Jon Bon Jovi and his wife, Dorothea Hurley, attend the Food Bank for New York City Can-Do Awards Dinner at Cipriani Wall Street in New York on April 20.

Jon Bon Jovi and his wife, Dorothea Hurley, attend the Food Bank for New York City Can-Do Awards Dinner at Cipriani Wall Street in New York on April 20.

Bon Jovi opens hunger center in town hit hard by Sandy

  • By Wayne Parry Associated Press
  • Tuesday, May 10, 2016 1:44pm
  • Life

TOMS RIVER, N.J. — Jon Bon Jovi knows he can’t help society by curing cancer or splitting atoms. But he can use his celebrity to command the attention of millions of people, including some of the wealthiest and most powerful.

The New Jersey-born rocker and his wife, Dorothea Hurley, are joining with local charities and wealthy fellow philanthropists to tackle hunger and poverty in a shore town that was devastated by Superstorm Sandy.

He and his Jon Bon Jovi Soul Foundation held a grand opening Tuesday for the B.E.A.T. Center, which stands for Bringing Everyone All Together. The center in Toms River is designed as a one-stop facility to help people get food stamps, health care and culinary-related job training. It also provides meals for at-risk children and seniors.

The project allows Bon Jovi to use his own particular skills to help fight hunger, an issue he cares about deeply.

“We didn’t need scientists to find a cure,” he said. “There are so many wonderful causes and so many passionate people that are addressing them.”

The center will house a second JBJ Soul Kitchen community restaurant, where diners pay a minimum $10 donation or do volunteer work for their meals. The first one opened in 2011 in Red Bank.

Bon Jovi says many area residents are still recovering from Sandy and don’t have enough nutritious food to eat. But he says the need predated the storm in Ocean County, where one in five residents is low-income or lives below the poverty level of $15,000 a year for a family of four.

“This is happening across our nation,” he said. “When there’s 15 percent of children going to be hungry at night in a nation like ours, that’s not an issue it takes a scientist to solve.”

Toms River was one of the hardest-hit communities during Sandy, which struck Oct. 29, 2012. The nearby Ortley Beach section was devastated, and many homes and businesses still have not been rebuilt as the fourth summer after the storm approaches.

Bon Jovi is partnering with the Food Bank of Monmouth and Ocean Counties, The Peoples Pantry and the David Tepper Charitable Foundation to provide $5 million in services to needy families in the B.E.A.T. Center’s first year of operation.

The center joins other charitable endeavors undertaken by Bon Jovi, including the construction of 440 units of affordable housing for homeless or low-income families and donations to numerous Sandy relief efforts.

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