose this.”
Twitter
and Zendesk declined to comment. GitHub and Lyft did not return requests for
comment. Yelp said it was “not active” on the issue.
Some
tech companies began giving money to the campaign to fight the tax. In
September, Stripe donated $20,000 to the “No on C” effort. In an editorial
in The San Francisco Chronicle that month, its general counsel, Jon Zieger,
wrote that “Prop. C will likely hurt more than it helps” because there was no
comprehensive plan to tackle homelessness and the extra money might go nowhere.
Patrick
Collison, Stripe’s chief executive, later tweeted that the measure was “poor
policy.”
In
a statement on Friday, Stripe said that homelessness was complex and that
“solutions require careful interventions.” It added, “Anyone who claims that
Prop C is a matter of being ‘for the homeless or against them’ is selling a
facile falsehood.”
Early
this month, Mayor Breed declared that she opposed the proposition,
saying it was fiscally irresponsible. “I do not believe doubling what we spend
on homelessness without new accountability, when we don’t even spend what we
have now efficiently, is good government,” she said in a statement.
Mr.
Benioff said early conversations within Salesforce focused on opposing the tax
since “all companies are supposed to oppose all taxes. You kind of learn that
in business school.” But he changed his mind after talking with his co-chief
executive, Keith Block, who often encountered homeless people on his walks to
work.
“We
said, you know what, I think we have to support this,” Mr. Benioff said. He
added that homelessness — not taxes — had become an existential threat to
business in the city and that Salesforce might have to leave if the crisis
continued.
On
Oct. 8, Mr. Benioff announced his $2 million commitment to passing the measure
and tweeted his support for the tax.
In
response, Mr. Dorsey tweeted his opposition. Mr. Benioff then questioned Mr.
Dorsey’s philanthropy; Mr. Dorsey insisted that Mr. Benioff reread his
arguments.
Mr.
Dorsey now plans to give $75,000 to the campaign against the tax, a Square
spokesman said. The funding would help spread a more nuanced message about the
ballot initiative, Mr. Dorsey said.
Stripe
has also recently donated an additional $400,000 to the campaign against the
tax, according to public records. Michael Moritz, a venture capitalist at
Sequoia Capital, gave $100,000, according to public records. In an email, Mr.
Moritz said he agreed with Stripe’s stance on the measure and noted that his
foundation had recently given $11 million to Hamilton Families, an organization
fighting homelessness.
Cisco’s
chief executive, Chuck Robbins, spoke in support of Mr. Benioff in a statement
this week, saying, “We must end the homelessness and housing crises our
communities are facing.” He said he was supporting a proposition to fund
affordable housing in San Jose, Calif., where Cisco has its headquarters.
In
a phone call after their Twitter exchange, Mr. Benioff said, Mr. Dorsey told
him that the tax in Proposition C was too high. Mr. Dorsey said he had merely
pointed out the disproportionate impact that the tax would have on payment
processors like Square. Mr. Benioff estimated Salesforce would pay $10 million
annually for the tax; Mr. Dorsey said Square, a much smaller company, would pay
$20 million.
Mr.
Benioff has since continued taking digs at other San Francisco tech leaders and
their stance on Proposition C. “They didn’t know they didn’t like it until they
realized I supported it,” he said.
Mr.
Dorsey, when asked if he agreed with Mr. Benioff’s characterization of their
conversation, responded with a single word: “No.”
Tidak ada komentar:
Posting Komentar