IN THE NEWS! Fellowship in Prayer donates to local nonprofits for COVID-19 relief
May 22, 2020
JFCS received a grant of $2,500 from Fellowship in Prayer to support the food programs serving those impacted by COVID-19.
May 22, 2020
JFCS received a grant of $2,500 from Fellowship in Prayer to support the food programs serving those impacted by COVID-19.
May 18, 2020
The lives of those in the Mercer County community were upended when social distancing guidelines and shut downs took effect in mid-March. It became quickly apparent that food was an area of serious concern – the availability, accessibility, and affordability of resources was almost immediately an issue facing those already in vulnerable positions.
“The increase in calls for food started not long after the initial state-wide shutdown,” says Michelle Napell, Executive Director of Jewish Family & Children’s Service of Greater Mercer County (JFCS). “We stocked up on food for our on-site pantry and upcoming Mobile Food Pantry stops, as well as making sure we had resources prepared to continue our senior nutrition programs.”
JFCS is a non-profit, comprehensive social service agency that focuses on help, hope and healing in the Greater Mercer region. The agency serves those of all ages, backgrounds and faiths with mental health counseling, senior services, and a range of food distribution programs. From the early days of social distancing guidelines, JFCS has adapted all programs to better serve the changing and escalating need in the community. Through the use of technology and adapted procedures, all agency services have continued during this shut down.
Since March 16, JFCS has helped to feed over 2,250 people through its brick-and-mortar, Yvette Sarah Clayman Kosher Food Pantry, and the JFCS Mobile Food Pantry; provided grab-and-go hot lunches to 25-30 seniors four days a week; and continued delivery of 120 meals per week through Kosher Meals on Wheels to homebound seniors.

“Under normal circumstances, our brick-and-mortar and mobile pantries offer a healthy, choice-shopping experiences to our clients. At the brick-and-mortar pantry clients would make private appointments and make selections that match their personal and family preferences and diets. The same was true of the Mobile Food Pantry, where clients could select from a list of options by USDA nutritional category,” said Ms. Napell. “While we cannot offer the same choice experience at this time, we are staying true to the focus on healthy offerings and continue to provide fresh produce, sourced from local farms, and frozen meats, in addition to the pre-packed bags of shelf staples.”
The Mobile Food Pantry officially hit the road in January 2020, with a planned roll out of one stop per week during the first three months, then increasing to two stops per week through its first year on the road. The coronavirus expedited that timeline and the Mobile Food Pantry has been making 2 – 3 stops per week since mid-March, with demand growing.
“It is incredible how quickly word has spread. At the start of the shutdown, we connected with our existing partners and made sure that the local health departments, school districts, and community agencies knew about our resources,” said Beth Englezos, Manager of Senior Programs & Hunger Prevention. “Within a few weeks, we were connected with new partners including housing communities for adults with disabilities and low-income seniors, and the local school systems to help them support youth in the Title I program, as well as other families who are facing financial challenges due to job loss or reduced income.”
Seniors are one of the most at-risk demographics during the pandemic, and it was clear that seniors would be more severely impacted by social distancing guidelines.
“Our seniors are experiencing high levels of fear right now; the reports have been clear that older adults, in particular those who are already frail or have pre-existing conditions, face the greatest risk in contracting the virus,” said Ms. Napell. “Our Senior Services team receives new calls each week from clients, or those who have heard about our agency, seeking help accessing food.”
JFCS transitioned its Kosher Café, a designated Senior Nutrition Site funded by the Mercer County Office on Aging to provide hot, nutritious meals to low-income seniors, to a grab-and-go format the week prior to the official state-wide shutdown. The Kosher Café has seen a 25% increase in attendance as more of the regular guests come more often and word spreads to others who need this resource.
The agency also maintains a Kosher Meals on Wheels (KMOW) program that supplies five meals per week to homebound older adults who wish to keep a Kosher diet. Through a recent emergency funding award by the Jewish Federation of Princeton Mercer Bucks, the agency will be expanding the program to provide a total of 14 meals per week to the current KMOW recipients and expand the program to others who find themselves in need of food including Holocaust Survivors and seniors enrolled in JFCS services.
