Reports by Year: 2009
Long Island Index 2009

Long Island’s economy is not faring well in comparison to the U.S. as a whole.Annual growth in GDP/GMP (Gross Domestic Product/Gross Metropolitan Product) was less on Long Island than the U.S.
Most significantly, average annual pay per employee was on the down swing in 2008 and is now on par with the United States as a whole. Ten years ago, Long Islanders earned more than the U.S. average but in inflation adjusted dollars, Long Island’s average pay per employee was $834 lower in 2008 than it was in 1999.
Long Island is one of the few places in the nation with local bidder preference laws which are in place to favor local contractors for public work projects and purchases of goods and services. The downside is that they can result in higher costs and reduce competition.
Long Island's Educational Structure
Long Island Index 2009 Special Analysis
The Long Island Association describes the region’s schools as “the centerpiece of our lifestyle” and “the driving force behind this region’s economic vitality and attractiveness to business.” But while some of our schools are the best in the country, many are not doing well at all.
What accounts for these differences? The Long Island Index set out over the past year to study our region’s educational system. We approach the subject not from the standpoint of pedagogy—we are not educators—but rather in structural terms. We quantified how educational services are delivered on our island. By unraveling the intricate relationships between funding sources and educational outcomes in a way that hasn’t been done before, we find that while we pay a lot in taxes, we don’t always get what we expect and sometimes we don’t get what we need.
Maps:
Why Boundaries Matter: A Study of Five Separate and Unequal Long Island School Districts
Report written by Amy Stuart-Wells, Teachers College
This study underscores pervasive racial and ethnic segregation across Long Island’s School Districts and how our suburban system of disparate villages and hamlets impacts students’ equal access to high quality education.
- Why Boundaries Matter (Unabridged: 86 pages)
- Why Boundaries Matter (Abridged: 12 pages)
- Press Release
- Op-Ed Article
Educational Inequality on Long Island Survey: Public Awareness and Support for Solutions
Report written by Leonie Huddy, Stony Brook Center for Survey Research
Long Island has schools that are among the best in the nation. It also contains some poorly performing schools. Moreover, the large number of school districts on Long Island exacerbates the problem by isolating failing schools in small, less well funded school districts. Failing school districts stand apart from others in terms of the wealth and race of their students. In general, Black and Latino children attend schools with poor academic records and a largely minority student body in areas characterized by higher poverty rates than schools attended by most Whites on Long Island.
Long Island’s Educational System
Report written by Marc Silver and William Mangino, Hofstra University
The chasm between rich and poor on Long Island is vast. The social distance between racial and ethnic groups is wide. Most telling, of course, is that both of these divides are reflected in our patterns of residential location. Long Island is among the most racially segregated suburban regions in the nation. That pattern is complemented by a high degree of economic segregation. In many respects, the Long Island of the early 21st century reflects the trends of more than a century of social, residential and economic development that both responded to and perpetuated the pressures of embedded class and racial inequalities in our society at large.
School Finance on Long Island
Report written by Trudi Renwick, Fiscal Policy Institute
Resources available to fund education in each district are generally based on measures of property wealth per-pupil and income per-pupil. SED uses several measures to compare wealth across districts: the value of taxable property per student, the total income per student, the Income Wealth Index (IWI) which is the average income per student compared to the statewide average income per student and the Combined Wealth Ratio (CWR) which is the average of the ratio of income per-pupil and property wealth per-pupil to the state average for each.

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