Elon Musk on his ‘hiring problem’ at SpaceX: Hard to get engineers with families to …
Elon Musk has revealed that SpaceX is facing a hiring challenge in Texas. In a recent podcast, the Tesla and SpaceX CEO noted that married engineers and technicians are struggling to relocate their families to areas with limited job opportunities for spouses. The problem is particularly acute at SpaceX’s launch site and headquarters in South Texas, also known as Starbase, where employment options for family members of engineers and technicians outside the company are scarce.During a nearly three-hour interview with tech podcaster Dwarkesh Patel and Stripe’s cofounder John Collison, Musk said: “I call it the ‘significant other’ problem. For Starbase, that was particularly difficult, since the odds of finding a non-SpaceX job are pretty low.”Both SpaceX and Tesla relocated their headquarters from California to Texas, a move Musk acknowledged has created recruiting difficulties. The CEO of both companies noted that married technicians, engineers, and scientists have faced obstacles in bringing their families to certain parts of the state.“Tesla being engineering, especially being primarily in Silicon Valley, it’s easier for people to just… They don’t have to change their life very much. Their commutes are going to be the same. Tesla still has a majority of its engineering in California,” Musk added.
What problems are SpaceX employees facing in relocating to Starbase
Starbase, where SpaceX has built and tested its rockets since 2019, is located in a sparsely populated area of Texas near the US-Mexico border. It’s located across from the largely undeveloped Las Palomas Wildlife Management Area. The campus is roughly a 40-minute drive from Brownsville, the nearest city, according to Google Maps. Brownsville has a population of approximately 187,000, according to recent U.S. Census data.That remoteness stands in sharp contrast to SpaceX’s former headquarters in El Segundo, California, which is minutes from Los Angeles and part of a significant job market.“It’s like a technology monastery thing. Remote and mostly dudes,” Musk said about Starbase.Tesla, which moved its headquarters from California to Austin in 2021, faces a similar, though less severe, challenge, Musk added. The electric carmaker’s campus, called Giga Texas, is a roughly 30-minute drive from downtown Austin, home to nearly 1 million people. Plus, while Tesla’s top executives have largely moved to Texas, the electric car company still maintains several robotics, energy, and manufacturing operations in California.Musk has predicted that Austin will experience significant growth, calling it “the biggest boomtown that America has seen in 50 years.” He has made moves to expand his company’s campuses, including a company town called “Snailbrook” near The Boring Company and SpaceX.