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No Coding in Palo Alto? City Takes On Silicon Valley Growth (siliconbeat.com) 305

An anonymous reader writes:The birthplace of Hewlett Packard and Xerox Parc and founding place of Facebook is now considering whether to enforce a zoning regulation banning firms whose "primary business is research and development, including software coding," according to the New York Times. As the Times wrote, "To repeat: The mayor is considering enforcing a ban on coding at ground zero of Silicon Valley." Palo Alto Mayor Patrick Burt told the Times: Big tech companies are choking off the downtown. It's not healthy. Palo Alto is a software capital. It has also become a company town, with Palantir Technologies renting 20 downtown buildings, as Marisa Kendall wrote. Other notable tech firms there include Tesla, SAP, Flipboard, VMWare and many others. It has become a center for automation and cars and is home to Ford's research and development center.
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No Coding in Palo Alto? City Takes On Silicon Valley Growth

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  • Gotta love America (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Jason1729 ( 561790 ) on Wednesday August 31, 2016 @03:14PM (#52804479)
    Now can we start tearing down research labs to build more NFL stadia...at the taxpayers' expense, of course.
  • Lol (Score:2, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward

    No company that's not involved with tech is going to pay Palo Alto rent and have to employ people at Palo Alto wages so they can afford to live. It only works with tech.

    • More so, if companies like Palantir move out, who do they think is going to buy lunch at all the lovely downtown restaurants? Do they really think their downtown will improve by kicking all the jobs out of it?

      • If you remove the tech companies, all you'll have in Palo Alto is Stanford and the surroundings. Oh, and biotech. I wonder who will be left to stroll all those University Avenue restaurants?

        More seriously, the Bay Area no longer looks like a tech hub. I remember in the 90s, when I lived there, wherever I drove around Santa Clara, Milpitas or Sunnyvale, a company that I may have read about or whose ad I may have seen in BYTE or PC Magazine would suddenly pop out of nowhere. That's what would scream out

        • Biotech types are only slightly less nerdy and unhip than computer people. If the luddite hipster brigade successfully chases the (software)tech people out, it's only a matter of time before they set their sights on the biotech people. Neither group is, by and large, cool, hip, or fabulous enough for their standards. So really, this sort of crap really needs to be stopped before it can gain any kind of momentum.

        • Re:Lol (Score:5, Insightful)

          by wierd_w ( 1375923 ) on Wednesday August 31, 2016 @04:27PM (#52804949)

          What's the difference between a city and an industrial park?

          One has residents, and infrastructure for residents. The other does not.

          I did not read TFA, (it's traditional), but it sounds like this mayor wants to do the following:

          1) light commercial zones must not be exploited for yet more satellite office buildings, and needs to stay as strip malls, gas stations, dollar general stores, et al.

          2) satellite office construction projects will have to seek different zoning from light commercial, to avoid having the problems proposal 1) seeks to address.

          The headline sounds sensational-- "oh noes! Coders not welcome in Palo alto!"

          I read him differently. "People actually live in Palo alto. They need to be able to buy gas and groceries without having to drive all the way to San jose. Light commercial zoning currently covers both the circle k, and pallantir's new office building. There is only so much real estate in Palo alto. Only so much of that can be light commercial. Only so much of the limited light commercial property can be office buildings, if people are going to live in Palo alto, they need light commercial that actually sells products, like a circle k does. We want to make it so new office proposals do not eliminate all other forms of light commercial, no matter how much money they have to wave around."

        • More seriously, the Bay Area no longer looks like a tech hub. I remember in the 90s, when I lived there, wherever I drove around Santa Clara, Milpitas or Sunnyvale, a company that I may have read about or whose ad I may have seen in BYTE or PC Magazine would suddenly pop out of nowhere. That's what would scream out tech to me. If you drove up the Bayshore Freeway near Lawrence Expressway, you could see the S3 headquarters and Microcenter right from the freeway.

