Latest Long Island Index report says many plan to leave the area within the next five years.
Long
Island's high cost of living has half of its population planning to
leave the region within the next five years, a new study released
Thursday concludes, as locals who have seen economic hardship after the
Great Recession struggle to pay their mortgages and rents.
The findings of the The Long Island Index Report, "
Long Island in the Aftermath of the Great Recession,"
is based on data gathered in the fall of 2012, before Superstorm Sandy
left Long Islanders with damaged properties, battered homes, destroyed
personal belongings and totaled automobiles.
Follow Levittown Patch on Facebook.According
to the report, 58 percent of Long Islanders have trouble paying their
housing costs, with 81 percent pointing the finger at the "serious"
problem of high property taxes.
The
study, conducted by the Stony Brook University Center for Survey
Research, found locals are either planning to leave the area or worry
that their children or family members will head for greener pastures off
of Long Island, otherwise known as brain drain.
But while Long Island organizations like the
Index
have warned of brain drain for years, the urgency to thwart the problem
is high on local minds, the study found. About 60 percent said the lack
of affordable housing is a problem in their county, with the same
percentage supporting changes to zoning laws that would make it easier
to create legal rental apartments in a single-family homes.
“This
survey highlights serious concerns for policymakers, and these concerns
existed prior to Hurricane Sandy,” Nancy Douzinas, president of the
Rauch Foundation, which publishes the Index, said in a statement. “The
storm could not have lessened them or altered the fact that we need to
be far more innovative in developing ways to address the high cost of
living on Long Island.”
Leonie
Huddy, director of the Stony Brook's survey research center, said the
level of locals struggling for housing is at an all-time high.
“Unless
there is a sudden and sustained increase in local household income,
residents will look to leave as soon as the property market bounces
back," he said.
To read the entire report, see the media attached to the article.
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