A tour of the new facilities at the MLK Community Center
The MLK Community Center has expanded their operations
Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Community Center's Community Programs Manager, Melanie Saunders gave some of the Memorial Funeral Home's staff a tour of MLK's new and improved space this week. "All we can say is wow! We are so lucky to have a community center like this one that helps so many people in our community," says Memorial's Director of Community Relations, Kim Shute.
Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Community Center has 26 staff along with 700 plus volunteers who have already served over a million meals since this time last year. They offer a hot breakfasts Monday through Friday serving about 75 people every morning, and their mobile pantry serves households that are homebound on Aquidneck Island and beyond two days a week.
For families that come in to shop for themselves, the new and improved facilities are now open 5 days a week. You can find their hours here. Each household can come once monthly, and each visit usually feeds a family for about 2 weeks. "With the new center it is more like a grocery store." Says Kim. "They are getting more foods that people from Central America are looking for, and signage is in English and Spanish."
Besides the various food programs offer, the MLK Center also has a book buddy program, which is an inter-generational literacy program that pairs adult volunteers with MLK's preschool students to engage in reading and activity time. The program brings children and community friends of all ages together in an experience of social interaction, positive role models and engaging in literacy development.
In fact the Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Center has various education programs, including summer camps.
Memorial's staff also learned that MLK's emergency warming center helped 112 people stay warm during the cold nights of January through mid-March.
"We are all now thinking about ways we can help support their programs." Says Kim. "The new space is simply beautiful, bright, clean and accessible to the community the needs them most. "