          Microcenter closed a while ago - they always se

        • Stanford is actually not in Palo Alto. Of course plenty of Stanford people live in Palo Alto, but the University itself is on unincorporated county land, outside the city limits.
      • Re:Lol (Score:5, Insightful)

        by sabri ( 584428 ) on Wednesday August 31, 2016 @03:39PM (#52804621)

        Do they really think their downtown will improve by kicking all the jobs out of it?

        It's time to make Silicon Valley a Silicon Desert.

        Look at the City of San Francisco. They want all the tech companies to come in, giving lots of tax breaks and other incentives so they can pride themselves on having all this innovation. But then they complain about all the tech workers coming in and living in the city. Then they complain about buses picking up workers. Did you ever hear a greenie complain about people using a bus? Well, go to SF.

        Palo Alto is doing the same thing now. They want all the tech money, but not the tech companies. And watch them whining when large companies decide to move out.

        Just imagine Cisco, Google, Facebook and Apple deciding to move out of the area completely, with all their workers. Imagine how many mortgages will be under water, how many folks will lose their jobs, how many tax revenue these cities will have to do without.

        Palo Alto should shut the F up really quick.

        • I get your point, but are any of these companies Palo Alto based? Cisco, the last time I looked, owned much to all of Tasman Drive throughout Santa Clara. Google owns what used to be Silicon Graphics' buildings on Shoreline in Mountain View. Apple - they have that campus off the 280 and De Anza, but I recall them looking towards building another office in Cupertino - what happened to that? Facebook, it wasn't around when I was, but from what I know, they're in Mountain View, right?

          But yeah, if these c

          • by sabri ( 584428 )

            I get your point, but are any of these companies Palo Alto based?

            Nope. But a lot of their workers are. And those are the ones that are bringing the revenues. Spending their paychecks in the city. Paying property taxes, utility bills. The companies themselves usually don't pay a lot to a city directly. It's all indirect.

            That's why I'm saying: remove the 10 biggest tech companies and Silicon Valley will become a silicon desert with a huge housing crash.

            Just take a look at Detroit to see how quick a booming economy can crash.

  • by dgatwood ( 11270 ) on Wednesday August 31, 2016 @03:15PM (#52804485) Homepage Journal

    The purpose of a downtown is to be a shopping and restaurant district. If you clog the place up with a bunch of tech firms, the city ceases to be viable for its residents. There's nothing nefarious here; there's just a desire for Palo Alto to remain a normal city with actual residents mixed in with those tech firms, rather than becoming just a place that people commute to.

    • by jfdavis668 ( 1414919 ) on Wednesday August 31, 2016 @03:22PM (#52804517)
      Downtown in most cities is where businesses are. Wall street is downtown. The US Capital is downtown. Detroit used to have factories downtown. Downtown isn't the shopping district, except where all the businesses left and they made it a shopping district to save it from abandonment.
      • Re: (Score:2, Informative)

        by Anonymous Coward

        In a small town, which is what Palo Alto is, the downtown is the retail center.
        Office parks do fine for offices, and are typically, at least in most *towns* not in downtown.

        • Maybe that far West section of Palo Alto out towards Russian Ridge. The East part, along the bay, with all the businesses and where the downtown, is completely indistinguishable from Mountain View or Menlo Park - or basically anything south of SFO and north of San Jose. It literally runs right into its neighbors and one side of the street representing the border is indistiguishable from the other side in another city.

          It's as far from a "small town" as Lynwood or Monterey Park are; nominally they are "ci

          • nominally they are "cities", in reality they are incorporated neighborhoods in a much bigger, continuous metropolis. You wouldn't know it's a new place/city/town exept for a map or maybe a label on the street sign.

            Or the "Welcome to XXX" sign along El Camino Real (assuming you're reading signs in the medium or along the curb rather than watching traffic).

            (Or the color and/or font of the street sign, but see previous parenthetical note.)

        • In a small town, which is what Palo Alto is, the downtown is the retail center. Office parks do fine for offices, and are typically, at least in most *towns* not in downtown.

