USA TODAY International Edition

PRICED OUT

People are leaving San Francisco – because they can’t live with the costs

- Marco della Cava

SAN FRANCISCO – Social media influencer Sarah Tripp and her husband, Robbie Tripp, moved to San Francisco in 2016 brimming with optimism.

“We thought, here’s a city full of opportunit­ies and connection­s where you go to work hard and succeed,” says Tripp, 27, founder of the lifestyle blog Sassy Red Lipstick.

But after a year- long hunt for suitable housing in San Francisco only turned up “places for $ 1 million that looked like rundown shacks and needed a remodel,” the couple packed up and moved to Phoenix.

They went from paying San Francisco rents of $ 2,500 for a one- bedroom, one- bath apartment that was far from shopping and other amenities, to purchasing a newly constructe­d 3,000- square- foot, four- bedroom, four- bathroom home where they’ll raise their newly arrived baby boy.

“It was cool to be living near all those high- tech startups,” Tripp says of her time in the Bay Area. “But you quickly saw that if you weren’t part of that, you’d be pushed out. It’s just sad.”

For the better part of two decades, the Bay Area has been a magnet for newcomers lured by a modern- day technology Gold Rush. But increasing­ly only those who have struck it rich can afford to stay.

Once a bohemian mecca that welcomed the Beat poets and ’ 60s hippies, San Francisco now lays claim to the most expensive housing in the West, with a median home price of $ 1.4 million. There’s also $ 5- a- gallon gas,

private schools priced like universiti­es and chic restaurant­s that cost nearly double the national average.

Earlier this year, the San Francisco Bay Area was second only to New York – and ahead of Los Angeles, Washington and Chicago – when it came to people leaving major U. S. cities. More than 28,190 departed in the second quarter of 2019, almost double 2017’ s rate, according to a regular Migration Report from real estate brokerage Redfin.

The most popular in- state option for San Franciscan­s fleeing high costs is Sacramento, where the median home price is $ 350,000. Out of state, Seattle, at a $ 580,000 median, offers the biggest draw, Redfin data shows.

Yet another popular destinatio­n is even farther afield: Austin, Texas, a capital city with no state taxes and a booming tech scene that is home to Apple’s latest HQ. The most recent quarter, which ended July 30, saw Austin receive 5,403 newcomers, the majority of whom came from San Francisco, Redfin says.

California overall also is losing residents. In 2018, 38,000 more people left the Golden State than entered, the second year in a row for this negative trend, according to the U. S. census. A recent Edelman Trust Barometer survey found 53% of residents and 63% of millennial­s were considerin­g leaving because of the high cost of living.

“The great tragedy is this place was a middle- class paradise, and now you’ve got the flight of the middle class with all their aspiration­s, leaving the poor, the rich and a transient population,” says Joel Kotkin, presidenti­al fellow in Urban Futures at Chapman University in Orange, California.

In the Bay Area, median household income is around $ 100,000, a tidy sum in most cities. But after federal and state taxes, residents have to cover rents that range from $ 3,600 a month in San Francisco to $ 4,600 in Silicon Valley, according to rental site Rent Cafe. That economic reality has left many of the city’s low- income residents living in their cars or on the streets.

“I don’t recognize my city, to be honest,” says Shannon Way, executive director of Homeowners­hipSF, a nonprofit umbrella group that helps residents secure housing. “When you only have people at the extremes, it tears at the very fiber of what it means to live in a community.”

Way says her organizati­on does what it can to steer locals toward the city’s few below market rate housing options, as well as a city down payment assistance loan program.

“We focus on those who really want to stay,” she says. “But it’s getting harder and harder to survive here.”

California’s biggest challenge

Business and political leaders – from Salesforce billionair­e Marc Benioff to Gov. Gavin Newsom – have sounded the alarm over the growing housing crisis.

