The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Tech companies boast views of wild horses

Wildlife advocates: Push to lure workers is harmful to animals.

- Adam Popescu

You can’t ride the wild mustangs at the Tahoe-Reno Industrial Center in Nevada, but you’re nearly guaranteed to see bands of them loping over sagebrush in a scene that feels straight out of the 1800s.

At least until the dust clears and Tesla’s 5.3-million-square-foot “Gigafactor­y” comes into focus.

Welcome to the Silver State, where Elon Musk, a cryptocurr­ency tycoon and a brothel owner are using a symbol of Americana as a social media recruiting tool.

The water cooler used to be the spot in the office to talk shop.

Then came on-site cafes, fitness and yoga studios, rooftop gardens, fire pits and rock-climbing walls.

“The overarchin­g trend of the last five years has been the hotelifica­tion of the office,” said Lenny Beaudoin, an executive managing director at CBRE.

For employers, the newest amenities to wow workers are ideologica­l, with environmen­tal commitment­s topping the list, said Jason H. Somers, president of Crest Real Estate, a Southern California real estate consultanc­y.

“Health and wellness have become the ultimate luxury,” he said, including access to nature. “Adding value to an employee’s well-being has a significan­t impact in a compensati­on package.”

In Nevada, wildlife advocates say efforts to market the wild mustangs to bolster a “green” image are interferin­g with the space and resources the animals need to survive.

To attract talent, a green message is easy to promise but hard to fulfill. There has been progress by corporate giants, but most efforts remain so opaque that it is tough to spot greenwashi­ng, the use of sustainabi­lity efforts to appear more attractive.

Embracing high environmen­tal standards can be challengin­g and expensive. Some companies pay others to reduce emissions. Others plant trees, which can take years to grow and rely heavily on water and care.

Protecting large mammals can be even harder. A good example is roaming the Nevada desert.

The Tahoe-Reno Industrial Center, a 107,000-acre office park, is home to more than 150 companies with a combined annual payroll of $750 million. Tesla, which broke ground on its battery factory there in 2014, says it will be the biggest building in the world when completed.

Musk has used the wild horses as a selling point to lure workers.

“Come work at the biggest & most advanced factory on Earth! Located by a river near the beautiful Sierra Nevada with wild horses roaming free,” he wrote on Twitter.

Tesla did not respond to multiple requests for comment.

“They’re all kind of rogues out there in the tech world, but so are the horses,” said Kris Thompson, the office park’s project manager.

But how does a wild horse help productivi­ty in the workplace?

“I think they’re symbolic of what America was, and they’re just beautiful,” said Jeffrey Berns, 58, a former consumer protection lawyer and the CEO of Blockchain­s, a blockchain software developmen­t company. He added that his company’s “DNA cares about the environmen­t, and that includes the animals and wild horses on our land.”

He spends around $300,000 a year on five water tanks and feeding programs for the herds, and maintains that, unlike Tesla, he is not marketing them.

The animals support a vision that began with a handshake with Lance Gilman, owner of the Mustang Ranch brothel and a Storey County commission­er, who bought this land from Gulf Oil in the late 1990s.

“Lance is an old cowboy,” Thompson said. “His word means something. Tech entreprene­urs see that.”

Cheap land, space and transporta­tion corridors were draws for Amazon, Walmart and PetSmart, which turned the vacant land into a fulfillmen­t hub. Tesla used a $1.3 billion state tax break to build its $5 billion factory, tapping into a local workforce still reeling from the Great Recession and ushering in a wave of Silicon Valley heavies. Switch, a technology infrastruc­ture company, set up three data centers, then Google gobbled up 1,200 acres. Blockchain­s bought 67,000 acres for $170 million in 2018, becoming the park’s biggest tenant.

Berns hoped to transform the expanse into an experiment­al city run by his encrypted digital systems.

He pledged to build 15,000 homes, turning it into a huge innovation zone, with his company overseeing everything from schools to courts, law and water.

“I want this to become the greatest social experiment in the history of the world,” he said. “It’s going to be a cross between Disneyland and the chocolate factory from Willy Wonka.”

He will have to rethink the scope: In March, the county voted against the secession plan.

Berns said he plans to develop around 25,000 of his 67,000 acres, but for now, it will remain an outpost for wild horses.

Nevada is home to more than half of the country’s 95,000 wild horses and burros, descendant­s of animals brought to the continent by Spanish conquistad­ors in the 1500s.

Managed by the federal Bureau of Land Management to the tune of about $100 million annually, wild horses live on protected and private land crisscross­ed by freeways.

Around 1,000 resident horses in Storey County regularly come down from higher elevations for food and water and face what can be fatal traffic from workers and lookie-loos itching for the perfect picture.

With just 15% of the industrial park occupied, and Thompson expecting occupancy to double in five years, it is a far more complicate­d experiment than advertised.

“We get about five emergency calls a month in the slow season,” said Corenna Vance, founder of Wild Horse Connection, an advocacy group. “Horses in traffic, on the wrong side of fencing, vehicular, train accidents, sick or ill horses.”

Rescues triple once mares start foaling, said Vance, whose annual budget is about $100,000, including small donations from the office park and tenants. She said further expansion would deplete open spaces and decrease grazing areas.

“Horses have migration patterns, and when a developmen­t comes in, it cuts that off and there’s more interactio­ns with people,” she said.

One solution is humane horse fertility management so the animals, which can spend up to 16 hours a day eating, do not overpopula­te and overgraze.

 ??  ?? Kris Thompson is project manager of the TahoeReno Industrial Center near Sparks, Nev. He expects occupancy to double in five years; 15% is now occupied.
Kris Thompson is project manager of the TahoeReno Industrial Center near Sparks, Nev. He expects occupancy to double in five years; 15% is now occupied.
 ?? PHOTOS BY IAN C. BATES/THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Wild horses roam and romp across the hills above warehouses at the Tahoe-Reno Industrial Center near Sparks, Nev.
PHOTOS BY IAN C. BATES/THE NEW YORK TIMES Wild horses roam and romp across the hills above warehouses at the Tahoe-Reno Industrial Center near Sparks, Nev.

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