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Food Resources in Little Rock and North Little Rock

Little Rock 
Bullock Temple
1513 South Park Street, Little Rock, AR 72202 
501-375-1581 
Monday 1:00 – 2:00pm; Thursdays 4:30-6:00 pm 
Appointments preferred, ID required 

Little Rock 
Christ Temple Outreach Center 
1919 South Arch Street, Little Rock, AR 72206 
501-376-1664 
Tuesday & Thursday 10:00am – 12:00noon 

Little Rock 
Church at Rock Creek
11500 West 36th Street, Little Rock, AR 72211 
501-221-1051 
Open Tuesday, thru Friday 
Call in the mornings between 8:00 & 10:00am to schedule an afternoon appointment.  Services available for each person/family at intervals of 5-weeks, 1 service per household.  Serving Little Rock and Saline County residents ONLY 

Little Rock 
El Zocalo Immigrant Food Pantry 
5500 Geyer Springs Road, Little Rock, AR 72209 
501-301-4652 
Inside Geyer Springs United Methodist Church www.zocalocenter.com El Zocalo Immigrant Food Pantry organized by El Zocalo and Interfaith Arkansas.  1 box of food per month for lowincome immigrant families or families affected by immigrant detention.  No ID necessary. 

Little Rock 
Geyer Springs United Methodist Church 
5500 Geyer Springs Road, Little Rock, AR 72209 
501-565-3175 
1st & 3rd Thursday 9:00am – 12:00noon 
Serves residents of the 72206, 72209 & 72103 Zip Code area ONLY.  Photo ID required.  

Little Rock 
Greater Second Care Center
5615 Geyer Springs Road, Little Rock, AR 72209 
501-569-998 
Open third Wednesday 10:00am – 12:00noon 
www.greatersecond.org 

Little Rock 
Helping Hand of Greater Little Rock 
1601 Marshall Street, Little Rock, AR 72202 
501-372-4388 
Monday thru Thursday 9:00am – 12:30pm 
May only access food once each month.  Food and inexpensive thrift store clothing available.  Photo ID required. 

Little Rock 
Immanuel Baptist Church
10500 West Markham Street, Suite #107, Little Rock, AR 72211 
501-376-3071 
Tuesday 10:00am – 2:00pm 
ID and proof of residence required.  For children, must provide proof of guardianship.  

Little Rock 
Lakeshore Drive Baptist Church 
21 Lakeshore Drive, Little Rock, AR 72204 
501-565-5536 
2nd and 4th Tuesday of each month 10:00am – 2:00pm 
Serving the 72204 Zip Code area ONLY www.facebook.com/LakeshoreLittleRock/?rf=113369145364049 

Little Rock 
Liberty Hill Baptist Church
1215 South Schiller, Little Rock, AR 72202 
501-374-8060 
2nd Monday, 3:00pm – 6:00pm 
www.libertyhbc.org 
Photo ID Required 

Little Rock 
Little Rock Church
10701 West Baseline Road, Little Rock, AR 72209 
501-4550900 
Open every other Monday 4:30 – 6:30pm 

Little Rock 
Little Rock Compassion Center 
3618 West Roosevelt, Little Rock, AR 72204 
501-296-9114 
Tuesday and Thursday 8:00 – 11:00am 
Photo ID required.  Serving the 72204 Zip code area only 

Little Rock 
Mosaic Church of Central Arkansas 
6221 Colonel Glenn Road ad, Suite #A, Little Rock, AR 72204 
501-5623336 (Bilingual ) 
Tuesday 2:00 – 3:30pm, must be from 72204 area, 1st come 1st served 

Little Rock 
Mount Zion Baptist Church
924 Cross Street, Little Rock, AR 72202 
501-374-5832 
Wednesday 11:00am – 2:00pm & Saturday 10:00am – 12:00noon. 

