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RACISM

School segregation on LI twice U.S. average

The rate of school segregation on Long Island is "double the national average" and, in Nassau County, it is triple, according to a new study.

The Long Island Index study, released Thursday, found segregation in the Island's schools largely occurs between school districts, mirroring the region's segregated housing patterns.

Long Island ranks 10th in the nation in residential segregation between blacks and whites, which affects the racial and ethnic makeup of its school districts, the study said. The study also found black-white segregation in the Island's schools was greatest, though Hispanic-white segregation was growing with the increasing Hispanic population.

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"Since school district boundaries mimic housing patterns, it is well known that Long Island's schools are highly segregated," wrote Douglas Ready, an education professor at Teachers College at Columbia University, which did the index study.

He said the study explored the "extent to which racial and ethnic groups are [or are not] equally distributed across schools." It concluded segregation wasn't a big factor between schools in the same district, but that "entire school districts were segregated from each other," at about 90 percent.

Ann Golob, director of the Long Island Index, said in an interview Thursday she found the data "shocking." The Long Island Index publishes reports about various regional issues, such as education.

"We know that things are divided" on Long Island, she said. "When you see the numbers and you realize how much worse we are, how much more extreme we are, it sent shivers down my spine" and pointed to a need for change in how education is provided.

Ready, in an interview, said "big counties" like Miami-Dade in Florida and Fairfax in Virginia have just one school system compared to the Island's 124. "What it means is, where you live in the county doesn't matter [in terms of] what school system you go to. But in Nassau County, if you move half a mile, you can be in two or three different school districts." So when an area is sliced and diced, that's where you will find the most between-district segregation, he said.

On Long Island, he added, "where you live matters more."The executive director of the Nassau-Suffolk School Boards Association declined to comment on the study because members hadn't yet seen it.

Elaine Gross, president of ERASE Racism, a Syosset-based advocacy group, concurring with the index study, added, that the "heart of the problem" was that school districts reflect the Island's residential segregation.

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NO justice, no peace!

A time comes when silence is betrayal…. Some of us who have already begun to break the silence of the night have found that the calling to speak is often a vocation of agony, but we must speak. We must speak with all the humility that is appropriate to our limited vision, but we must speak.—Martin Luther King Jr.

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Stop County Executive Mangano's Dissolution of County Human & Civil Right Agencies

 Nassau County Executive Edward Mangano's proposal to consolidate the Nassau County Human Rights Commission, CASA and the Office of Minority Affairs into an Office for New Local Opportunities is an affront to the communities served by these three County Departments. By law they are separate and distinct so that they may focus on their respective missions of investigating bias and discrimination complaints, violations of human and civil rights and delivering critical social services to their unique constituencies. Support Dr. King's legacy! Mr. Mangano- Empower these agencies!

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The elimination of human & civil rights agencies is not about saving money. While hundreds of Health and social service workers are being fired, the County Legislature passed County Executive Mangano's confiscatory bill awarding 5 million dollars to Morgan Stanley to conduct a fiscal review! As County employees are fired, the tentacles of  big business swoop down and suck up their salaries! In these tough economic times, doing something to deliver less services to the neediest communities in Nassau County is unconscionable. Now is the time! Contact your legislator.
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SUPPORT THE COUNTY CHARTER VISITOR BOARD TO OVERSEE THE COUNTY JAIL!
We urge all people of conscience to rally at the Theodore Roosevelt County Building Legislative Chambers on Franklin and Old Country Road in Mineola on Mondays and demand that the County Executive and the County Legislators honor their oath of office and obey the law as mandated by the County Charter and implement the Visitor Board. Click the link above and sign the petition that the County Charter provisions for a Visitor Board to oversee the county jail be immediately implemented. Contact your legislator and demand that that he or she put a stop to County Executive Mangano's proposal to gut and dismantle the County's Human and Civil Rights agencies. www.nassaucountyny.gov/agencies/Legis/index.html
PLEASE FORWARD THIS Appeal to your EMAIL DATABASE.  

 

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Report: LI segregation unchecked

Local and county government agencies responsible for

combating discrimination are doing little or nothing to break patterns that

have made Long Island the third most segregated suburb in the nation, according

to a study by Erase Racism, a Long Island advocacy group.

Government fair housing agencies fail to investigate discrimination

complaints, local governments cling to zoning practices that perpetuate

segregation, and real estate agencies that steer black and Latino renters and

home buyers away from predominantly white neighborhoods face little risk of

prosecution, the report said.

Calls to the Long Island Board of Realtors were not returned.

"Yes, housing discrimination is very real," said Nassau County Executive

Thomas Suozzi. "This is a good example of where you have lots of good laws

passed at the national, state and local level and there has been no effective

coordination of resources to enforce the existing laws."

Elaine Gross, president of the advocacy group that did the study, said

county human rights commissions in Nassau and Suffolk leave it to the state to

investigate fair housing complaints, which often go unresolved.

The study said although local governments seeking federal Housing and Urban

Development funds must file "analysis of impediment" plans for overcoming

discriminatory housing patterns, few governments offered meaningful proposals.

In one example, the study noted Huntington Town, which it said has been

cited by HUD for exclusionary zoning practices, although its most recent

analysis of impediment report offered no action to address neighborhood

segregation.

Just 15 percent of 2.75 million Long Islanders live in communities where

both blacks and whites each make up more than 15 percent of the population,

according to a 2001 report by the Lewis Mumford Center for Comparative Urban

and Regional Research, at the State University at Albany. The other 2.3 million

are in communities that are predominantly white or black.

The Erase Racism report, which is based on a survey of government and

private data, said racial steering continues to keep neighborhoods segregated,

citing a survey in which 85 white testers and 79 African-American or Hispanic

testers asked real estate agents about the availability of housing.

White applicants were told an apartment was available 93 percent of the

time, compared to 53 percent of the time for African-American or Latino

applicants, according to the report.

Among the personal stories cited in the report was one of Deborah Post, a

black Touro Law Center professor, who was shown six homes in largely black and

Latino Huntington Station, when she had asked to see homes in predominantly

white Smithtown.

These findings were part of a 2004 survey conducted by the Association of

Community Organizations for Reform Now, or ACORN, one of the organizations

whose records were cited in the Erase Racism report.

Testing by the Long Island Housing Services, a fair housing group, in

Oyster Bay, North Hempstead and Smithtown last year, also cited in the Erase

Racism report, showed similar results.

"The statistics and our research show this is pervasive across Long

Island," said Cathryn Harris, the report's author. "Long Island is the third

most segregated [suburb] in the United States" behind suburban Newark, N.J.,

and Cleveland.

A spokesman for Suffolk County Executive Steve Levy said local governments

are handcuffed by laws that place enforcement responsibility in the hands of

state government.

War is always a defeat for humanity.
                                            ~Pope John Paul II