Showing posts with label East Village Loves NYC. Show all posts
Showing posts with label East Village Loves NYC. Show all posts

Monday, July 1, 2024

With larger new kitchen, EVLovesNYC expands to feed more New Yorkers

Photos and reporting by Stacie Joy 

After an extended search, mutual aid group EVLovesNYC has found a kitchen space that fits its growing organization and mission. 

EVLovesNYC recently began cooking every Sunday at Rethink Food's state-of-the-art community kitchen at 116 W. Houston St. between Thompson and Sullivan. (Rethink Food is a nonprofit "creating a more sustainable and equitable food system by working in partnership with a network of local restaurants, community-based organizations, and food donors.") 

According to organizers, the move allows EVLovesNYC to scale up production numbers and expand its reach throughout NYC while maintaining its Sunday meals in the East Village, Tompkins Square Park, and with regular distribution partners throughout the city. 

The volunteer-run group's modest origins date back to spring 2020 when a handful of friends got together to prepare meals for neighbors from a small East Village apartment kitchen. 

Early on, Ali Sahin, the owner of C&B Cafe on Seventh Street, donated his kitchen on Mondays so the group could cook its meals. By June 2020, they had outgrown the space and started assembling deliveries at the Sixth Street Community Center between Avenue B and Avenue C. 

More than four years and 500,000 meals later, EVLovesNYC is still preparing meals — beef, chicken and vegan, made with attention to allergens and religious practices — for distribution.

I spoke with Tyler Hefferon (below right), EVLovesNYC's executive director, about the group's new kitchen and how it impacts its mission.
You've been looking for one for a while now. How did this come about? What is your agreement for using the Rethink space? 

We were put in touch with Matt Jozwiak [founder and CEO] of Rethink Food through East Village Neighbors Who Care. This mutual aid group receives hot meals from both EVLovesNYC and Rethink Food to support the number of clinics and services they offer to asylum seekers. 

After a short call with the Rethink team, we discussed EVLovesNYC using Rethink Food's new Community Kitchen on the weekends. Their staff is usually only active in the space Monday through Friday, and we have full access to their kitchen and equipment on Sundays. 

You’ve been in the new space for a few weeks now. How has it been cooking in the new kitchen? 

Like any new kitchen, there has been some getting used to the new layout, but in general, we are excited about the number of cooking surfaces, which will significantly increase the speed at which we can produce meals!

At the Sixth Street Community Center, we have been limited to six stovetop burners and a five-rack convection oven, capping us at around 2,500 meals per day. To put it in perspective, we now have 24 stovetop burners, a griddle, two deep fryers, four gas-powered ovens, and a tilt skillet at our disposal. Not to mention a loading dock for our distribution partners to pick up meals, an additional 800 square feet of prep and meal-assembly space, and a refrigerated compost room. 

Our core volunteer team worked in small groups in June as we familiarized ourselves with the space, but we are excited to open the space to online volunteer signups on July 7.
Will you continue to use the space at Sixth Street Community Center? 

Yes. Our lease was up for renewal, and we were unable to afford the increased cost of the space. In an effort to continue our partnership, we signed a three-month agreement effective July 1 with a less drastic increase, but with an understanding that we would cap our production at the Sixth Street Community Center to 1,300 meals per week so that they may lease the kitchen to other organizations. 

While this forces us to cut our Sunday operations, we still plan on using the space for smaller events throughout the week. 

Will you still be doing distributions in the East Village? If so, what are the dates, times and locations? 

We will be sending hot meals from our new kitchen every Sunday from noon to 2 p.m. in an effort to not disrupt our food distribution in front of the Sixth Street Community Center and Tompkins Square Park every Sunday from 1:30 p.m. to 2:30 p.m. 

We will also continue supporting East Village Neighbors Who Care's services during the week, including the Free Store at Hope Church every other Monday from 1 p.m. to 3 p.m., and services at St. Mark's Church in-the-Bowery every Wednesday from 4:30 p.m. to 6:30 p.m. 

We are also working with Rethink Food to add additional distributions in Tompkins Square Park on Tuesday, Thursday, and Friday afternoons. 

The new industrial kitchen is enormous. Does this increase the quantity of food you can produce? What about types of cuisines? 

Yes! We are proceeding with caution as we get acclimated to the logistics of the new space and have a better sense of what quantities we can handle financially, but our real-estate situation had been the major cap to our meal production every Sunday.

Realistically, we will start increasing our quantities to support additional distributions around the city starting in October. If we can figure out how to make it happen financially, we could gradually increase our production to 4,000-5,000 individually packaged hot meals every Sunday. 

The new equipment, such as the fryers and tilt skillet, absolutely opens doors to new cuisines. As we familiarize ourselves with all of the fancy prep equipment, we can eventually incorporate new complexities into our recipes that we've been avoiding just to be efficient with our volunteer prep team's time.
How can the community support EVLovesNYC going forward? 

As exciting as doubling our meal counts sounds, we hope that our fundraising can keep up to pace! If you are in a position to donate to our kitchen warming fund, do so here

Watch for July volunteer shifts [link here] if you want to join us at the new kitchen. 

There is nothing more valuable than spreading the word and sharing our work and mission within your network. Any interaction with our social media accounts helps our visibility exponentially. You never know who may be able to help.
[Co-founder Mammad Mahmoodi]
Previously on EV Grieve



Tuesday, January 30, 2024

East Village Loves NYC seeks a new commercial kitchen to help feed NYC’s food insecure

File photo by Stacie Joy 

East Village Loves NYC — the local volunteer group formed in the spring of 2020 to feed people in need during the pandemic — is looking for a commercial kitchen to use to continue their mission to help end food insecurity in New York.

