The Guardian (USA)

San Francisco investigat­ing Twitter over complaint it added beds to office rooms

- Dani Anguiano in Los Angeles

Twitter is under investigat­ion by city officials in San Francisco following a complaint that the company allegedly converted rooms in its headquarte­rs to sleeping quarters, an inquiry that has drawn scorn from Elon Musk.

As of Monday, the office has “modest bedrooms featuring unmade mattresses, drab curtains and giant conference-room telepresen­ce monitors” with four to eight beds a floor, employees told Forbes. The changes appear to be part of Musk’s plan for “hardcore Twitter” in which he’s demanded workers dedicate “long hours at high intensity” after he fired nearly half the company’s workforce.

But the San Francisco Chronicle reported the company has not applied for any permits to use portions of the building for residentia­l purposes.

The San Francisco department of building inspection confirmed to several media outlets that it is investigat­ing the matter after receiving a complaint and that it plans to inspect the company’s headquarte­rs.

“We need to make sure the building is being used as intended,” a department spokespers­on, Patrick Hannan, told the Washington Post. “There are different building code requiremen­ts for residentia­l buildings, including those being used for short-term stays. These codes make sure people are using spaces safely.”

The department has contacted the building representa­tives to conduct an inspection and if the headquarte­rs are no longer up to building code, it will issue a notice of violation. They city treats all property complaints and owners the same, Hannan said.

“No one is above the law,” Hannan said.

Musk was critical of the investigat­ion. “So city of SF attacks companies providing beds for tired employees instead of making sure kids are safe from fentanyl. Where are your priorities @LondonBree­d!?” he said on Twitter with a link to an article detailing an account from a father who says his baby overdosed on fentanyl after being exposed to the drug at a city playground.

No city or police officials have confirmed whether or not the child’s emergency was the result of fentanyl expo

sure.

Some workers have already reported sleeping in company headquarte­rs. Twitter’s director of product management, Esther Crawford, shared a photo last month of her sleeping in the office with an eye mask and sleeping bag. “When your team is pushing round the clock to make deadlines sometimes you #SleepWhere­YouWork,” Crawford wrote on Twitter.

Employees told Forbes that no announceme­nt was made about the new beds but that they believed they were there so workers could stay in the office overnight.

“It’s not a good look,” they said. “It’s yet another unspoken sign of disrespect. There is no discussion. Just like, beds showed up.”

 ?? Photograph: Noah Berger/AP ?? A Twitter logo hangs outside the company's San Francisco offices.
Photograph: Noah Berger/AP A Twitter logo hangs outside the company's San Francisco offices.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States