          Palo Alto ain't that small. On the freeway, it has 3 or 4 exits on Bayshore and 2 on the 280. There are quite a few miles on El Camino Real that one would have to drive between where Mountain View ends (San Antonio Road) and where Menlo Park starts (Sand Hill Road).

          Retail center - if you are thinking about the mall, what you have is the Stanford Shopping Mall right on El Camino Real. Downtown, or University Avenue, just has those restaurants and mini art stores that hippies visit, and where one can rar

      • > Wall street is downtown.

        I wouldn't consider anything past Canal as 'downtown', that's financial district.

        > US Capital is downtown

        Again, no. It's again, on the south side of downtown.

        • by Zak3056 ( 69287 )

          > Wall street is downtown.

          I wouldn't consider anything past Canal as 'downtown', that's financial district.

          Manhattan has three basic divisions, "uptown," "midtown," and "downtown." The financial district is contained within the geographic area of "downtown" (which starts at the Battery and has a nebulous northern border somewhere between the Village and 34th St).

          You're essentially claiming that "Times Square" is not located in midtown, it's in the theater district, or that Harlem is not "uptown."

      • Downtown Detroit (Score:4, Informative)

        by sjbe ( 173966 ) on Wednesday August 31, 2016 @05:12PM (#52805143)

        Detroit used to have factories downtown.

        If by "downtown" you mean within the city limits then that was true a loooong time ago. But Downtown Detroit [wikipedia.org] hasn't had factories of any meaningful scale for ages. The actual factories tended to be in other nearby places like Hamtramack, Highland Park, River Rouge, and other areas. Detroit's downtown has been greatly revitalized in the last 15 years in spite of what many of you who haven't actually visited may have heard but very little manufacturing actually occurs in Detroit proper. Instead most of it happens in the greater Detroit metro area which has a far larger population than the city itself.

    • You were making a joke, right? Downtowns are often also where service industries located, such as courts, lawyers, accountants, etc. Many focused the corporate offices into those so desirable downtown spaces.

      Since daytime parking was left empty at night, restaurants around theaters and galleries made sense. Those restaurants that chose to stay open past lunch for the office throngs, that is.

      Shopping served the office lemmings well, and could encourage some to linger after work, buy, catch a bite, and comm

    • by CAOgdin ( 984672 )

      #1. Because they provide tax revenues from many businesses that otherwise would enjoy income only in the evenings (e.g., restaurants).

      #2. Because they work inside existing buildings, without crowding out retail "frontage" on main streets.

      #3. Because being together creates interchange of information and ideas, leading to even more new tech startsup.

      #4: Because programming (aka coding) is becoming embedded in the mid-level jobs of nearly everyone working at a desk in that city.

      #5: Because these four thin

      • Re: (Score:2, Troll)

        by whoever57 ( 658626 )

        I suspect the writer of the original story doesn't understand the issues

        The issue here is simple. The ultra-rich residents of University Avenue don't want people with mere $100K+ incomes clogging up "their" street and using "their" shops.

        • The ultra-rich residents of University Avenue don't want people with mere $100K+ incomes clogging up "their" street and using "their" shops.

          As a $50K per year virtual ditch digger who commutes in from San Jose, I have no problems eating at the Panda Express on El Camino and Cambridge in Palo Alto.

  • by ShanghaiBill ( 739463 ) on Wednesday August 31, 2016 @03:19PM (#52804505)

    In the past, many cities dealt with excessive demand for existing space by creating more space. The most obvious way to do this is to build taller buildings. We need to find a way to sideline the NIMBYs and BANANAs so that core cities can grow again, instead of sprawling into the suburbs.

    • But Palo Alto doesn't have any headroom to grow. South West of the city is Stanford, and that's pretty much off limits for these purposes. North West is Menlo Park, Atherton and Redwood City. North East is East Palo Alto, w/ Ikea and aside from that, that city's high crime reputation. South East is Mountain View and South is Los Altos and if you go to the other side of 280, Los Altos Hills and Woodside. So these companies would then have to move there.

