How remote work is poised to change California’s cities

Good morning, California. It’s Wednesday, July 22.

A metropolitan exodus?

Powell Street in San Francisco, normally a bustling tourist and shopping destination, is empty on May 7. Photo by Anne Wernikoff for CalMatters

Many tech employees may never return to their offices in San Francisco or Silicon Valley as jobs go and stay remote, presaging a massive political and cultural shift as workers flee from crowded, expensive cities to quieter, cheaper parts of California. 

Two-thirds of Bay Area tech workers would consider leaving the region if they had the option to work remotely. And many do — Twitter, Square, Coinbase and other tech giants recently announced most employees could work from home forever. Meanwhile, two-thirds of Sacramento residents said they want to work from home at least twice a week even after the pandemic ends. And wealthy Californians are leaving San Francisco and Los Angeles and snapping up estates in Napa, Pebble Beach and Lake Tahoe