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Bus driver spends $450 of his $700 paycheck to feed the homeless

Dacalo

Diamond Member
CNN.com

JACKSON HEIGHTS, New York (CNN) -- Every day, unemployed men gather under the elevated 7 train in Jackson Heights, Queens. Many of them are homeless. All of them are hungry.
Jorge Munoz estimates he has served more than 70,000 free meals since 2004.

Jorge Munoz estimates he has served more than 70,000 free meals since 2004.

At around 9:30 each night, relief comes in the form of Jorge Munoz's white pickup truck, filled with hot food, coffee and hot chocolate.

The men eagerly accept containers of chicken and rice from Munoz, devouring the food on the spot. Quiet gratitude radiates from the crowd.

For many, this is their only hot meal of the day; for some, it's the first food they've eaten since last night.

"I thank God for touching that man's heart," says Eduardo, one of the regulars.

Watching Munoz, 44, distribute meals and offer extra cups of coffee, it's clear he's passionate about bringing food to hungry people. For more than four years, Munoz and his family have been feeding those in need seven nights a week, 365 days a year. To date, he estimates he's served more than 70,000 meals. Video Watch Munoz describe how his work is a family affair »

Word of his mobile soup kitchen has spread, and people of all backgrounds and status now join the largely-Hispanic crowd surrounding his truck -- Egyptians, Chinese, Ethiopians, South Asians, white and black Americans and a British man who lost his job.

"I'll help anyone who needs to eat. Just line up," Munoz says.

And at a time when food banks are struggling to keep up with skyrocketing demand, he's never been needed more. But for Munoz, a school bus driver by day, this work is a labor of love.
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"When I see these guys on the street," he says, "it's like seeing me, 20-something years ago when I came to this country."

Munoz was born in Colombia and his father died in an accident when he was young. When his mother found it difficult to support Munoz and his sister, she made her way to New York, finding work in Brooklyn as a nanny. At her urging, Munoz followed in her footsteps, coming to the United States in the 1980s.

"She said this was a better future for us," he says.

Munoz obtained legal residency in 1987 and later became a citizen, along with his mother and sister. He never stood on a street corner to find work, but as an immigrant, he identifies with many of the men he feeds.

Munoz began his unorthodox meal program -- now his nonprofit, An Angel in Queens -- in the summer of 2004. Friends told him about large amounts of food being thrown away at their jobs. At first, he collected leftovers from local businesses and handed out brown bag lunches to underprivileged men three nights a week. Within a few months, Munoz and his mother were preparing 20 home-cooked meals daily.

Numbers gradually increased over the years to 35 per night, then 60. In recent months, that number has jumped to as many as 140 meals a night.

Sustaining this endeavor consumes most of his life. To his mother's dismay, his family's Woodhaven home is bursting with goods related to this work. An oversize freezer takes up most of the dining room, and the porch is lined with canned food and paper products.

Daily operations now run like a well-oiled machine. Munoz gets up around 5:00 a.m. to drive his bus route, and he calls home on his breaks to see how the cooking is going. When he gets home around 5:30 p.m. -- often stopping to pick up food donations -- he helps pack up meals before heading out to "his corner" in Jackson Heights.

"He comes here without fail," says one of the men. "It could be cold, it could be really hot, but he's here." Video Watch Munoz in action in Queens, New York »

On Saturdays he takes the men breakfast, and on Sundays -- his "day off" -- he brings them ham-and-cheese sandwiches. It's a relentless schedule, but either Munoz or his sister does it every night of the year.

"If I don't go, I'm going to feel bad," he says. "I know they're going to be waiting for me."

With the economic downturn, donations have slowed as the crowds awaiting Munoz's arrival have grown. But he is determined to do all he can to meet their needs.

Munoz estimates that food and gas cost approximately $400 to 450 a week; he and his family are funding the operation through their savings and his weekly $700 paycheck.
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Asked why he spends so much time to help people he doesn't know, he answers, "I have a stable job, my mom, my family, a house... everything I want, I have. And these guys [don't]. So I just think, 'OK, I have the food.' At least for today they're going to have a meal to eat."

This man gives me faith in humanity.

His nonprofit website.
 
Originally posted by: Dacalo


This man gives me faith in humanity.

Wait until he gets fined for not having the appropriate permits, and health inspections for serving food to others. That'll kick that pesky faith in humanity right out of you ;^)
 
I wouldn't do it. I'm not that selfless. I can't even really understand it...
 
Originally posted by: lxskllr
Originally posted by: Dacalo


This man gives me faith in humanity.

Wait until he gets fined for not having the appropriate permits, and health inspections for serving food to others. That'll kick that pesky faith in humanity right out of you ;^)

:thumbsup:
 
I hear living in NY is expensive, I wonder how he gets by on whats left. I know you can live on very little if you chose to, and if he wants to do this, more power to him. His heart is big.
 
I think it's stupid. If he wants to do it, fine, everyone has his quirks. As for myself, I work to ensure I don't end up as one of these homeless people.
 
Originally posted by: fleshconsumed
I think it's stupid. If he wants to do it, fine, everyone has his quirks. As for myself, I work to ensure I don't end up as one of these homeless people.

