San Francisco Has Fallen

So shoot the Messenger (;)) and counter with The Chronicle, which essentially says the same thing with more political correctness.
I remember many years ago I worked in a record store on Union street, in San Francisco. For those who don't know, it's one of the city's posh boutique street in a posh neighborhood.
Even so, theft, or tentative, was significant (0nce every other week), and the stereotype portrait of the petty criminals would make liberals like me cringe. It was disheartening. But at least the business could manage these losses for several years beyond my time there, until increased rents shut it down.
I can only imagine the level of brazen thievery in Westgate, in the middle of vagrants, drugs, tents and roaming kids looking for a thrill... The only thing to deter petty criminality there is to have a guard posted at each store with a taser in hand... Imagine the atmosphere... That's why they're closing down. These retailers and Westfield don't want to become some political punching balls of the right or the left while getting fleeced on a daily basis.

 
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What's your point? On one hand you say thefts are overblown by the big bad retailers and on the other that theft is rampant because it's organized crime by the rich? :banghead: You're special aren't ya?
stay triggered
 
For some thieves that target retailers...it's an addiction. Other thieves, see their theft activity as stealing from the rich and giving to the poor...a Robin Hood mentality.

Yet, an organized theft ring is very disturbing (more than petty theft) and most likely involves federal criminal activity.

wrbtrader
 
I'm not saying that downtown San Francisco is a shiathole. But the latest group to move out of downtown San Francisco is the Government of San Francisco.

The latest tenant likely to quit its downtown San Francisco lease? The city itself
https://sfstandard.com/2024/03/15/san-francisco-office-real-estate-lease-pullout-mid-market/
My friend works at the EPA as a lawyer and he hasn't been back to his SF office since the pandemic started. No surprise that the Feds are bolting.
 
My friend works at the EPA as a lawyer and he hasn't been back to his SF office since the pandemic started. No surprise that the Feds are bolting.
commercial RE is shook by all these radical unionists!

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4 day work week could backfire... imagine you need service form a company and they are short staffed due to how they establsh their schedules based on 4 days a week of work. There would have to be overlap to make sure the business is open 5 days a week.

Ca plants and factories operate and meet demand with being closed 3 days a week? Doubt it for most industries. Also you need to reduce vacation times since workers would now be getting 50 more days off a year.

What is the driving force? To artificially inflate hourly wages? You make $500 a week on 40 hours, now it is on 30 hours so your hourly rate grows?
 
4 day work week could backfire... imagine you need service form a company and they are short staffed due to how they establsh their schedules based on 4 days a week of work. There would have to be overlap to make sure the business is open 5 days a week.

Ca plants and factories operate and meet demand with being closed 3 days a week? Doubt it for most industries. Also you need to reduce vacation times since workers would now be getting 50 more days off a year.

What is the driving force? To artificially inflate hourly wages? You make $500 a week on 40 hours, now it is on 30 hours so your hourly rate grows?
Purpose is likely to close that productivity/pay gap from tech advancements last couple of decades. You'd have to structure your shifts to fill out the whole week I reckon though could get tricky in managerial roles. We didn't think work from home would work but alas it has.

I'm sure Henry Ford managed to figure it out when he went to a 40 hr work week. Hell, I'd be fine not finding services on Friday if I get to take it off.
 
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