Rant follows:
SF is such a weird case study.
As mentioned above, large groups of people sharing a couple bedrooms? The semantics of being an adult with desires that demand at least some level of privacy just doesnt align. Then again, it is SF, so maybe nobody GAF about privacy in that regard.
I'm surprised the city hasn't collapsed. While I'm happy to field a "living wage" discussion, that possibility lapsed decades ago in SF. Should McDonalds pay its SF employees $60 an hour so they can live in healthy conditions without an unreasonable commute? Answer: No. But now that suggests that low-skilled jobs should disappear from SF, and then how do the ones who can actually afford it get their Fast-Food Fix, or even their groceries? Suddenly a lot fewer people will want to live there when they have to cross a toll bridge to purchase basic needs.
Less demand and more supply might balance the situation a bit.
Like, how do you argue that a company should pay you enough to survive in a place that everyone (oddly) wants to be in, instead of finding a place to live where the company pay makes it easy to survive.
Like, if Arkansas Mcdonalds pays $8/hr $1300/mo, and a one bedroom runs $700, doesn't that make more sense than $15/hr $2400/mo in SF and paying $700 to split a single bedroom 5 ways.
SF is such a weird case study.
As mentioned above, large groups of people sharing a couple bedrooms? The semantics of being an adult with desires that demand at least some level of privacy just doesnt align. Then again, it is SF, so maybe nobody GAF about privacy in that regard.
I'm surprised the city hasn't collapsed. While I'm happy to field a "living wage" discussion, that possibility lapsed decades ago in SF. Should McDonalds pay its SF employees $60 an hour so they can live in healthy conditions without an unreasonable commute? Answer: No. But now that suggests that low-skilled jobs should disappear from SF, and then how do the ones who can actually afford it get their Fast-Food Fix, or even their groceries? Suddenly a lot fewer people will want to live there when they have to cross a toll bridge to purchase basic needs.
Less demand and more supply might balance the situation a bit.
Like, how do you argue that a company should pay you enough to survive in a place that everyone (oddly) wants to be in, instead of finding a place to live where the company pay makes it easy to survive.
Like, if Arkansas Mcdonalds pays $8/hr $1300/mo, and a one bedroom runs $700, doesn't that make more sense than $15/hr $2400/mo in SF and paying $700 to split a single bedroom 5 ways.