San Francisco Chronicle

Apple’s big expansion includes Austin campus

- By Michael Liedtke, Matt O’Brien and Will Weissert

Apple plans to build a $1 billion campus in Austin, Texas, that will create at least 5,000 jobs ranging from engineers to call-center agents while adding more luster to a Southweste­rn city that has already become a bustling tech hub.

The decision, announced Thursday, comes 11 months after CEO Tim Cook disclosed plans to open a major office outside California on the heels of a huge tax break passed by Congress last year. The tax cut on overseas profits prompted the Cupertino company to bring about $250 billion back to the U.S., freeing up more money for investment­s in the country in addition to higher dividends for Apple shareholde­rs.

The company said it will also hire thousands more engineers in several other emerging hightech hotbeds. Apple plans to open three offices that will each employ at least 1,000 workers in Seattle, San Diego and Culver City (Los Angeles County). Apple also pledged to add hundreds of jobs each in New York, Pittsburgh, Boston, Boulder, Colo., and Portland, Ore.

“They are just picking America’s most establishe­d

superstar cities and tech hubs,” said Richard Florida, an urban developmen­t expert at the University of Toronto.

Apple’s scattersho­t expansion reflects the increasing competitio­n for engineers in Silicon Valley. The bidding for programmer­s is driving salaries ever higher, which in turn is catapultin­g the average prices of homes in many part of the Bay Area above $1 million, causing many workers with computer coding skills to live in less expensive places with less traffic.

Cities around the country offered financial incentives in an attempt to land Apple’s new campus, but Cook avoided a high-profile competitio­n that pitted them against one another, as Amazon had before deciding to build huge offices in New York and Virginia.

Amazon is receiving about $1.5 billion in incentives in New York and up to $750 million in Virginia. Apple will receive up to $25 million from a jobs creation fund in Texas in addition to property tax rebates that still need approval. The figure is expected to be a fraction of what Amazon received in New York and Virginia.

The Austin campus, expected to span about 5,000 square feet, will be about a mile from another large office that Apple opened five years ago. Apple currently employs about 6,200 workers in Austin, making it the company’s largest hub outside Silicon Valley even before the expansion.

The new Austin jobs are expected to mirror the same mix Apple already has at its existing campus, ranging from positions in technology and research that pay well over $100,000 to lower-paying spots in customer call centers. Austin Chamber of Commerce Board Chairman Phil Wilson described jobs that Apple will be adding as “mid-skill” and “good-paying.”

Virtually all of the jobs in Seattle and San Diego will be in technology — a field where six-figure paychecks plus stock options are standard compensati­ons. The jobs in Culver City, about 8 miles from Hollywood, will be a mix of technology and digital music and video programmin­g, two areas where Apple is rapidly expanding to compete with the likes of Spotify and Netflix so it can sell its own subscripti­on entertainm­ent services to its legion of iPhone, iPad and Mac computer customers.

Back in January, Apple pledged to use part of its windfall from its tax breaks to finance more than $30 billion in capital expenditur­es in the U.S. over the next five years. It also committed to creating more than 20,000 more U.S. jobs during that same time frame. After adding 6,000 jobs, Apple said it now has 90,000 U.S. workers and is on track to fulfill its expansion pledge on schedule.

Where U.S. companies open new facilities or plants has always had the potential for public and political backlash.

That potential has intensifie­d under the Trump administra­tion, which has pushed companies to keep more of their operations inside the country’s borders.

While Cook has steered mostly clear of President Trump’s ire, Apple did receive some pressure three months ago from the White House. Apple sent a letter to the U.S. trade representa­tive warning that the burgeoning trade war with China and rising tariffs could force higher prices for U.S. consumers. Trump in a tweet told Apple to start making its products in the U.S., not China. Apple uses a lot of overseas facilities in China and elsewhere to produce components and its products.

Cities are eager to bring in more tech employers because companies like Apple and Amazon ladle out six-figure salaries to engineers and other skilled workers.

The infusion of thousands of new and highly paid residents can ripple through the economy of a city and the surroundin­g region, with those employees filling restaurant­s and theaters, buying property and paying taxes.

“Austin has long been among one of America’s top knowledge and talent clusters, so that’s not surprising,” Florida said. “And so is Boulder. The good news is places like Pittsburgh are starting to make real strides in becoming targets of these investment­s. But there aren’t a lot of other Pittsburgh­s in the heartland.”

The choices, he said, also illustrate the growing geographic inequality that “separates the thriving tech hubs from the more struggling and stagnating rest of the country.”

Annual pay will vary at the new locations, but Apple workers in Cupertino have an average annual salary of about $125,000, according to a report the company submitted to the city.

 ?? Suzanne Cordeiro / AFP / Getty Images ?? Apple’s planned $1 billion campus in Texas will be near the Cupertino company’s existing facility in Austin.
Suzanne Cordeiro / AFP / Getty Images Apple’s planned $1 billion campus in Texas will be near the Cupertino company’s existing facility in Austin.
 ?? Suzanne Cordeiro / AFP / Getty Images ?? Apple’s plans are displayed in the company’s current campus in Austin, Texas. The new facility will initially have 5,000 workers.
Suzanne Cordeiro / AFP / Getty Images Apple’s plans are displayed in the company’s current campus in Austin, Texas. The new facility will initially have 5,000 workers.

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