![]() ![]() Scott Wiener, D-San Francisco, and other backers in an event at Yelp headquarters Wednesday.Īsked how his San Francisco local-reviews company is helping employees find housing, Stoppelman replied, “You end up paying (them) more. Stoppelman spoke alongside the bill’s author, state Sen. Google and Facebook have started to engage locally, Stoppelman said, and he’s surprised that “more tech leaders weren’t paying attention to this problem as it was developing.” Two days after a controversial state bill to allow more housing near public transit was stopped dead in its tracks, one of its biggest supporters - Yelp CEO Jeremy Stoppelman - called on other tech leaders to pressure their local governments to expand housing near their campuses. Amy Osborne / Special to The Chronicle Show More Show Less Amy Osborne / Special to The Chronicle Show More Show Less 3 of3 (Left to Right) Sonja Trauss founder SF Bay Area Renters� Federation, Senator Scott Wiener, and Miriam Zuk director of Urban Displacement Project and the Center for Community Innovation UC Berkeley participate in a panel discussion on housing at the Yelp headquarters on Thursday, Apin San Francisco, California. Amy Osborne / Special to The Chronicle Show More Show Less 2 of3 YELP CEO Jeremy Stoppelman speaks at a panel discussion on housing with State Senator Scott Wiener among others at the Yelp headquarters on Thursday, Apin San Francisco, California. 1 of3 (Left to Right) YELP CEO Jeremy Stoppelman, Sonja Trauss Founder SF Bay Area Renters� Federation, and Senator Scott Wiener participate in a panel discussion on housing at the Yelp headquarters on Thursday, Apin San Francisco, California. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |