Post job

Competitor Summary. See how Long Island Crisis Center compares to its main competitors:

  • The Trevor Project has the most employees (2,016).
  • The oldest company is Children's Aid Society, founded in 1853.
Work at Long Island Crisis Center?
Share your experience

Long Island Crisis Center vs competitors

CompanyFounding dateZippia scoreHeadquarters# of LocationsRevenueEmployees
1971
3.7
Bellmore, NY1$5.0M30
1998
3.2
West Hollywood, CA1$13.1M2,016
1970
3.3
Hyattsville, MD1$5.0M75
1977
4.3
Indianapolis, IN1$50.0M200
Reformed Presbyterian Women's Association
1897
3.2
Pittsburgh, PA1$1.0M23
Ohio Health Care Association
1946
3.8
Centerville, OH1$5.0M13
1957
4.8
Wernersville, PA1$85.9M500
1994
4.4
Los Angeles, CA1$20.0M50
1978
3.8
Philadelphia, PA1$50.0M50
1916
4.2
Bernards, NJ1$50.0M200
2006
3.9
New York, NY1$6.3M125
1970
4.0
San Diego, CA1$50.0M232
1853
4.0
New York, NY1$140.2M50
1970
4.5
Olympia, WA1$10.0M80
1947
4.3
Portland, OR6$50.0M400
Center Against Sexual & Family Violence
1977
3.7
El Paso, TX1$3.0M5
1971
3.7
Albuquerque, NM1$24.7M240
1968
4.1
New York, NY1$31.6M65
1869
3.4
Pittsburgh, PA1$10.0M100
1889
4.0
New York, NY1$52.8M1,000
Auberle
1952
4.0
McKeesport, PA1$5.0M5

Rate how well Long Island Crisis Center differentiates itself from its competitors.

Zippia waving zebra

Long Island Crisis Center salaries vs competitors

Compare Long Island Crisis Center salaries vs competitors

CompanyAverage salaryHourly salarySalary score
Long Island Crisis Center
$37,633$18.09-

Compare Long Island Crisis Center job title salaries vs competitors

CompanyHighest salaryHourly salary
Long Island Crisis Center
$55,011$26.45
Community Crisis Services Inc
$51,636$24.83
Ohio Health Care Association
$46,136$22.18
Indiana Health Centers
$44,600$21.44
The Trevor Project
$42,634$20.50
Reformed Presbyterian Women's Association
$41,648$20.02
YDI NM
$40,374$19.41
Children of Promise, NYC
$40,306$19.38
Educational Alliance
$40,263$19.36
Auberle
$39,965$19.21
Center Against Sexual & Family Violence
$39,897$19.18
San Diego Youth Services
$38,172$18.35
Bonnie Brae
$38,153$18.34
Phoenix House
$37,827$18.19
Non Profits
$37,288$17.93
Women Against Abuse, Inc
$36,726$17.66
Caron Treatment Centers
$36,678$17.63
Community Youth Services
$36,318$17.46
Morrison Child and Family Services
$35,736$17.18
Dream Center
$35,593$17.11

Do you work at Long Island Crisis Center?

Does Long Island Crisis Center effectively differentiate itself from competitors?

Long Island Crisis Center jobs

Long Island Crisis Center demographics vs competitors

Compare gender at Long Island Crisis Center vs competitors

Job titleMaleFemale
Family Resources28%72%
Ohio Health Care Association32%68%
Children's Aid Society33%67%
Educational Alliance34%66%
YDI NM38%62%
Long Island Crisis Center--
Male
Female
100%
75%
50%
25%
0%

Long Island Crisis Center

Ohio Health Care Association

0%
25%
50%
75%
100%

Compare race at Long Island Crisis Center vs competitors

CompanyWhiteHispanic or LatinoBlack or African AmericanAsianUnknownDiversity score
54%25%12%6%3%
9.5
54%22%12%8%4%
9.2
Ohio Health Care Association
71%8%10%7%3%
8.6
70%12%9%5%3%
7.6
57%22%11%6%4%
8.7
55%18%12%8%7%
8.6

Long Island Crisis Center and similar companies CEOs

CEOBio

Drew McWilliams is a Chief Executive Officer at Morrison Child and Family Services and is based in Portland, Oregon. He has worked as Supervisor at The Village for Families & Children, Chief Operating Officer at Morrison Child and Family Services, and Division Director--Outpatient at Morrison Child and Family Services.

Phoebe Boyer is a President and CEO at Children's Aid Society. She has worked as Executive Director at Robertson Foundation and Executive Director at Tiger Foundation.. Phoebe studied at Columbia Business School and Wesleyan University.

Alan van Capelle
Educational Alliance

Alan van Capelle is a nationally recognized leader in the field of civil rights and social justice. As CEO of Educational Alliance, he leads a network of community centers offering social, educational, cultural and recreational services, programs, and events to the diverse population of downtown Manhattan. Selected by the Jewish Daily Forward as one of the “Forward 50,” Mr. van Capelle catapulted Bend the Arc into the forefront of the national progressive landscape as CEO and represented the American Jewish community in his speech at the 50th Anniversary of the March on Washington. Also chosen by the New York Observer as one of New York’s top “power gays,” Mr. van Capelle won major victories for LGBT rights as Executive Director of the Empire State Pride Agenda. In forming partnerships with labor unions and faith communities, he paved the way for marriage equality in New York, while more than tripling Pride Agenda’s budget. Mr. van Capelle began his career as an organizer and contract negotiator in the labor movement, eventually running the day-to-day political operations of the Service Employees International Union (SEIU) Local 32BJ, the largest and most powerful building service union in the country. He served as Deputy Comptroller for the City of New York, where he advised the agency on all matters involving public policy, media, and community relations. He has also served as a member of the New York City Banking Commission. Mr. van Capelle has been named to the National Leadership Council’s “40 under 40” list, and has been quoted by The New York Times, CNN, New York 1, Newsweek and New York Magazine. Mr. van Capelle has served on the transition committees for Governor Eliot Spitzer and Attorney General Andrew Cuomo. He was also selected as an elector of the 2008 New York Electoral College. A lover of all things New York, Mr. van Capelle serves on the Board for the Association of a Better New York (ABNY) and the Association for a Better New York Foundation and recently served as a member of the transition team for New York Attorney General-Elect Letitia James. In 2016, he was appointed by Mayor Bill de Blasio to the Children’s Cabinet Advisory Committee. Mr. van Capelle is also a former member of Manhattan’s Community Board 3. Mr. van Capelle earned his MPA from the Robert F. Wagner School of Public Service at New York University, where he currently serves as an Adjunct Professor and teaches on organizational culture. He holds Bachelor of Science degree from the City University of New York. Mr. van Capelle lives with his husband, Matthew Morningstar, on the Lower East Side where they are raising their two children, Ethan and Patrick.

John Lydon
Auberle

Nicole Cisne Durbin
Family Resources

Scott Hanauer is a Chief Executive Officer at Community Youth Services.

Paul D. Rieger
Bonnie Brae

Experienced Chief Executive Officer with a demonstrated history of working in the non-profit organization management industry. Skilled in Nonprofit Organizations, Management, Customer Service, Strategic Planning, and Program Development. Strong business development professional with a Master’s Degree focused in Social Work from University of Pennsylvania.

Long Island Crisis Center competitors FAQs

Search for jobs