      Just send these companies off to Berkeley and San

  • To the money.

  • by randomErr ( 172078 ) <ervin,kosch&gmail,com> on Wednesday August 31, 2016 @03:22PM (#52804515) Journal
    Don't want growth and prosperity in your area? Create a coding tax. You'll get extra tax dollars for a year or two and you can watch as you downtown empties out like a Walmart on Black Friday.
  • by 31415926535897 ( 702314 ) on Wednesday August 31, 2016 @03:25PM (#52804531) Journal

    This is what I've never quite understood: why does it seem that zoning laws are allowed to ignore constitutional freedoms? Banning research and development, "including software coding" would seem to ignore the right to free speech, free assembly and the right to privacy (if it's my property and I'm not doing anything dangerous toward my neighbors, why does the city care what I'm doing inside?)

    Look, I understand that we don't want coal factories building next to residences. That all makes sense to me, and I could see an argument that this doesn't restrict constitutional freedom. But where does a city get off telling a person they can't run a business (e.g. sole proprietorship) out of their home?

    So while I'm afraid that Palo Alto could follow through on this threat, it boggles the mind how it could in the USA. I also think it would be royally dumb for them to kick out all of these businesses too, but that's a different discussion.

    • If they embrace growth (ironic?) they'd let the businesses build taller buildings and thus have been use of land keeping the charm of Palo Alto.

      It's called evolution.

    • by ADRA ( 37398 )

      Businesses/Industry/Residences are taxed differently, so there's always that note. There's always city/state/national facilities like plumbing, roads, telecoms, safety inspectors, firemen, etc.. all who have to be paid out largely from the taxes represented by there properties. Flip side, if you were in an apartment and the unit beside you was used to make commercial porn (and all the fun that could bleed out from that), wouldn't you like the lever to shut it down if they got too loud, lavish, bad actors in

    • This is what I've never quite understood: why does it seem that zoning laws are allowed to ignore constitutional freedoms? Banning research and development, "including software coding" would seem to ignore the right to free speech, free assembly and the right to privacy (if it's my property and I'm not doing anything dangerous toward my neighbors, why does the city care what I'm doing inside?)

      Look, I understand that we don't want coal factories building next to residences. That all makes sense to me, and I could see an argument that this doesn't restrict constitutional freedom. But where does a city get off telling a person they can't run a business (e.g. sole proprietorship) out of their home?

      So while I'm afraid that Palo Alto could follow through on this threat, it boggles the mind how it could in the USA. I also think it would be royally dumb for them to kick out all of these businesses too, but that's a different discussion.

      You missed the correct amendment. It is the 5th amendment... Very specifically the taking clause that would prevent Palo Alto from taking the use of my property without compensating me for it. I don't think Palo Alto could afford to pay companies for their now worthless buildings as what else could you use them for?

      • by x0ra ( 1249540 )
        they can't afford it, but they can make the property worthless by denying construction "permits".
      • by Altrag ( 195300 )

        I'm not sure the 5th works either since they're not "taking" the property they're just restricting what you can do with it. Which might seem like the same thing when you don't have any other use for the property but from a legal perspective, its still yours.

        As for the first, I'm pretty sure freedom of speech doesn't cover zoning regulations to start with since that's not "speech" by any definition I've ever heard. Privacy protection might help you hide your activities if you're planning to go against the

        • I'm not sure the 5th works either since they're not "taking" the property they're just restricting what you can do with it.

          A legal technicality. Mere possession is perhaps the least significant part of ownership. The essence of a property right is that the owner gets to decide how the property will be used. Of course, others get to decide how their property is used, so whatever action you want to take has to satisfy the rights of everyone whose property is involved, not just your own. However, when some authority figure tells you that you aren't allowed to use your property in a way which would not infringe on anyone else's rig

    • In theory, because if you can't do it in this particular location, there is another location where you can-- in the interests of the common good.

