Sentences with phrase «area tech workers»

Not exact matches

«As the economic tides change, the Bay Area, with its entrenched tech workforce, is the perfect place to take the pulse of worker expectations and how they are shifting over time,» Woo CEO Liran Kotzer told the Business Times.
One joke idea that my friend and I used to throw around was to build tiny houses for tech workers in each parking space in order to solve the housing crisis in the Bay Area.
«As far as whether it's a Bay Area / tech thing, I think this lifestyle is definitely more sustainable for tech workers like me who can rely on their workplace for necessities.
The San Francisco Bay Area, recognized as a global hub of tech finance and innovation, may be at risk of losing top tech workers if they can't afford to live there, even on six - figure salaries.
Brian Brennan, senior vice president at the Silicon Valley Leadership Group, told the Wall Street Journal that while the area's high - paying jobs and lifestyle still bring tech workers to the Bay Area, «it is hard to get the best talent outside of this region to come here and stay here.&raarea's high - paying jobs and lifestyle still bring tech workers to the Bay Area, «it is hard to get the best talent outside of this region to come here and stay here.&raArea, «it is hard to get the best talent outside of this region to come here and stay here.»
The tech mogul has located the classrooms behind glass walls in high traffic areas so workers can «be inspired by seeing their peers pursue new skills.»
San Francisco Supervisor Scott Weiner, whose district includes parts of the Mission — an increasingly trendy area of San Francisco, where some of the bus protests have taken place — warned that lashing out against tech workers was not the right approach to address the issue of gentrification.
A growing number of engineers and tech workers from the San Francisco Bay Area are looking to leave Silicon Valley for burgeoning tech hubs such as Austin, Texas, and Seattle, Washington, according to a job - search site's data.
Isn't it possible that foreign tech workers are «associated» with high levels of American employment because technology jobs cluster in areas with strong employment?
APEN has been a trailblazer in bringing the voices of APA communities to the forefront of environmental health and social justice fights in the Bay Area, winning real policy solutions for the community across a gamut of issues including occupational safety of high - tech workers, affordable housing, transportation and land - use, and challenging multinational corporations to mitigate pollution that is devastating the health and well - being of countless low - income communities of color.
Mayor Rahm Emanuel explains that his «vision is to make Chicago the most bike - friendly city in the United States,» attracting energetic tech workers from historically bike - friendly areas like Seattle.
The study adjusts each city's average software engineer salary for costs of living in the Bay Area, and found that only New York tech workers would be worse off than those in the Bay Area.
The research institute, which tracks patterns in the job market, said it was the biggest increase of any age group, though overall the number of tech workers looking for jobs far away from the Bay Area grew by about 8 percent.
Meanwhile, cities like Austin, Los Angeles and Washington D.C. are becoming more competitive with the San Francisco Bay Area in terms of salaries offered to tech workers.
With 7,000 Microsoft employees and the headquarters of other tech and telecomm companies, such as Expedia, in downtown Bellevue, the area has proved a huge magnet for the younger knowledge workers.
Ultimately a check on Bay Area real estate values is, and will continue to be, that jumbo loans require a little more skin in the game than 3.5 % down OR have terms / conditions / rates that drive away intelligent young tech workers (they tend not to be in love with over-leveraging as much as our BP community members are... especially when it's a place to live, not a pure investment).
He notes that the DFW Metroplex is home to about 43 percent of the state's high - tech workers and added 44,000 jobs between 2011 and 2015, second only to the San Francisco Bay area.
(Bloomberg)-- It's no secret that the San Francisco Bay area has gotten too expensive for tech workers, but costs have also been skyrocketing for their companies, making other U.S. locales more appealing for industry offices and...
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