EyeQ Tech review EyeQ Tech EyeQ Tech tuyển dụng review công ty eyeq tech eyeq tech giờ ra sao EyeQ Tech review EyeQ Tech EyeQ Tech tuyển dụng crab meat crab meat crab meat importing crabs live crabs export mud crabs vietnamese crab exporter vietnamese crabs vietnamese seafood vietnamese seafood export vietnams crab vietnams crab vietnams export vietnams export
US News

San Francisco tech mogul: Woke city remains a ghost town post COVID-19

A San Francisco tech mogul is comparing the woke city’s downtown to a ghost town, sharing shocking images of its once-buzzing streets now empty.

“This is downtown San Francisco, Monday morning at 9:20am,” tweeted Michelle Tandler, founder of professional development firm Growth Path, earlier this week, along with a series of images showing nearly empty streets with few cars or people.

On Friday, she posted a video of the city center and wrote: “Historically these streets were bustling with office workers. Now, they are virtually empty.”

A recent report by the security firm Kastle showed just 39% of downtown San Francisco workers occupied as of late last month, despite mask mandates being lifted in March, according to CaliforniaGlobe.com. Prior to the COVID-19 pandemic outbreak two years ago, city office occupancy was constantly at or near 100%.

Tandler and others fear many big firms won’t renew their office leases, devastating small businesses and destroying the local economy.

“I don’t think San Francisco government has fully grasped how problematic this is,” she added on Twitter. “Either that, or they just don’t care.

1 of 5
A report found that downtown San Francisco's office occupancy was just 39% last month.
A report found that downtown San Francisco’s office occupancy was just 39% last month.Twitter/@michelletandler
Tandler wrote that the streets used to be full of office workers.
Tandler wrote that the streets used to be full of office workers.Twitter/@michelletandler
Advertisement
Tandler and other fear large companies won't renew their office leases and will leave the city.
Tandler and other fear large companies won’t renew their office leases and will leave the city.Twitter/@michelletandler
Advertisement

“When these leases come up, companies are going to downsize or leave. These buildings rely on rent. The landlords pay $$$ in taxes”

Mayor London Breed has worked with local businesses to lure workers back to downtown, and distributed $40 million to small businesses to help them survive, the California Globe reported.