Twitter and a nonprofit group called Compass Family Services are going to partner up to build a learning center where some of the city’s poorest residents will learn valuable tech skills.
“It really feels like we’re turning a corner — that the tech sector is getting it,” Erica Kisch, Compass Family Services’ executive director, told SFGate. “There are a number of initiatives that show these tech companies want to be part of the community.”
But, this isn’t just philanthropy. As SFGate points out, it’s an obligation:
In a deal to keep the company from leaving San Francisco, the city allowed certain Mid-Market companies to avoid payroll taxes for six years by signing a community benefits agreement promising contributions to nearby areas, some of the poorest parts of the Bay Area.
The Compass partnership will not count toward Twitter’s obligations for this year’s agreement, but company officials say it could count in future years.