Little Rock 
Oak Forest United Methodist Church 
2415 Fair Park Blvd., Little Rock, AR 72204 
501-663-9407 
1st and 3rd Thursday 11:00am – 1:00pm 

Little Rock 
Pulaski Heights United Methodist Church 
4823 Woodlawn Drive, Little Rock, AR 72205 
501-664-3600 
Open first Wednesday morning of each month at 8:30am 
www.phumc.com 

Little Rock 
Quapaw Quarter United Methodist Church 
1601 South Louisiana Street, Little Rock, AR 72206 
501-375-1600 
Groceries are distributed between 1:00 – 3:00pm on the first and third Tuesdays of each month, except August.  
www.umc.org/find-a-church/church/62626  

Little Rock 
Second Baptist Church
1709 John Barrow 
501-223-2323 
Wednesdays & Thursdays 
Photo ID and utility bill required to have matching name & address.  
10:00am – 12:00noon 

Little Rock 
St. Francis House
2701 South Elm Street, Little Rock, AR 72204 
501-644-5036 
Monday thru Friday 8:30am – 11:30am & 1:00pm – 3:00pm 
Must provide photo ID, Social Security card for each recipient.  

Little Rock 
St. John Missionary Baptist Church Unto Others Food Pantry 
2501 South Main Street, Little Rock, AR 72206 
501-537-8658 
Open the 2nd & 4th Thursday of each month, 9:00am – we run out 
Must complete application, photo ID Required.  During winter weather months open only once a month. 

Little Rock
St. Mark’s Episcopal Church Food Pantry 
1500 North Mississippi Street, Little Rock, AR 72207 
501-225-4203 
Thursdays, 9:15 – 10:45am 
Photo ID required
http://st-marks.com/serving/st-marks-food-pantry 

Little Rock 
Temple Baptist Church – Food Pantry 
10710 Interstate #30,  Little Rock, AR 72209 
501-565-4966 
1st & 3rd Monday of each month 6:00pm 
Must register with the food pantry with each use.  

Little Rock 
The Van
P.O. Box #250061, Little Rock, AR 72225 
501-955-3444 
www.theoneinc.org 
Mobile homeless services, locating and serving unsheltered homeless on the fringes of Little Rock.  Provides: Clothing, Food, Meals, as well as sundries and materials to enhance basic living conditions 

Little Rock 
Union A.M.E. Church Food Pantry 
1825 South Pulaski Street, Little Rock, AR 72206 
501-374-3528 
2nd Wednesday of each month, 1:00 – 3:00pm 
Call to confirm time
www.unionamec.com 

Little Rock 
Watershed
3701 Springer Blvd., Little Rock, AR 72206 
501-378-0176 
Monday thru Friday 8:00am – 4:00pm 
Call before coming to make sure food is available.  Appointments and referrals are preferred.  Social Security card or number is preferred.  Must have photo ID.  

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Shelters in Little Rock and North Little Rock

Immerse Arkansas
PO Box 45385
Little Rock, AR 72214 
501-404-9890
Email:  help@immersearkansas.org
https://www.immersearkansas.org/youth
Youth ages 16-22
Provides supportive housing for youth ages 16-22 who are aging out of foster care, runaway, or homeles, or victims of sex trafficking or sexual exploitation

Mid AR Substance Abuse in LR, AR  
4601 W. 7th Little Rock, AR 72205 
501-686-9393 
Shelter for the indigent and others who need detox  

St. Francis House 
2701 S. Elm Little Rock, AR 72204 
501-6645036 
Homeless veterans program  http://www.stfrancisministries.com/ 

Union Rescue Mission Dorcas House 
823 S. Park Street Little Rock, AR 72202 
501-374-4022 
Outreach to women and children begin at Dorcas House.  We provide services like food, shelter, clothing and crisis intervention.  https://urmissionlr.org/dorcas-house/ 

PATH- Partners against Trafficking Human 
PO BOX 21066 Little Rock, AR 72221 
501-301-4357 
Provide safe housing and a program of restoration and reintegration for rescued victims of Human Trafficking and prostitution.  pathsaves.org 

Gaines House 
1702 Gaines Street Little Rock, AR 72206 
501-376-7922 
Transitional living shelter for women 18 or older who have been treated for mental, physical or emotional disabilities  http://www.gaineshouse.org/ 

The Salvation Army Shelter
1111 W. Markham Little Rock, AR 72201 
501-374-9296 
Single men, single women and family shelter. 5 free nights per month

