New Money, New Problems
Bloomberg Businessweek US|March 20 - 27, 2023
In Naples, an influx of wealthy is displacing out-of-towners lower-income workers
Amanda Albright
New Money, New Problems

The city of Naples on Florida’s Gulf Coast is paradise on Earth, if you believe those slick websites that rank the best US cities to live or retire in. But if you talk with the people who work in its hospitals, restaurants and city government, you’ll get another story. They’d like to live in Naples, too, but most of them can’t afford to.

Naples is home to the second-richest ZIP code in the US, after Miami Beach. Median household income stood at about $125,000 in 2021, compared with about $62,000 in Florida overall, according to the Census Bureau. The city of 19,000 landed on a 2022 list of least affordable places for renters compiled by the National Apartment Association.

Amid a dearth of reasonably priced housing, at least 90% of city employees live outside Naples. Job vacancies are going unfilled, leading to chronic staffing shortages. The shortfall among firefighters, police officers and other essential workers in Collier County, which includes Naples, verges on unsafe, according to one local advocate. Private-sector employers have converted a hotel into apartments for workers as a temporary fix.

“I think we’re at the point of critical mass here,” says Jay Boodheshwar, who became city manager last year. Even Boodheshwar, whose salary is $270,000, lives outside the city because a home of comparable size and price to one he previously owned in West Palm Beach wasn’t available in Naples.

This story is from the March 20 - 27, 2023 edition of Bloomberg Businessweek US.

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This story is from the March 20 - 27, 2023 edition of Bloomberg Businessweek US.

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