Since June 2020, EV Loves NYC, now a 501c3 nonprofit organization, has prepared meals from the kitchen at the Sixth Street Community between Avenue B and Avenue C.

Here's more via an Instagram post:
The need for food and love in our city has only gotten greater and we're still operating out of a setup the size of a suburban home's kitchen. (Don't get us wrong: We are forever grateful to Sixth Street. They opened their doors to us and gave us keys, no questions asked, in June 2020 when we were just a small group of friends, not yet a not-for-profit org.) You are our best resource, as always. Can you think of any leads? Corporate kitchens? Kitchens in event spaces or church halls or arts venues? Anything?
You can find contact info on the EV Loves NYC website here... or DM them on Instagram.

In the spring of 2020, a handful of friends got together to prepare meals for neighbors. Early on, Ali Sahin, the owner of C&B Cafe on Seventh Street, donated his kitchen on Mondays for the group to cook its meals. By June 2020, they had outgrown the space and started assembling deliveries at the Sixth Street Community Center between Avenue B and Avenue C. 

Eventually, the group became known as East Village Loves NYC, with volunteers in the four digits. In their first year, the group cooked over 100,000 meals, not to mention donated 325,000 pounds of groceries and 7,000 pounds of pantry bags.
 

Tuesday, December 19, 2023

EV Loves NYC looks for support and a partnership with the city to aid in feeding asylum seekers

Photos and reporting by Stacie Joy 
Note: Faces of the asylum seekers have been blurred 

The situation at the reticketing center at the former St. Brigid School hasn't improved since the last time we visited. 

There are still almost 1,000 people being processed at the center on Seventh Street and Avenue B daily, and few shelter placements. Asylum seekers who have received their 30- or 60-day notice evicting them from their shelter wait in long lines, sometimes overnight, to be given a wristband and hopefully temporary placement or a cot assignment.

The overwhelming majority do not get placed and can opt to go to Bathgate in the Bronx, where they may be able to sleep on the floor, or, if it’s a Code Blue or weather event, a center in Gramercy, where they can stay but are only offered chairs overnight. They can also opt for oneway reticketing anywhere else in the world, but this does not seem to be a popular choice. 

Meals are also an ongoing crisis for asylum seekers, refugees and migrants, with city no-bid contract providers often offering spoiled or moldy food or items that can't be eaten by Muslims. 

Last week, The New York Times reported that DocGo, which has a $432 million no-bid contract with the city, discarded more than 70,000 uneaten meals between Oct. 22 and Nov. 22. The Post spoke with asylum seekers who said the meals — which DocGo charges the city $11 each for — were unhealthy and inedible.
"The breakfast and lunch is so cold we can't eat it, so it gets thrown in the trash," said one mother.

Mutual aid groups like the volunteer-run East Village Loves NYC have been working to provide hot meals as often as possible, with Sunday's distribution providing a choice of vegan sweet potato curry, balsamic-glazed chicken or beef meatball stew with side slaw Halal meals to just shy of 600 people at the site. Also available are hot coffee, snacks, and socks — desperately needed in the cold weather. (Although fewer than the last time I attended a distribution, many people still wore chancletas or sandals.)
Almost everyone I spoke to mentioned being hungry, often pantomiming by rubbing their stomachs and gesturing for food. In Spanish, women gathered around me and asked for help with shoes, underwear, warm clothes, blankets, or tents. 

A group of 20 women were escorted to the nearby Sixth Street Community Center between Avenue B and Avenue C, where they were offered donated clothing.
Sasha Allenby, co-founder of East Village Loves New York, explained the numbers game of fundraising to provide food to those in need. Since the long lines at the reticketing center at St Brigid's started three weeks ago, the nonprofit has already delivered 3,300 free meals plus fruit and coffee, costing them over $10,000. 

"This would have cost the city over $40,000 considering they pay their contractors between $11 to $14 to provide a sub-par meal," Allenby said. "Since the asylum seekers began arriving last year, we've spent around $60,000 on providing free meals. We care about every asylum seeker and want to keep helping. Still, at the end of the day, we're the little guy on a shoestring budget raised by small donations from the community, and we can only continue helping if we are supported by the City."

Aside from feeding the asylum seekers on Sunday, East Village Loves NYC partnered with multiple organizations this week to help provide hungry New Yorkers with meals in Manhattan, Queens, Brooklyn, and the Bronx. (Find a list here.)
We contacted David Schmid, deputy commissioner of external affairs of the NYC Office of Emergency Management. He said that "the guests were extremely appreciative (as are we)" of the meals and assistance East Village Loves NYC provided. 

Schmid said they have a meeting set up with Mammad Mahmoodi, co-founder of the group, tomorrow for the city to discuss how they can continue the partnership. 

"We'll walk him through the Strengthening Communities program in the hopes that they'll apply for our next cohort in 2024," Schmid said. "In the meantime, we've also discussed using some private funds that we've raised internally to make a monetary donation to EV Loves NYC to recognize their contribution and ongoing support. It will be a modest donation for now, but we certainly want to acknowledge their incredible work while we explore how to best formalize and sustain the relationship going forward."
NYCEM Commissioner Zach Iscol mentioned the partnership in the Dec. 15 public safety update at City Hall, and you can hear his remarks about EV Loves NYC and the Strengthening Communities program around the 16:30-minute mark here

Curious about how you can help? EV Loves NYC is hosting a sock drive. Details here

Previously on EV Grieve