Family Promises of Pulaski 
222 East 8th Street Little Rock, AR 72202 
501-372-0733  
Provide shelter, food, transportation and case management for homeless families with children under 18. www.familypromisepc.org  

Jericho Way Day Center
3000 Springer Blvd Little Rock, AR 72206 
501-916-9859 
M-F 7:30am -3 pm 
Homeless day center, clothing closet
http://www.depaulusa.org/our-programs/little-rock-ar/ 

A.B.B.A. House
1002 South Oak St. Little Rock, AR 72204 
501-666-9718 
Provides shelter for homeless and/or pregnant women, Non-pregnant woman can stay up to 3 wks., pregnant woman can stay up to 1 month after the child is born, NO drug problems or mental illness.  

Center for Youth & Families, Youth Emergency Shelter 
6425 W. 12th St.  Little Rock, AR  72204 
501-666-7233 
Shelter for homeless and runaway youth, ages 8-18, wheelchair accessible, children may stay up to 45 days.  Must be a DHS client. 

Dorcas House
823 South Park St.
501-374-4022 

Women’s domestic Violence Program
9-month program for women and children
A division of Union Rescue Mission 
Little Rock, AR 72202 
Children in domestic abuse situations, male children allowed through 17 years of age (on a space available basis). 50 beds available for women and children. Recovery Program: 9 month recovery program for women with substance or alcohol addiction. Children are NOT permitted to remain with women in Recovery Program. Wheelchair accessible. 

Empowerment Village
3604 W. 12th St.  Little Rock, AR 72204 
501-663-7223 Ext. #210 
For Arkansans with special needs, i.e.: limited income, homeless or has disability affecting their income and need for supportive services. 

Little Rock Compassion Center (Men’s) 
3618 W. Roosevelt Rd., Little Rock, AR 72204 
501-296-9114 
Men’s homeless shelter must have ID and be over 18. Must be sober, no medical services available. 

Little Rock Compassion Center (Women’s) 
4210 Asher Ave.  Little Rock, AR 72204 
501-663-2972 
Women’s homeless shelter must have ID and be over 18. Check-in 3:00pm. 
Nehemiah House, A Division of Union Rescue Mission 
2921 Springer Blvd, Little Rock, AR 72216, 
(501) 374-1108 
Men’s homeless shelter, 4-free days per month, free if the weather is below freezing, after that $6.00 per day (includes breakfast and dinner.) You must be out of the building daily by 7:00am. Once in at night you cannot leave and re-enter. Weapons, tobacco, cell phones, drugs and alcohol not permitted on the property. Work Program – 36-bed facility for working homeless – This program is 6 months and for the working homeless. Recovery Program – 46 bed facility – 9-month recovery program that is faith based in nature. Wheelchair accessible 

Our House
https://ourhouseshelter.org/ 
302 East Roosevelt Road, Little Rock, AR 72206, 
(501) 375-2416 / (501) 374-7383 
Working shelter for men, women, and families, wheelchair accessible, long term shelter available (up to 2-years). Many educational programs, meals, clothing and classes available, domestic violence recovery. Must be working a minimum of 32 hours a week soon after moving in. 

Phoenix Recovery Center
104 North Battery, Little Rock, AR 72205, 
(501) 725-4907 
Transitional housing for women only. 

Salvation Army
1111 West Markham, Little Rock, AR 72201, 
(501) 374-9296 / (501) 374-8636 After 3:30pm 
Emergency shelter for women, and families, opens at 6:15pm. 

Union RESCUE Mission Transient Lodge  
615 Magnolia N. Little Rock, AR 72114 
501-376-8470 
Homeless Shelter for Men. Can stay up to 5 nights.   

