Bosses and workers still can’t agree on whether the commute is part of the work day, and it’s creating a $578 billion productivity problem
Bosses and workers still can’t agree on whether the commute is part of the work day, and it’s creating a $578 billion productivity problem
It's creating a $578 billion productivity problem
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Set minimum wage for any in-office position to match the amount required to purchase a house within 15 minutes average transit to the office.
74 2 ReplyMin 250k salary in Seattle lol.
23 0 ReplyYeah. That's exactly what it should be, and would like up correctly with what C level people have given themselves in pay raises over the past decade.
26 0 Replynonono, if all the lowly peasants get a comfortable wage, how would execs be able to afford their second summer homes? Won't someone think of them?
8 0 Reply
Seattle should build more walkable neighborhoods with a metro, lol.
14 0 ReplyGod yes please
2 0 ReplyHuge regional light rail expansion is happening right now there. Walkable neighborhoods are building up around it.
1 0 Reply
Some people just want to watch the world burn. I love it haha
19 1 ReplySometimes the old has to be burned down to prepare the ground for new growth.
18 0 ReplyI say it, knowing that there's no possibility of it happening in the current day but, really, it's the only way that's fair for both sides and removes most potential discriminatory policies. If a business can't afford to pay its workers enough to have a decent life, they can't afford to be in business.
7 0 Reply
Or reform land and housing so the landlord grifters stop fucking everyone over simply for having their name in a registry of who owns what.
14 0 ReplyPorque no los dos?
2 0 Reply
So that's, what, $1,500,000 per hour?
13 1 ReplyI'm not sure what area has average cost of houses around $2.8B but, if that's the cost, sure. That is, of you're not trying to imply that the "Wage-Price Spiral" exists, despite all evidence contrary.
1 1 Reply