      Many of the restrictions are based on problems that have occurred in the past. In my "town", realtor "offices" are under scrutiny. They crowd out other merchants and are effectively only an advertisement. A city has a need to control growth, character, and sustainability-- and zoning is an effective tool for that.

      Sure, it can go overboard, but you need to have s

    • Constitutional rights and freedoms aren't zero-sum absolute matters. There are reasonable limits, such as the classic "Yelling Fire in a crowded theater." Zoning is within that realm, at least to a reasonable point. Why might the city care what you're doing? It comes down to a matter of scale. If you're one person coding in your home, they won't have any reason to, but if you've got hundreds or thousands of people working out of your 'home', then there are quite a few things the city (or other local governm
    • by CAOgdin ( 984672 )

      Actually, zoning laws are quite valid, where the lawmakers can justify it. We don't want garbage dumps next to homes, nor cemeteries in the town square. But, this kind of absurd law...and Palo Alto's failure to enforce it for years (decades?) makes it moot.

    • by Wrath0fb0b ( 302444 ) on Wednesday August 31, 2016 @04:34PM (#52804983)

      This is what I've never quite understood: why does it seem that zoning laws are allowed to ignore constitutional freedoms? Banning research and development, "including software coding" would seem to ignore the right to free speech, free assembly and the right to privacy

      Sometimes speech is also conduct, and conduct can be regulated. For instance, if I call you up and say "give me a million BTC or else I'm going to kill your family", surely that's speech but it's also criminal conduct (e.g. 18 USC 875 for Americans, YMMV elsewhere). Similarly, if two coffeehouse owners in a small town meet over lattes and one says "Let's raise prices a quarter" and the other says "Sure, we'll change ours next week", surely that's speech, they are just talking, but it's also criminal conduct (15 USC 1). Or urging a specific person to commit suicide. The fact that all of these crimes are accomplished by talking doesn't magically throw First Amendment protection over conspiracy to fix consumer prices.

      The same is true in civil, as opposed to criminal, law. Libel, defamation, and slander are tortious, even though they are obviously speech. So are tax fraud, misleading investors and filing false business reports, even if you use a printed medium to convey them. Publishing your company's trade secrets as a book (or a newspaper) won't get you off the hook, neither will failing to pay generally-owed taxes or follow generally-applicable laws (like zoning) for your magazine. I mean, no one (I think?) believes that the NYT or /. can just ignore the zoning laws and set up whatever, wherever any more than they can violate labor law or building codes or tax law (right?).

      Eugene Volokh did a fairly thorough review [ucla.edu] of the boundary between speech and conduct.

    • Look, I understand that we don't want coal factories building next to residences.

      Same basic principle just with a different cause and effect. Too much of any single type of business can actually be bad for a city in the long run. The canonical example is a city like Flint Michigan. Flint had a lot of automotive assembly business and the city came to depend on it. Then at some point business conditions caused the companies for various reasons to relocate and the city has fallen on hard times ever since. It might be hard to imagine but it does happen. Plus it can make it really hard

  • if it is directed only at street level storefront space on University Ave (downtown) and surrounding areas, that's fine. If including the office space around downtown - that's dumb.

    Palo Alto has done many dumber things, such as declaring itself a "Nuclear Free Zone". No nucleii allowed!

    The zero growth advocacy and climate is similar to Santa Cruz. Their housing crisis is their own creation. The classic hippies vs. techies war.

    People who have lived in Palo Alto for a very long time are understandab

  • by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday August 31, 2016 @03:27PM (#52804549)

    The issue is that:
    1) There isn't sufficient money to pay for decent transit.
    The county pays for BART to go to San Jose, but isn't doing shit for any of the peninsula cities transit issues.
    2) Corporations have been converting retail space (i.e. stuff that actually serves residents) into office space with ~10x the density.
    This screws residents.
    3) Because of the lack of decent transit, increasing density isn't possible without *severe* impacts to traffic.
    And yes, it already takes 15+ minutes to go about two miles on a number of arterial roads.
    The traffic is REALLY FRACKING BAD.