Firm Foundation Ministries 
2200 East Broadway North Little Rock, AR 72114 
501-945-7412 
Men’s homeless shelter and half way house

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Resolution to Prohibit Police Presence in CLTMDSA

As voted on at the June 7th Meeting of the Charlotte Metropolitan Democratic Socialists of America, the voting body has adopted the the following resolution:

Therefore, be it resolved, employment as a law enforcement officer is in opposition to the principles of the organization as outlined in DSA constitution article II. “Law Enforcement officer” shall be defined as “an individual who is sworn, badged, and arm-able by the government to enforce the law, or a prison guard; or individuals who are members, operators, or supporters of police associated union organizations”(Whether employed by the government or a private company). Persons employed as law enforcement are therefore excluded from membership in Charlotte Metropolitan DSA. Whereas, law enforcement agencies operate to promote the interests of capitalist institutions and to suppress organized dissent against their control of American society; and Whereas, oppressed groups with whom the DSA seeks to organize such as people of color, sex workers, and the homeless have immediate reasons to be afraid of the police, and uncomfortable in their presence.

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Columbus DSA Statement on Police Unions

The last eight days witnessed the single greatest national explosion of popular unrest since the summer of 1968. Hundreds of thousands of protesters of all races and generations gathered around the world to demand justice for the murder of George Floyd in Minneapolis on 25 May and to demand an end to police brutality and racism more broadly. The vicious response most protesters received — and continue to receive in ongoing demonstrations — at the hands of those sworn to “protect and serve” only proves the urgent necessity of their demands.

The history of workers’ struggles in the United States is punctuated by the constant antagonism of policing — whether municipal, state, federal, or private armies of thugs like the Pinkertons. No matter the place, no matter the era, no matter the industry, police have served as aggressor against workers’ organizing efforts and bulwark protecting the interests of property and capital. 

Simultaneously, police have served to uphold the racial hierarchy imposed upon people of color by the white supremacist ruling class by aiding, abetting, and directly participating in all conceivable forms of subjugation and oppression. Moreover, in the century since its founding the Fraternal Order of Police (FOP), the country’s largest police union, has worked tirelessly to shield those police officers guilty of crimes against communities of color and to stamp out dissent or efforts to reform from within.

In Columbus, the historical narrative is no different from the rest of the country. Here too, Black, Indigenous, and People of Color struggle against a repressive and overwhelmingly white police force that disproportionately targets them for harassment, arrest, and murder. Here too, the police are shielded from accountability by their union. 

According to its website, FOP Capital City Lodge #9 is the fifth-largest union local in the country, representing more than 4,000 members and 29 law enforcement agencies throughout Franklin County. In the past eight days, hundreds — if not thousands — of those members have been mobilized against the public in a shocking display of unrestrained malice. Mace, pepper balls, rubber and wooden bullets, tear gas, shield and batons have all been wielded with impunity against peaceful protesters who had the gall to demand accountability from nominally public servants. On the night of 31 May, for instance, the police were so proud of their handiwork, they congregated for a group photo in the middle of a cleared intersection. These are not the actions of workers, let alone the actions of union siblings.

As workers of Columbus, the site of the 1886 founding of the American Federation of Labor (AFL), we deeply feel the twisted irony of being home to the 11th-most murderous police force in the country. As socialists, we believe in the power of workers, in fostering bonds of solidarity among workers through the shared struggle of organizing, in the battles workers wage against capital to build and exert their collective power. As moral human beings, we believe in the full emancipation of BIPOC and the destruction of white supremacy. At every turn, police stand against these interests. 

Police unions are a blight on the labor movement. They ignore calls for reform and scoff at pleas for solidarity. They are the enemy of workers and BIPOC communities everywhere. They are scabs, pure and simple.

Columbus DSA hereby calls on FOP Capital City Lodge #9 President Ferrell, Executive Vice President Simpson, and Vice President Steel to immediately resign. We call on the State House to pass legislation stripping police unions of the right to collectively bargain. We call on all municipalities of Franklin County to demilitarize and defund their police departments, and to reappropriate existing “public safety” funding toward more critical sectors and infrastructure like public education, public housing, and public transportation.

Further, we call on the AFL-CIO to immediately expel the International Union of Police Association (IUPA) from the federation and to sever all ties with police and prison guard unions. They are not siblings. They do not deserve the union privileges they actively help deny workers everywhere.

These are merely the first steps towards building a future safe for BIPOC communities and for workers of all colors, backgrounds, and industries. A better world is possible!

