You are reading

Flushing, Forest Hills Organizations Providing Free Food to Federal Employees During Government Shutdown

Volunteers and members of Masbia Queens handing out fliers of their services to federal workers at LaGuardia Airport (via Alexander Rapaport/Masbia Queens)

Jan. 18, 2019 By Meghan Sackman

Two Flushing and Forest Hills-based organizations have been working to ensure that no federal employee goes hungry in the midst of the fourth week of the partial government shutdown.

The Flushing Jewish Community Council (FJCC) and Masbia of Queens are currently providing free boxes of food, hot meals or both to federal government employees and their families, many of whom have been mandated to go back to work without pay.

The FJCC will hold its next food distribution event next week on Jan. 22, where government employees that show up with work IDs to Temple Beth Sholom at 171-39 Northern Blvd. can receive a box of groceries with canned fruits and vegetables, pasta, cereal, and more.

via FJCC

The organization will also inform federal government workers of other free programs it provides, including English and ESL classes and family therapy.

Over in Forest Hills, Masbia of Queens, the nonprofit soup kitchen and food pantry, has been spreading the word of their available services to federal employees around the city.

The soup kitchen at 64th Road has already been providing free dinners to those in need five nights on week, and will now donate boxes of groceries to federal employees and contractors.

A grocery and produce package prepared for a federal employee by Masbia Queens (via Alexander Rapaport/Masbia Queens)

Members and volunteers of the nonprofit were out handing fliers earlier this week to federal employees at LaGuardia and JFK airports about the program.

“This is the awareness phase,” said Alexander Rapaport, executive director of Masbia Queens. “It takes time for people who usually have a steady paycheck to make peace with the situation to go and get charity handouts, so we wanted to let people know that there’s help out there.”

The Queens facility at 105-47 64th Rd., part of a network of emergency food programs that serves over 2 million meals a year, is open Sunday through Thursday for hot sit-in meals from 2 p.m. to 6 p.m., where grocery packages are also available for pick-up.

The size of the box could change depending on the size of the family, but boxes typically contain enough food for three meals a day for three days for all members of the family, according to Rappaport. Packages may be picked by once a week by a given family.

Sit down meals at the site are available to all nightly, with meals consisting of bread, a beverage, a main dish, two sides, and dessert.

Grocery packages contain raw foods families can prepare such as chicken, salmon, rice, beans, pasta, condiments, and vary based on the recipients’ preferences as well as the pantry’s stock.

“We wanted people to know that there’s help if they ever find themselves with an empty refrigerator,” Rappaport said.

The Masbia network has expanded its hours in some of its locations to accommodate federal workers. A list of locations and times can be found in the flier below.

email the author: news@queenspost.com
No comments yet

Leave a Comment
Reply to this Comment

All comments are subject to moderation before being posted.

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

Recent News

Flushing man gets 25 years to life in prison for ‘incredibly brutal’ murder, sex assault on 29-year-old woman: DA

Flushing resident Quiming Wan was sentenced to 25 years to life in prison in Queens Supreme Court on Tuesday morning for the November 2021 murder and sexual abuse of Jiaomei Zhou, a 29-year-old woman whose battered body he carried from his blood-soaked apartment to the lobby before being stopped by building residents.

Wan, 55, of Main Street, was convicted by a jury in October of murder in the second degree, aggravated sexual abuse in the first degree and other related crimes after a nearly two-week-long trial.

Teenage girl groped by man on a stand-up scooter on Main Street in Downtown Flushing: NYPD

A 15-year-old girl was groped as she walked in Downtown Flushing by a man riding a stand-up scooter on the morning of Thursday, Nov. 14.

Police from the 109th Precinct are looking for a suspect who approached the victim as she was walking in the vicinity of Main Street and 39th Avenue just before 9:30 a.m. and touched her rear end before riding away southbound on Main Street toward Roosevelt Avenue a block away. The girl was not injured during the encounter, police said.