    So, if you're crying about NIMBYs, shut the eff up, and look at the fact that there are *real* problems here that density cannot solve until the infrastruture to support that density arrives.

    I'd rather have cheap housing with increased density. Since that cannot happen reasonably right now, I'd like for the retail -> office space conversions to stop.

    • When I lived in the Bay Area, BART ended at Millbrae. If it has been extended to San Jose, how are there not stops in the cities in b/w - San Mateo, Redwood City, Palo Alto, Mountain View and Sunnyvale? Also, BART would have covered a width similar to Caltrain, which already runs through the city parallel to Alma/Central Expressway. So what would BART address that Caltrain doesn't already cover?
  • So, once Palo Alto chases out all of its businesses and sinks into urban decay, do we get to have our own Devil's Night here on the west coast? A friend on mine from Detroit has told me that it's a heck of a show, even if you're not actually participating in the festivities yourself.

    • by ADRA ( 37398 )

      Urban decay is all but a guarantee eventually without business/economic diversity. Cities no longer exist that where one-trick ponies who's industries collapsed. Being close to another town with different industries may save you from complete collapse, but it'd still hurt hard turning you into a bedroom community. Do you realize just how well you evangelize for the wrong side of the argument?

      Unless of course you're under the delusion that somehow IT/software development is the inevitable apex of human accom

      • Would you rather chance an eventual urban decay or intentionally cause one? Palo Alto seems to be aiming for the latter.
      • Re:Devil's Night... (Score:4, Interesting)

        by sl3xd ( 111641 ) on Wednesday August 31, 2016 @05:21PM (#52805195) Journal

        I agree; 40 years ago, who would have dreamed that the auto industry would move most their production away from Detroit? That most of the city's factories would be vacant and collapsing? We've already seen the largest company in the world go bankrupt and be purchased by the US government.

        Who would have dreamed so many factories would abandon the US entirely?

        In much the same way, software development and R&D may well collapse in Silicon Valley.

        Nobody has a crystal ball. Diversification in a financial portfolio has always been good advice; how would it be any different for your tax base?

        At the end of the day, skilled people have the freedom to move as opportunities do. Cities can't.

        While Silicon Valley is in a golden age, who is to say if or when those jobs will abandon the Bay Area entirely?

        • There is a reason the car industry that remains in America is not in Detroit (some is near).

          Detroit thought they had an immortal golden goose. Turns out they were wrong.

          Cities need to remember that business can vote with its feet.

        • Haven't a lot of them already left the Bay Area? A lot of the companies I used to see are gone. Either to another part of the country, or out of business completely. The Bay Area no longer looks the unique techy place it did in the 90s and even the 00s.
  • Otherwise known as HELL ON EARTH!
  • by A10Mechanic ( 1056868 ) on Wednesday August 31, 2016 @03:37PM (#52804601)
    Could somebody model this in Sim City, let it run for about 20 years in sim-time, and get back to us with hard data?
  • I can understand how the mayor feels because software coding is just like finance, it does nothing to contribute to the economy other than offer a service. We need a manufacturing economy to bring jobs back. Service economies are third world. However, banning sets a dangerous precedent.
    • I can understand how the mayor feels because software coding is just like finance, it does nothing to contribute to the economy other than offer a service. We need a manufacturing economy to bring jobs back.

      Presumably manufacturing stuff that has no processors in it, otherwise, you'd have to write software for those processors, thus reducing the contribution to the economy of that manufacturing.

      (And what about the engineering work done designing the stuff being made? Does that also do nothing to contribute to the economy other than offer a service?)

      And the number of jobs offered by a manufacturing economy depends on the volume of production and the productivity of the labor - the higher the productivity, th

    • by kwerle ( 39371 )

      I can understand how the mayor feels because software coding is just like finance, it does nothing to contribute to the economy other than offer a service. We need a manufacturing economy to bring jobs back. Service economies are third world. However, banning sets a dangerous precedent.

      I'm a programmer, so maybe I shouldn't be surprised by my not understanding.