It is one thing to be selfish and admit you wouldn't do it but it is another to call it stupid.
 
That's truly generous of him. I'll have send him a donation via his website. I wonder where under the 7 line he visits.

edit: Truly generous of him AND his family.
 
Originally posted by: fleshconsumed
I think it's stupid. If he wants to do it, fine, everyone has his quirks. As for myself, I work to ensure I don't end up as one of these homeless people.

And the hours spent on w/e hobbies you have are REAL productive. What he's doing is the ONLY thing that can ever Fill that empty feeling we're all born with. It's in Every relgious text, and common sense to the point of cliche, but it's still thee. reason
 
Originally posted by: Tweak155
Originally posted by: fleshconsumed
I think it's stupid. If he wants to do it, fine, everyone has his quirks. As for myself, I work to ensure I don't end up as one of these homeless people.

It is one thing to be selfish and admit you wouldn't do it but it is another to call it stupid.

What happens if he loses his job and is forced to become homeless himself, all because he spent all his money, no matter what the cause is, without saving for a rainy day? It is stupid.
 
Originally posted by: fleshconsumed
Originally posted by: Tweak155
Originally posted by: fleshconsumed
I think it's stupid. If he wants to do it, fine, everyone has his quirks. As for myself, I work to ensure I don't end up as one of these homeless people.

It is one thing to be selfish and admit you wouldn't do it but it is another to call it stupid.

What happens if he loses his job and is forced to become homeless himself, all because he spent all his money, no matter what the cause is, without saving for a rainy day? It is stupid.

Munoz estimates that food and gas cost approximately $400 to 450 a week; he and his family are funding the operation through their savings and his weekly $700 paycheck.

The have (some) savings already.
 
Originally posted by: fleshconsumed
Originally posted by: Tweak155
Originally posted by: fleshconsumed
I think it's stupid. If he wants to do it, fine, everyone has his quirks. As for myself, I work to ensure I don't end up as one of these homeless people.

It is one thing to be selfish and admit you wouldn't do it but it is another to call it stupid.

What happens if he loses his job and is forced to become homeless himself, all because he spent all his money, no matter what the cause is, without saving for a rainy day? It is stupid.

Sometimes you've gotta roll the dice, and do what you think's right. I think the work he's doing is awesome, and if everybody pitched in a little, he wouldn't have to stretch himself thin, and do all the work himself ;^)
 
Originally posted by: fleshconsumed
I think it's stupid. If he wants to do it, fine, everyone has his quirks. As for myself, I work to ensure I don't end up as one of these homeless people.

You're a class act. :roll:
 
Originally posted by: Lonyo
Originally posted by: fleshconsumed
Originally posted by: Tweak155
Originally posted by: fleshconsumed
I think it's stupid. If he wants to do it, fine, everyone has his quirks. As for myself, I work to ensure I don't end up as one of these homeless people.

It is one thing to be selfish and admit you wouldn't do it but it is another to call it stupid.

What happens if he loses his job and is forced to become homeless himself, all because he spent all his money, no matter what the cause is, without saving for a rainy day? It is stupid.

Munoz estimates that food and gas cost approximately $400 to 450 a week; he and his family are funding the operation through their savings and his weekly $700 paycheck.

The have (some) savings already.

So he's burning through his paycheck and his savings. Real smart.
 
Originally posted by: Old Hippie
Originally posted by: fleshconsumed
I think it's stupid. If he wants to do it, fine, everyone has his quirks. As for myself, I work to ensure I don't end up as one of these homeless people.

You're a class act. :roll:

Sorry for bringing reality into the thread.
 
Originally posted by: fleshconsumed
Originally posted by: Lonyo
Originally posted by: fleshconsumed
Originally posted by: Tweak155
Originally posted by: fleshconsumed
I think it's stupid. If he wants to do it, fine, everyone has his quirks. As for myself, I work to ensure I don't end up as one of these homeless people.

It is one thing to be selfish and admit you wouldn't do it but it is another to call it stupid.

What happens if he loses his job and is forced to become homeless himself, all because he spent all his money, no matter what the cause is, without saving for a rainy day? It is stupid.

Munoz estimates that food and gas cost approximately $400 to 450 a week; he and his family are funding the operation through their savings and his weekly $700 paycheck.

The have (some) savings already.

So he's burning through his paycheck and his savings. Real smart.

To be fair, the publicity he's getting through his website and articles like this will probably generate enough donations to fund what he's doing now easily. I'll bet a few people on this board will donate, even.
 
Nice.

There was a man on the news that gave , I think it was $2000 to each of his employees and told them to spend it on whatever they wanted but to give a small amount to a charity of their choice. They were mostly low income people that were working things like cash register or bagging groceries. He said it was his form of stimulus and that he had noticed people were kind of feeling down on the job. One woman said she was going to buy tires for her car so she could continue to come to work.

 
Originally posted by: CRXican
good way to keep the homeless from being motivated to improve their situation

just wow. The guys are eating 1 meal a day. It must be a paradise like life. They work manual labor jobs and send the money home. Now they can't even find work. Everybody gets on hard times. I can't believe people are actually finding negative things about this article. Guy is a saint in every sense of the word.
 
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