Sponsored link
Saturday, March 8, 2025

Sponsored link

UncategorizedThe other Twitter tax break -- and how it...

The other Twitter tax break — and how it cost the city $25 million

By Tim Redmond

Way back in 1969, when Sue Hestor was a young activist organizing a peace march, she asked the sympathetic owner of the Furniture Mart building on Market Street if he would let her group use a corner of his shop for office space. “He said he was sorry, but no,” Hestor, now a veteran land-use lawyer, recalled recently. “He said the legal use of the building was very clear: Just showroom space, no offices.”

That’s the position the city took in 2002, when the owners wanted to rent out the 1.2 million-square-foot space, which was used as a home furnishings showroom, as offices. The zoning administration, Larry Badiner, said that would require a change of use: Under city law, the property was never used for offices, and if the owners wanted to fill it with cublicles, they needed to apply under the city’s annual limit on new office space – and pay the fees that any other office developer would pay.

Now, of course, the building is home to Twitter, and has been renovated entirely for traditional office use. And there’s been considerable discussion around the payroll-tax break that Mayor Ed Lee used to entice the microblogging company to set up its headquarters, with several thousand employees, in the 1937-vintage mid-Market building.

But there’s been almost no discussion of the fact that the building owners never paid the $25 million in city fees for housing, Muni, and childcare that should have been required when the showroom became office space.(more after the jump)

48 Hills welcomes comments in the form of letters to the editor, which you can submit here. We also invite you to join the conversation on our FacebookTwitter, and Instagram

Marke B.
Marke B.
Marke Bieschke is the publisher and arts and culture editor of 48 Hills. He co-owns the Stud bar in SoMa. Reach him at marke (at) 48hills.org, follow @supermarke on Twitter.

Sponsored link

Sponsored link
Sponsored link

Featured

Dear Gavin: You are all wrong about trans women athletes

I was a competitive college swimmer. There are no 'unfair advantages.' Just look at the numbers.

Newsom just threw the trans community under the bus

Why did the governor go out of his way to attack a small, vulnerable community? We can never trust him again.

Drama Masks: When illness derails the performance

As flu and COVID cases rise (many of them deadly), how will the local theater scene adjust its communal experience?

More by this author

The pinball wizard of Superfine Art Fair

Lead curator Sharone Halevy tells us how she fits 150+ artists—plus circus performers, live musicians, and more— into Fort Mason.

Party Radar: 5 hot spots to dance this mess around

We don't need this fascist groove thang—from Carnaval to the Klituation, with reggaeton, techno, and Detroit house in between.

Juanita More names Transgender Law Center as Pride party beneficiary, as threats to community mount

Wild annual celebration is also essential community fundraiser—and protecting trans rights has leapt to fore.

You might also likeRELATED