In Solidarity,

Labor Working Group

Columbus DSA

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Chief Evans Defends BCPD

In an interview with the Gavel, BCPD Chief Evans DEFENDED sending BCPD officers to Franklin Park Tuesday evening. Roxbury and Dorchester are majority Black neighborhoods of Boston. Under no circumstance should BCPD be doing anything, ever, in Roxbury or Dorchester. Particularly not policing a protest against police brutality.

Evans says sending officers to police the protest is”by no means political” This is outrageous. Sending police to oppose protesters at a rally against police brutality and the murder of Black people by police is absolutely political. Boston College must immediately end any involvement in policing protests in Boston. YDS of BC reiterates our call for Evans to resign or be removed as Chief of the Boston College Police department. No institution that employs him has any concern for systematic racism of the police or the criminal justice system. All the statements in the world cannot outweigh his presence on BC’s campus.

Petition to remove Evans can be found here.

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PETITION: Ordinance To Explicitly Condemn Police Brutality & Implement A Zero-Tolerance Policy Towards Abusive Policing

High Peaks Democratic Socialists of America (DSA) seeks to express our collective horror at the cold-blooded murder of George Floyd by officers in the Minneapolis, Minnesota police force and our solidarity with the black Americans and citizens of all races who have taken to the streets to peacefully protest police brutality and state-sanctioned racism in our country.

While High Peaks DSA recognizes that the Saranac Lake police department maintains a relatively positive relationship with the village community, we call for the Village Board to adopt an ordinance that explicitly condemns police brutality in light of the murder of George Floyd and implements a zero-tolerance policy towards abusive policing. By explicitly condemning police brutality, the Village of Saranac Lake will signal itself as a safe space for diverse communities.

High Peaks DSA also calls for the Village Board and Police Department to partner with village residents to establish a system of community oversight to ensure cooperation, accountability, and justice for all.

Fill out the form below if you’d like to sign the petition:

The post PETITION: Ordinance To Explicitly Condemn Police Brutality & Implement A Zero-Tolerance Policy Towards Abusive Policing appeared first on High Peaks DSA.

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Trauma in the Time of COVID

Text from Natalie Stroud’s presentation during “Education Workers Unite to Defend Vermont Education” on May 29.

My name is Natalie Stroud. I have been a preschool teacher in Burlington for six years. I'm not going to rehash most of the facts and figures because they are already out there and I encourage you to read the letters written people who work in childcare centers. I will share with you the reason WHY I have chosen to plead with Governor Scott to reconsider the June 1st reopening date.



Our nation is experiencing collective trauma right now. Trauma happens when what we individually assume to be true about the world or ourselves is challenged, making it hard to cope and impossible to go back to how things were before. We will all be changed forever by this pandemic. That is trauma.



My students are home right now learning that sometimes parents lose their jobs. They are learning that you can’t always trust the grownups in charge to tell the truth or take care of us. They are learning what it feels like to be isolated and lonely. They are learning that sometimes people don’t always get better when they get sick. All of this is traumatic.



People often say, "kids are so resilient, they will be fine" and yes, kids have the capacity for resilience. But don’t be fooled, their body will remember the trauma for the rest of their lives. They keep moving and smiling because they have to to survive.

So much social and emotional learning takes place in the first five years of life, which is why it is essential that children receive high quality, trauma-sensitive care in early childhood. When we send our children back to school, we need to make sure the environment can provide this for them. They deserve it. 



Right now, our country is showing that we do not value their education. We do not value the quality of their care. Preschool aged children need touch. They need to play with their friends. They need their bodies to be comfortable and unencumbered by a mask in order to learn. They need to see their teachers’ mouth move to learn language. They need to be able to nap. They need their special education providers to help them in the classroom. They need to see their teachers smile. They will need all of this even MORE after what they all have gone through these past few months. The schooling experience we would be sending them back to on June 1st would not be that place.



Teachers are scared and worried, rightfully so. We will be overworked and underpaid, in masks and long sleeve button down shirts in the summer heat nonetheless. Of course, two of things aren’t new. We have always been overworked and underpaid. But at this moment in history, we have a chance to change that.