Last year, Benioff lobbied to pass a controvers­ial San Francisco corporate tax to fund homelessne­ss initiative­s. And Newsom, who in his State of the State address early this year called housing “our most overwhelmi­ng challenge,” has committed $ 1.75 billion to fund new building projects.

During a statewide tour in October, Newsom signed various housing bills, including one that puts an annual cap on rent increases at 5% plus inflation and another that aims to block predatory evictions.

“We’re living in the wealthiest as well as the poorest state in America,” Newsom said as he signed the bills.

San Jose natives Halie and Jim Casey assumed that by getting into the housing market they could keep costs under control. They had bought a small house well suited to the two of them and were happy. Then Halie got pregnant.

“We quickly saw we couldn’t afford anything bigger,” she says.

Their appreciati­ng asset served as a ticket out. The couple had purchased their home for $ 700,000, and two years later, it was worth $ 1 million thanks in part to Google buying land in San Jose.

Jim, 40, decided to become a stay- athome dad for a spell, while Halie, 32, arranged to transfer in May 2018 with her employer, Apple, to the company’s new Austin offices.

“We got a great house with a nice yard, have great schools, and all for less money,” she says.

For some experts, families opting to leave the state foreshadow­s larger problems. They worry a lack of affordable housing could jeopardize a state growth rate – one fueled in large part by Bay Area tech giants – that typically outpaces the national average. That could mean fewer jobs for those who stay.

“The Bay Area’s strength is also its greatest weakness,” says Jordan Levine, deputy chief economist of the California Associatio­n of Realtors.

“The area has a strong economy and some of the most innovative companies in the nation, but it’s also a poster child for housing supply issues that haven’t kept up with growth.”

Middle class in peril

Chapman University’s Kotkin says he’s alarmed by the growing number of California companies moving to states where cheap housing and sometimes no state taxes make it easier to pay middlemana­gers a living wage. These include automakers ( Mitsubishi leaving L. A. for Tennessee), defense contractor­s ( Parsons leaving Pasadena for Washington, D. C.), and technology enterprise­s ( Apple building in Austin).

“In the end, you want a middle class in your state,” Kotkin says. “Because a society without one is unstable.”

Solutions will have to come from public officials and citizens alike, says Dowell Myers, professor of policy, planning and demography at the University of Southern California’s Sol Price School of Public Policy.

“I’m not despondent, but it requires many people to see how their interests are negatively impacted,” he says. “If you own a house, you benefit as your value goes up in a housing shortage. But your children and grandchild­ren will be impacted; they may not be able to live and work here. So that’ll be the way things will change.”

The alternativ­e is bleak, says state Sen. Scott Wiener, D- San Francisco.

“We’re headed to a future where the middle class won’t be able to raise families here, where restaurant­s increasing­ly will close because they can’t hire workers, where teachers and police officers can’t live anywhere near where they work,” he says. “We need a much greater sense of urgency.”

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? The Bay Area was second only to New York in losing residents.
GETTY IMAGES The Bay Area was second only to New York in losing residents.
 ?? SOURCE Redfin quarterly Migration report, July 30, 2019 GEORGE PETRAS/ USA TODAY ?? 1 – New outflow is defined as the number of people looking to leave the metro minus the number of people looking to move to the metro
SOURCE Redfin quarterly Migration report, July 30, 2019 GEORGE PETRAS/ USA TODAY 1 – New outflow is defined as the number of people looking to leave the metro minus the number of people looking to move to the metro
 ?? SOURCE Redfin GEORGE PETRAS/ USA TODAY ??
SOURCE Redfin GEORGE PETRAS/ USA TODAY
 ?? HALIE CASEY ?? Jim and Halie Casey of San Jose, Calif., found they got a lot more for their money when they moved to Austin, Texas, to raise their 2- year- old daughter.
HALIE CASEY Jim and Halie Casey of San Jose, Calif., found they got a lot more for their money when they moved to Austin, Texas, to raise their 2- year- old daughter.

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