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Monday, April 1, 2019

Tech billionaires are pouring money in to support San Francisco homeless shelter

A fundraising battle has two previously-opposing tech CEOs fighting on the same side.

Salesforce CEO Marc Benioff and Twitter and Square CEO Jack Dorsey both appear to have donated to a GoFundMe page supporting a proposed Navigation Center. The center would open on a parking lot owned by the Port of San Francisco and add 200 beds for the local homeless population in addition to providing housing and health services, according to CBS's Bay Area affiliate.

Benioff and Dorsey butted heads on a proposal last year aimed at combating San Francisco's homelessness problem. Benioff aggressively supported Proposition C, widely known as a "homelessness tax" on businesses with more than $50 million in annual revenue. The proposition, which will subject Benioff's own business to increased taxes, passed in November despite intense opposition from other tech leaders. Dorsey was among the most vocal critics of the tax, saying it would unfairly affect financial services companies like his own, Square.

But now, the two are on the same side in supporting the new Navigation Center. They are joined by other tech leaders, including GitHub CEO Nat Friedman and Twilio CEO Jeff Lawson, who each appear to have donated $10,000 on the GoFundMe page "SAFER Embarcadero for ALL." GoFundMe even donated $5,000 to the initiative.

The fundraiser was built in response to another GoFundMe page called "Safe Embarcadero for All," which opposes the homeless shelter, arguing the plans "put expediency over safety." As of Monday morning, the page supporting the homelessness center raised about $144,000, while the page opposing the center raised about $80,000.

On Friday, Benioff tweeted his support for the page, saying, "Homelessness is our number [one] crisis and it requires all of our attention and resources."

According to the city's 2017 count of the homeless population in a single night, there were about 7,000 people on the streets or in shelters.

Representatives from Salesforce, Twitter, GitHub, Twilio and GoFundMe did not immediately respond to CNBC's requests for comment or confirmation of the donations.

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Watch: Controversial San Francisco homelessness tax passes

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