What It Costs To Live In San Francisco | Making It - YouTube

Channel: VICE News

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Everyone wants a piece of San Francisco right now. That's why it's so hard to live here
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I'm assistant professor of sociology at San Francisco State University.
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Between me and my partner we make anywhere between a $100,000 and
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$110,000 a year and that's considered low income here.
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My family of four: my partner, our two children live in a one-bedroom apartment in a high-rise we pay
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$2,400.
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We are living in a university subsidized apartment, so that's why we have it a little cheaper, but it's still a one-bedroom apartment.
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For four people it's a little tight, right?
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I've lived in many major cities, and I've lived in San Francisco before, but this time around it's super hard to find affordable housing.
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So when I get up in the morning I get my kids ready to go. My partner
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and I will be tag-teaming on that. I'll get breakfast started, and I'll cook eggs and
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sausage, cut up an avocado.
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Child: "I want avocado."
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You don't like avocado, but you like eggs.
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Child: "I don't want eggs!"
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On days that I go [see?] child care. After we've eaten breakfast, we'll head over to her daycare.
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We pay around
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$1,300 a month for daycare for our two-year-old daughter.
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I think that the state should have more responsibility to working parents and working families to help them afford quality
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child care for their children.
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Our transportation costs monthly vary, but this is where we're trying to save money
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San Francisco and the Bay Area has a definite car culture,
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but between me and my partner we share one car. We pay around
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$60 for gas a month because we drive a hybrid and we fill up for gas every two weeks or something like that.
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When I get onto campus, I'll grab a coffee and a bite to eat.
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Come to the office,
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I will get my work done, respond to emails,
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get back to paper writing or grading or something like that in my office.
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After I've done some work in the office or after I've taught, I'll go to lunch at a local sandwich shop.
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On some days my husband and my son will join me and we'll have lunch together before I come back to work.
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Feeding a family of four, we really rely on meal planning and cooking at home. So, every week
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we try and go grocery shopping.
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We are
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Lucky enough to live in the city where we have
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friends and are raising our family in community. So, at times friends come over to share a meal with us
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and they'll bring dishes to come and share and break bread together.
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The bay area is a lovely place to grow up in, right. It's super diverse.
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I remember growing up here as an immigrant and a child of an immigrant and
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knowing that my mother was working a low-wage job.
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Being a working-class family and an immigrant family here in the Bay Area
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was never easy, right? It's not just like it happened in 2017 where, you know, it's hella hard to live here now.
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I think there is some sort of myth around that that it's just happening at this moment
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Even if I am a professor and I have these great benefits
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Often it's harder and harder to justify how to live in this city because it's so expensive
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Homeownership in the Bay Area feels like chasing a dream. It's what they call a seller's market.
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There's no negotiation. Someone will always outbid you in terms of buying a home here in San Francisco.
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When we do buy a home, it will be in the East Bay.
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Somewhere not in San Francisco and not in the peninsula.
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There's a push and pull about living in San Francisco: the, you know, "I left my heart in San Francisco" kind of feeling, but also
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you're brokenhearted in San Francisco because you can't afford to live here.