Posted on 12/27/2012 12:39:28 PM PST by Lorianne
Idea was probably imported by Indian techies. A professional driver to pick you up and take you home again is a common perk for tech workers over there (largely because Indian traffic is so nerve-jarring to the non-professional driver)
If taxpayers aren’t paying for it, I don’t care
I live on a main drag in Silicon Valley. I see a LOT of these busses during the commute hours.
It’s always astonished me that the companies don’t have them covered with advertising.
They’re just about the only thing that isn’t!
Stuff that works really angers gubmint bureacrats because it makes all their failed utopian schemes look even dumber.
These buses aren’t empty. lol. Government bureaucrats will not be happy, lol. Next they will offer to have taxpayers fund this.
Those evil capitalist corporations are using the roads that were built for everyone!
I have been looking at changing to a different job in my company. I had to turn down a couple of positions which would have required me to move to California Bay Area. The company I work for is a tech company based out of Silicon Valley.
What has kept me from moving forward in the interview is a couple of items
- having to move and the very high cost of living in the Bay Area
- Not being able to work from home like I do now when I so choose
- Company does NOT have their own “in-house” transportation like Google or FB
If I was in my 20’s and single I would consider taking the job in the Bay Area with the caveat that I can totally bike and/or use their transit to go to work. I traveled to the Bay Area quite a few times and like the perk of Cal-Train and Capitol Corridor. But uprooting my family, the high cost of living and California liberalism has been a real turnoff. One time back in 2005, I interviewed for a position at Google but didn’t make it past the second interview. It would have been an interesting place to work at though. Nice thing where I am at is not having to follow a dress code like having to wear slacks and can wear shorts to work. Google would still be an interesting place to work at if politics is shoved aside since high tech is a big thing which I like.
One thing I want to add, if the job market keeps heading in the direction of going further into the toilet, I can see these amenities being taken away starting with the transportation and then with dress codes. Saw it at Lockheed Martin. When I was at LM, we had the pension, flex time, more casual dress code and today, flex time has been taken away all but in name only, stricter dress code where even casual Friday is gone and pension long gone as well. On dress code, they gotten picky even where a polo shirt is considered too casual and they want you in a long sleeved button down shirt and even khakis is also too casual and they want you in dark colored dress pants now.
The author missed a company. Genentech, a large bio-tech company located in South San Francisco (a seperate city on the south border of San Francsico), also runs these luxury motor coach shuttles. I see them daily, crossing SF Bay on the San Mateo Bridge. Unlike other companies, they actually display their company name, and shuttle’s destination, on the front and rear of each bus (via electronic signs). Their shuttles are bound for the suburbs of the East Bay (not the Silicon Valley), and usually display the name of the suburb to which they are travelling - I have seen them display destinations like Pleasanton, San Ramon, and Walnut Creek.
Hence, it is not only the “Urban Hipsters” in San Francisco who are being provided this type of transportation.
I addition to the Genentech busses, I also see the unmarked double-deck luxury shuttles, mentioned in the article. They are frequently travelling north and south along the East Bay freeways during commute times (probably to and from the Silicon Valley). Again, I am guessing that these coaches are not simply transporting SF twenty-somethings, as they are nowhere near “The City” (unless they came across from San Francisco via the Oakland Bay Bridge). Hence, these shuttles seem to spread out across the entire SF Bay area. I wish my employer would run one for us!!
If they put their logo on the bus they’ll be ambushed by bands of roving recruiters.
Good point...
You may find that these shuttles are provided because the employers in the area have voluntarily agreed to ‘trip reduction programs’ advocated (or required) by government.
Dress code here in Seattle is, wear clothes.
BTW MS runs shuttles for FTEs as a commute service, and also runs intra-site shuttles that orange badges can also ride.
Its rumoured that Amazon does something similar around its Lake Union campus.
Interesting. Thanks
Yeah, I worked with a lot of offshore folks in Hyderabad a few years ago, and almost none of them had their own cars. They either rode the municipal bus system (the Indian state of Andhra Prahesh, including Hyderabad, has the largest bus system in the world), used taxis or rickshaws, or more commonly, used hire vans that our company provided.
The downside to this is when they have a transit strike there, which happens every few years, all the hire van drivers and taxi/rickshaw drivers join the strike, often involuntarily. There tends to be violence if they don’t. (Yes, union thugs are the same the world over.)
}:-)4
Only thing that pisses me off about these buses is they get in the fast lane and act a piece on a Parcheesi set, essentially blocking anyone from passing.
Only thing that pisses me off about these buses is they get in the fast lane and act like a piece on a Parcheesi set, essentially blocking anyone from passing.
Thereby filling an ecological niche formerly held by the Prius and before that the Volks Wagon minibus which took over from the Nash Rambler...
beep, beep... beep, beep...
It was probably done to cut down on poaching. The carpooling in the 90s was pretty intense, but because so many of the companies were in the same neighborhood the carpooling was also pretty haphazard. Lots of folks showing up in one parking lot then gathering into cars with people from multiple companies, people start to talk, offers get made... Company owned buses helps keep that down. Also whatever morning get together meetings you have can be scheduled to happen on the bus.
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