Leaving 'hotel California': Business owners torn over exodus share stories of 'how bad' things really are

67% of California employers want to move their HQ out of Golden State, RedBalloon reports

California's businesses share the same "headache," being personally torn between closing their doors or moving to other states over high crime and taxes.

"I have considered moving to a different state," attorney and law firm founder in the San Francisco Bay area, Flavio Carvalho, told Fox News Digital. "I don't agree with the direction California is going, and I hate the fact that I am forced to support it through my taxes."

"We have wanted to move for at least the last three to four years," Bulletproof Pet Products CEO and CFO Cherie Falwell also said. "Especially since Biden has been president. Things were already expensive here. Now they are so expensive we can hardly afford to do business. However, moving is expensive, and with interest rates on homes, it is difficult to move." 

"We are L.A., California natives, and have never lived or worked anywhere else," Trish Aquino, who owns a digital marketing business with her husband Brandon, weighed in. "It was our financial strife, prospecting struggles and concern for our children's futures that made us finally consider a move to Frisco, Texas."

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More than 86% of business owners in California say that crime has increased in their area, while 67% from the same survey claimed to be considering moving their headquarters out of the Golden State, according to the latest numbers from RedBalloon and PublicSq.’s Freedom Economy Index.

Leaving California

California business owners Flavio Carvalho, Cherie Falwell and Trish Aquino have all recently considered moving their operations to Texas, Florida or Nevada. (iStock)

The national survey includes 80,000 business owners, with 10% of those respondents being based in California, RedBalloon CEO Andrew Crapuchettes noted.

"Employers we've been talking to have been planning a move or thinking about a move since 2020," Crapuchettes told Digital. "And what's happening is, in the last couple of years, every time Gavin Newsom does a new stupid thing, it makes it a lot easier for them to make that decision."

"[It’s a] headache," the CEO continued. "They are dealing with regulation, they're dealing with taxes, they're dealing with crime… They're still generating economic activity, but this invisible groundswell of businesses [are] planning on leaving the state, and that's because of those bad policies."

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