Williston-Park-2022_05_27

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Serving Williston Park, East Williston, Mineola, Albertson and Searingtown

$1.50

Friday, May 27, 2022

Vol. 71, No. 21

HEALTH, WELLNESS AND BEAUTY

TOWN TABLES HIGHWAY SUPERINTENDENT VOTE

PROUD BOYS MARCH IN ROCKVILLE CENTRE

PAGES 25-28

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Large disparity in spending per pupil by districts

B AT T L E O F T H E C L A S S E S

Ranges from $23K to $45K on N. Shore with EWSD 2nd at $41K BY R OB E RT PE L A E Z North Shore school district budgets for the upcoming school year show a wide disparity in spending per pupil ranging from more than $45,000 to less than $23,000, according to an analysis by Blank Slate Media The Floral Park-Bellerose school district allocated the least amount of funding per student, $22,466 for its 1,603 students. The North Shore school district allocated $45,601 for its 2,543 students, the most among the districts. The East Williston School District, which has the second-fewest enrolled students, will spend the second-highest per pupil at $41,192, according to the statistics. Great Neck will spend $39,539 per pupil, Roslyn $38,804, Mineola $36,559, Manhasset $34,193, Port Washington $32,994, Herricks $30,023, Sewanhaka $28,260 and New Hyde Park-Garden City Park the second-lowest per pupil with $27,043, according to statistics. Despite having 1,400 fewer students than the Sewanhaka School District’s 8,045 students, the Great Neck School District will outspend Sewanhaka by about $35 million — $261.4 million to $227.4 million — for the 2022-23 school year. Blank Slate’s study analyzed en-

rollment figures and budget expenditures for the 11 public school districts throughout the North Shore of Nassau County (East Williston, Floral Park-Bellerose, Great Neck, Herricks, Manhasset, Mineola, New Hyde Park-Garden City Park, North Shore, Port Washington, Roslyn and Sewanhaka). The analysis did not take into account property tax values, special education programs, adult education programs, English as new or secondary language programs, or other external factors aside from the overall budget and how many students were enrolled in the district. The analysis examined approved 2022-23 budgets based on preliminary enrollment figures for 2021-22. The average enrollment for the analyzed school districts was 3,706 students, an increase of 74 from the 2020-21 enrollment figures, according to the statistics. As a result, school districts throughout the North Shore increased their average spending per pupil by $230, according to the statistics and the approved 2021-22 budgets. North Shore’s budget, which had the highest per-student spending, has increased by more than $7 million from the 2019-20 budget, despite enrollment decreasing by five students since the 2018-19 school year. Continued on Page 42

PHOTO COURTESY OF THE MINEOLA UNION FREE SCHOOL DISTRICT

Mineola High School held Battle of the Classes last week, the first in two years.

Driver in fatal NHP car crash held without bail BY R OB E RT PE L A E Z The 22-year-old driver charged in a DWI car crash that killed three relatives of a girl celebrating her Sweet 16 party at The Inn in New Hyde Park Sat-

urday night was still hospitalized Tuesday and ordered held without bail, his lawyer and officials said. Dante Lennon of Freeport was behind the wheel of a speeding 2012 Mercedes-Benz sedan that struck a 2010 Lincoln Town

Car carrying six people outside of the Inn on the eastbound lane of Jericho Turnpike, police said. Detectives responded to the collision shortly after 11 p.m., officials said. Continued on Page 43

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