      You're saying that having many many programmers that are really well paid and who provide a service with no requirements other than infrastructure (energy as clean as you provide and no manufacturing needs) who live, buy stuff, pay taxes, and all that - is a bad thing.
      But having less well paid blue collar workers who buy less stuff, pay less taxes, and whose jobs require the inflow of goods and the outflow of goods (ie. who have mor

  • Dear Palo Alto: (Score:4, Interesting)

    by Hartree ( 191324 ) on Wednesday August 31, 2016 @03:38PM (#52804613)

    Please do this and point all the companies that move out to Champaign, Illinois.

    Massively cheaper cost of living and home to an excellent university that turns out lots of CS majors and other technical types every year.

    Sincerely,
    The residents of Champaign-Urbana Illinois and surrounding towns. We'd love to have your problems..

    • by rfengr ( 910026 )
      You SV people need to get out of the rat race; seriously. As I posted on HN yesterday on the Midwest being the new tech hub, my zip code here in Kansas is far better off: Don't let them know median household income in Leawood, KS is higher than Palo Alto, CA. Those SV people can stay in their rat race. http://www.city-data.com/city/... [city-data.com] http://www.city-data.com/city/... [city-data.com]
      • For those not from Kansas City. Leawood is basically a very rich strip of land between the Missouri/Kansas border and the 'Kansas City Country Club'.

        Mansions, old big money, absolutely no business. Sticks so far up their butts, they have to get splinters in their esophagus.

        For the bay area the analogous city(s) would be 'Pacifica', maybe 'Half Moon Bay'. Run the numbers on those two.

        KC has been calling itself the 'Silicon Prairie' for decades. It's still deluded bullshit.

        Also don't look at the loca

        • by rfengr ( 910026 )
          KCMO or KS? KCMO has a 1% earnings tax; I pay it and it sucks. None that I know of on KS side. As I said though, you guys are in rat race. Yes Leawood is a well off strip, but it's not all old money. So pick a lower cost area, say Overland Park with $69k income vs. $77k for SF. Housing price is $228k vs $778k. As I said, rat race; enjoy it.
        • Silicon Prairie used to be Gateway country - the Sioux cities in both IA and SD.
  • by Danborg ( 62420 )

    VMware isn't spelled with a capital "W". #pet #peeve

  • Already the city has been under pressure to increase its housing. A planning commissioner recently resigned in part out of frustration with the city’s anti-growth politics.

    Apparently the city is a NIMBY/Nogrowth zone

  • Cities or states that depend heavily on a single industry tend to be susceptible to boom and bust cycles. If 80% of the local economy is in oil and oil prices take a dive then the whole area suffers a lot. Same thing can happen in Silicon Valley. If 90% of the area is software related, then if a tech bubble bursts it can send everything into the toilet. Sounds like they want to put a damper on the biggest section of their industry so that other kinds of companies will get all the new growth for awhile.
  • Was founded on the East Coast... Harvard, specifically. Unless there's a Palo Alto branch of Harvard I've never heard of....

    • Palo Alto, VA, maybe?

      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Palo_Alto,_Virginia [wikipedia.org]

      The company I work for is located on the East Coast. At one point, they got confused between Palo Alto, CA, and Palo Alto, VA. They sent a team out to Palo Alto, VA, and found empty fields. I told management on the conference call that places in different states can have the same name.

  • Ask Detroit... (Score:4, Interesting)

    by ffkom ( 3519199 ) on Wednesday August 31, 2016 @04:13PM (#52804869)
    ... how an overdose of concentration on one particular industry branch can turn your prospering city into a sort of a post-apocalyptic no-go-zone, quickly. I think there is good reason to ensure that there is more in a city than just one kind of employers.
  • Is the Mayor drinking lead-contaminated water or something? Because this sounds extremely stupid. Or does he not want all the municipal revenue from these huge companies in his city?
  • So hire programmers instead, since the ban apparently only mentions coders. If someone applies for a job and their resume says they are a coder, that one goes int he rash. If they say they are a programmer, then they can be hired.

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