It might be time for companies in San Francisco to call employees’ bluff


Spend any amount of time in New York, and you’ll feel it. Manhattan and Brooklyn are teeming with activity. It’s electrifying to be there after years spent relatively locked down.

The question, and one asked this week by the San Francisco Chronicle, is why San Francisco isn’t bouncing back in the same way.

As reporter Roland Li writes: “There’s always been a disparity — New York has 10 times the population of San Francisco — but the coastal tourism and economic hubs have diverged in striking ways as they recover from the pandemic.”

Consider, writes Li, that while the construction of major commercial property projects in Manhattan were completed during the pandemic — and while much of that new office space is almost fully leased — over in San Francisco, projects have stalled and a lot of existing buildings are struggling to find tenants.

One possible way to fill those buildings is to convert them into housing. Wall Street, Li observes, has been doing exactly that for decades. But while in New York, there is clear demand for housing, with rents rising to record prices even now, in San Francisco, it’s not as plain that enough people would — at this very point in time — rent converted office space, even if it were made available.

According to a story today in The Real Deal, new data published by the commercial research company Yardi states that San Francisco is right now the least competitive housing market in all of California, with only seven would-be tenants per vacant apartment, compared with double that number in neighboring Silicon Valley and the East Bay.

It’s not all doom and gloom for San Francisco. Yardi’s research notes that the city’s occupancy rate rose to 93% in the second quarter, compared with 89% a year earlier. Also, apartments rented eight days faster at an average of 41 days.

Still, work-from-home policies are clearly having a major impact on where people live, and many Bay Area employees who could flee the region’s high prices have. (California — led by San Francisco, and followed by Los Angeles — lost more than 352,000 residents between April 2020 and January 2022, according to California Department of Finance statistics.)

Indeed, in his piece, Li partly draws a line between the “jarring crowds” on New York’s city streets to April of last year, when then-Mayor Bill de Blasio announced that city workers would soon be going back to the office, a move quickly followed by private companies.

Called back by employers, New Yorkers who’d left during the pandemic suddenly found themselves looking anew for housing, if even to spend just two or three days in the office.

The gambit continues to work, seemingly. The Partnership for New York City, which says it surveyed more than 160 employers between a two-week period in late April and early May, found that 38% of their Manhattan workers are now back in the office on the average weekday, while 28% are fully remote. Meanwhile average attendance is expected to rise to 49% next month.

That doesn’t mean employees are back full time. They might never be, given that even the loudest critics of remote work have been forced to soften their stance, including JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon. As Bloomberg reported in May, Dimon told shareholders in an April letter that working from home “will become more permanent in American business” and estimated that about 40% of his 270,000-person workforce would work under a hybrid model. Soon after, a senior tech executive from the bank told some teams they could spend two and not three days back in the office if they wanted, based on internal feedback.

Those two to three days a week could be saving New York, and it may be time for more San Francisco employers to consider doing the same. Small businesses in San Francisco are increasingly desperate for the economic activity; even if civic duty isn’t top of mind for local tech companies, there continues to be a strong argument that hybrid settings allow employees to enjoy a better work-life balance, more camaraderie with their colleagues and also to get ahead in their careers.

As for those who might blame San Francisco’s inability to fully bounce back on its lack of affordable housing, there’s no question the city is self-sabotaging on this front. In San Francisco, “instead of bright-line rules, where a developer knows I’m allowed to build this here, everything is a negotiation and every project proceeds on an ad hoc basis,” Jenny Schuetz, a housing economist at the Brookings Institution, told The Atlantic in May.

But forever abandoning return-to-office plans probably won’t solve the problem. Meanwhile, two-and-a-half years after COVID sent everyone packing, and amid a slowing U.S. economy that’s making job-hopping less viable, it might be time for more outfits to talk with their employees, ask them to come together in person two to three times a week, and see what happens.

It’s not their responsibility to “fix” San Francisco. At the same time, there might not be much left to come back to if they wait too long.

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