JFCS established a ‘Shop & Drop’ program wherein the agency matches a volunteer with a senior who expressed a need for help getting groceries.
“Older adults are experiencing the same obstacles as many of us – difficulty securing delivery times from local stores and having limited options when placing orders. Additionally, seniors may not have reliable transportation or simply be afraid to venture into a store,” said Ms. Napell.
‘Shop & Drop’ volunteers coordinate directly with the senior for their shopping list and a delivery schedule that works for them. The volunteer completes the shopping in the store and delivers to the doorstep of the senior for a no-contact transaction. The program is designed for seniors who do not have financial need but are facing difficulty getting out to a grocery store on a regular basis.
“I am incredibly proud of my staff, even as new challenges arise week after week with new guidelines, they have not faltered in their commitment to our clients,” says Ms. Napell. “In a time when help, hope and healing are needed more than ever, JFCS remains steady in our commitment to the community.”
For more information about program offerings, visit the JFCS website or call at 609-987-8100 Mon-Thurs 9 AM – 5 PM and Fridays 9 AM – 4 PM.
May 5, 2020
Jewish Family & Children’s Service of Greater Mercer County (JFCS) was awarded the Network of Jewish Human Service Agency’s 2020 Annual Conference Pillar of Excellence Award in the category Innovation for the Mobile Food Pantry. Award winners were recognized during the VISION 2020: NJHSA Virtual Annual Meeting attended by more than 200 agency executives, professionals, and lay leaders.
Illuminating the work of our most exemplary member organization is the goal of the Pillar of Excellence. This year we had many stellar submissions from among our members, and our selection process involved rigorous peer review.” said NJHSA CEO Reuben Rotman. “With a mission to serve their community, JFCS has demonstrated their ability to foster high impact solutions, innovative practices and dynamic opportunities.”
About Network of Jewish Human Service Agencies (NJHSA)
The Network is an international membership association of more than 140 nonprofit human service agencies in the United States, Canada and Israel. Its members provide a full range of human services for the Jewish community and beyond, including healthcare, career, employment and mental health services, as well as programs for youth, families and seniors, Holocaust survivors, immigrants and refugees, persons with disabilities and caregivers. The Network strives to be the leading voice for the Jewish human service sector. As the go-to resource for advocacy, best practices, innovation and research, partnerships and collaborations, The Network strengthens agencies so they can better serve their communities. For more information about NJHSA visit www.networkjhsa.org or call 201-977-2400.
April 3, 2020
The coronavirus outbreak has had immediate, profound effects across communities. In the Greater Mercer region, individuals and families are seeing the uncertainty of the future, heightened fear and anxiety for their health, all compounded by job losses, reduced income, and shortages of basic necessities. During this crisis, more and more people are turning to social service organizations.
Jewish Family & Children’s Service of Greater Mercer County (JFCS) continues to operate all programs in full or partial capacity. JFCS is a comprehensive social service, non-profit organization that delivers programs to individuals of all backgrounds, faiths and ages in the Greater Mercer Region. While the agency has closed its physical offices to all clients, visitors, and all but two staff members, the core programs have been adapted to continue in the new environments.
“Our staff has been incredibly flexible, creative and innovative in how they’ve addressed service delivery in difficult circumstances. Michelle Napell, our Executive Director, has demonstrated strong and decisive leadership in the face of unprecedented challenges,” said Arlene Pedovitch, JFCS Board President.
For example, counseling services transitioned to tele-therapy by phone. All current clients were moved to phone sessions and the agency remains open to taking new clients.
“We knew that the demand for our core programs – mental health counseling, food pantry and delivery services, and senior support – would increase dramatically during this outbreak,” said Michelle Napell, Executive Director.
In addition to tele-therapy, JFCS has launched weekly webinars to provide broader emotional and psychological support during the crisis. Topics have included managing anxiety, coping with the emotions of spending the spring holidays apart, and issues relating to teens.
The counseling department now also offers daily “drop-in” time frames that allow community members to call in for a 30-minute session with a licensed JFCS social worker for personalized support, coping skills and resources. Mondays, Wednesdays, and Fridays 10 AM – 12 PM and Tuesdays & Thursdays 5 – 7 PM callers can connect at 609-987-8100 and Dial 0 to speak with available counselor. JFCS weekly webinars and drop-in sessions are supported through a generous emergency grant by Princeton Area Community Foundation.