Help families with unemployment if they choose not to or cannot send their child back to school yet. Compensate teachers fairly. Provide more stabilization funds to programs that cannot open yet. Continue paying open programs a stipend for each child enrolled in the program, as the cost of care has risen. The early childhood education system has always been in survival mode but the response to this pandemic, if handled with care, can help programs thrive for the first time in history. We are asking Governor Scott to help us make history and change the landscape of early childhood education in Vermont forever by hearing our pleas.



Thank you.

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Metro Atlanta DSA stands with the nationwide anti-racist uprisings

Over the past few days, Atlanta has seen an organic, spontaneous working class uprising inspired by the uprisings in Minneapolis and elsewhere around the country. Mayor Keisha Lance-Bottoms has joined forces with Governor Brian Kemp to launch a brutally authoritarian crackdown on the protests, invoking the national guard and hostile military tactics. This looks like war because it is war. This is class war being waged by the ruling capitalist class and their jackboot cronies against Atlanta’s Black working class.

The Metro Atlanta Democratic Socialists of America (MADSA) unequivocally supports the working class uprisings developing in Atlanta and across the country led by the anti-racist Black working class. We support the #BlackLivesMatter movement and the efforts of the leading Black working class to defeat mass incarceration and the neo-fascist police state. We stand in solidarity with George Floyd, may he rest in power, with his family, and with the millions of Black people who fear death because of the violence of white supremacy in the United States.

The racist and white supremacist institutions of capitalism that oppress people of color must be immediately dismantled, and they can only be dismantled by a mass movement. Over the past few days, our members have been on the ground working to build this movement, standing side by side with the working class in its struggle for Black liberation and racial equality. Over the coming weeks, we will do our best to play a principled and helpful role in this non-violent anti-racist movement.

The images and videos of police officers brutalizing Atlanta workers are sickening. No amount of “administrative leave” can change the inherently oppressive nature of the Atlanta Police or the police at large. There is a pattern of injustice and impunity that’s survived decades of elections, all under Democrats. The racist policing system itself must be totally upended.

We demand that Mayor Bottoms and Governor Kemp immediately:

  • Remove the National Guard
  • End the city curfew
  • Restore MARTA services
  • Release everyone arrested during all protests
  • Demilitarize, disarm, and defund the police

The sign outside the CNN Center has already been repainted, but the life of George Floyd can never be replaced. Instead of addressing the needs of the Black working class, Mayor Bottoms has chosen to lecture the people of this city about property rights. She has shown that she values property over human life, and that her allegiance lies with the ruling class, not the working class majority of Atlanta.

We’re exhausted with the blame games. “Outside agitators,” organized crime, “thugs,” even foreign intervention! We are living in unprecedented times but this isn’t a gaudy spy novel. There is no sinister plot – we are seeing the natural, organic response of the working class to capitalism in crisis. Of course there are uprisings when there is nearly 30% youth unemployment and when the police are wantonly killing innocent people.

All footage of the protests clearly show that the police are the instigators of violence, in Atlanta and elsewhere across the country. The killings of George Floyd and so many others are inexcusable. The brutally militaristic police response to peaceful protests is unjustifiable. In the face of state violence, the working class is simply defending itself. The only way for this violence to stop is for the police to stop being violent.

Unfortunately our rulers are determined to make us disbelieve our own eyes and ears. They are inventing boogeymen and scapegoats. They demand more brutality against the people whose labor makes the world run. They threaten arrest, imprisonment, disfigurement and death to people across every age, race, and gender who just want to live in peace and be free of police brutality.

Atlanta has a history with the civil rights movement, but the struggle for civil rights and racial equality is clearly unfinished. We have a chance now to write our own history and set an example for unity and clarity in a time of injustice and uncertainty. We strive to build a new world rooted in justice, liberty, and peace for all people.

The Metro Atlanta DSA has officially endorsed and calls on our members to attend the Protest March & Rally for Justice for Black Lives on Sunday, June 7th at 12pm. We echo the organizers’ demands:

  • Pass the Hate Crimes Bill
  • Repeal the Citizen’s Arrest Law
  • Bring Killer Cops and Lynchers to Quick Justice
  • Criminal Punishment Reform
  • Stop Police Brutality & Militarized Policing

No Justice, No Peace
Metro Atlanta DSA Executive Committee

 

Photo credit: Steve Eberhardt