JFCS maintains an on-site food pantry, a Mobile Food Pantry, and special services for seniors including Kosher Meals on Wheels and Healthy@Home, a monthly grocery delivery program. All food programs have continued despite the outbreak.
The team at JFCS has sourced new providers of shelf stable items and frozen prepared meals to keep its shelves stocked for current clients and emergency calls for food. New partnerships have allowed the agency to reach even more vulnerable members of the community by connecting JFCS food supplies to individuals and families identified by other community organizations. JFCS provided emergency bags to Capital Area YMCA to distribute to displaced families residing in local motels and hotels and, most recently, the JFCS Mobile Food Pantry delivered 100 packages of chicken and additional food supplies to Homefront.
Ahead of Passover, JFCS staff packaged over 40 prepared bags of Kosher for Passover food items to be delivered to isolated seniors throughout Mercer County including members of JFCS senior programs, Kosher Meals on Wheels recipients, and Holocaust survivors.

The Kosher Café, a program made possible through the support of Mercer County Office on Aging, provides hot meals, prepared by our partner Greenwood House, to low-income seniors four times a week. The agency has continued this service in a “to-go” format with staff packing individual containers and delivering to café attendees curbside at Adath Israel Congregation where the cafés are held.
The senior services team is providing valuable phone support and check-in calls to all senior program clients. JFCS has enlisted the help of volunteers to make regular calls to all elderly clients across programs. Volunteers report back if a specific need is expressed or the senior shares information of concern. Staff have been able to provide critical interventions such as connecting clients to available home care options, prescription and grocery delivery services and estate planning.
JFCS has also seen success in transitioning teen programs and support groups to video conferencing. Teen participants of Gesher LeKesher, a peer mentoring and leadership program, and Jewish Community Youth Foundation (JCYF), a philanthropic program, now meet via weekly Zoom calls. The calls give the teens a guided presentation on a topical subject and allows open discussion and connection over the current challenges. Additionally, the Caregiver Support Group has returned to a biweekly schedule via Zoom. Those providing care for a loved one are facing even greater challenges during the coronavirus outbreak and rely on this safe gathering space for understanding, support and skills.
The agency has received emergency funding to support the continuation of our programs from Bristol-Myers-Squibb, Princeton Area Community Foundation (as noted previously), and a number of private donors.
It is impossible to look around you – even from within your own home – and not be inundated with information about the COVID-19 outbreak. These are uncharted waters for our local, national and global communities, but, there is an oddly comforting unity to know that this outbreak has an impact of everyone in our community, we are in this together.

We do not know how long our lives will be upended by restrictions and quarantines, but we do know the impact will last even longer. Right now and through the uncertain future, JFCS will be here ensuring help, hope and healing. In this phase of social distancing and disconnection, we intend to keep you, our community, well informed on JFCS actions.
What are we doing right now?
We are utilizing all available resources to ensure the most vulnerable and most in need have food:
Counseling is being provided by phone to our existing clients. Our team of counselors is available to take new calls for anyone who needs immediate assistance to cope with the heightened stress, anxiety or fear and for those with ongoing mental health concerns.
JFCS Geriatric Care Managers are making regular check-in calls and providing support by phone to our Secure@Home members, low-income seniors, Holocaust Survivors and support group members.
Volunteers have stepped up to provide check-in calls to our Kosher Meals on Wheels clients as well as seniors who were enrolled in Cooking Companions and Friendly Visitor programs.
We have launched a comprehensive resource page on our website as a one-stop source of agency information, helpful blogs from our staff on topical issues, and links to outside resources.
What is in the works?
What can you do?
Administrative staff will be available by phone to answer any questions Monday – Thursday 9 AM – 5 PM and Friday 9 AM – 4 PM. Please note effective March 23, the restrictions noted in our original posting remain in place indefinitely in accordance with local, state and national health and safety guidelines.
JFCS is stretching our resources as far as possible at this time to ensure our current clients have the support they need, be it counseling, senior resources and food. We know this is just the beginning of a rise in need for our services. Help us be equipped to provide for as many as possible here in our community.
March 20, 2020
We were indeed NJ PROUD to have the story of our Mobile Food Pantry featured by 6 ABC Action News in March 2020. The Mobile Food Pantry is providing essential access to fresh, healthy groceries for food insecure people in Mercer County, NJ.
UPDATED MONDAY MARCH 16, 2020
JFCS is here for the health of our community. In line with directives from the Center for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and the World Health Organization (WHO) as well as local leadership for the state of New Jersey and County of Mercer, we are moving our programs and staff to remote schedules effective March 16 – 27. We understand this situation is evolving day by day and will continue to assess our remote service delivery during these two weeks and beyond as prudent and safe for our staff, our clients, and all constituents.
Please note the following changes to programs & services:
No clients or visitors will be allowed inside JFCS offices through March 27.
Counseling services will be provided through tele-therapy. We are continuing to take new calls for clients interested in services. If interested in counseling services, call us at 609-987-8100 Ext 102.
Seniors enrolled in our programs will receive regular check-ins and phone support to connect them with needed resources. There will be no in-home visits and/or geriatric assessments provided by Senior Services.
Food delivery programs will continue to the extent our resources are available.
Gesher LeKesher and Jewish Community Youth Foundation (JCYF) recruitment and programmatic gatherings are canceled through April 1.
Administrative staff will be available by phone to answer any questions Monday – Thursday 9 AM – 5 PM and Friday 9 AM – 4 PM.

Our Executive Director, Michelle Napell, was named as the Princeton Mercer Regional Chamber as the October Champion for Business and recognized at their October 3 luncheon. This recognition is given by the Chamber in honor of Michelle’s leadership of JFCS as an important part of the Greater Mercer community.
During her tenure, Michelle’s determination to extend the reach of JFCS has led to the establishment of a satellite office in East Windsor to offer much needed mental health resources. Services at the East Windsor-Hightstown office offer a local resource to those struggling with mental health challenges and a bridge to a broad referral network of high-level services for substance abuse and acute mental health crises.
In January 2020, Michelle’s next and largest vision will come to life – the JFCS Mobile Food Pantry. The JFCS Mobile Food Pantry will bring the resources of the JFCS pantry on the road to locations across Mercer County. At each location, JFCS will park the fully-stocked truck and distribute groceries to those in need.
DATE: Wednesday, July 10, 2019
TIME: 5:00 p.m. to 8:00 p.m.
LOCATION: Christ Congregation, 50 Walnut Lane, Princeton
DESCRIPTION: Jewish Family & Children’s Service (JFCS) will be taking its Community Food Pantry on the road and hosting a Pop-Up Food Pantry at Christ Congregation in Princeton where fresh fruits, vegetables, snack foods, and non-perishable items will be available. Food pantry distribution is first-come, first-served until food runs out. Open to the community. No proof of income is necessary, but you must self-attest to need. Also, a vegetarian dinner will be prepared by congregants and served at 6:00 p.m.
JFCS has been operating the Yvette Sarah Clayman Community Food Pantry since 1999. The Pantry is choice-based and allows clients to shop for their food instead of picking up a prepared bag. This follows our philosophy of empowering clients to care effectively for themselves and others. It is open to people of all denominations in Mercer County.
RSVP: If you plan to attend the dinner to Beth Englezos at bethe@jfcsonline.org or 609-987-8100, ext. 126.
The JFCS Mobile Food Truck will bring the resources of our pantry on the road to locations across Mercer County. At each location, we will park our fully-stocked truck and distribute groceries to those in need. The truck will be FREE, CHOICE FOOD PANTRY that aligns with our mission of empowering individuals to make informed choices and care for themselves.
Over the next several months, our goal is to raise the funds to purchase our fully outfitted pantry truck and establish partners throughout the community as future truck sites. Founding sponsorship options are available and include recognition opportunities on the truck, on our website, pinned materials, social media, and more.

Looking for a way to contribute as a founder at a level not listed? Contact Helaine Isaacs at 609-987-8100 Ext. 104.