NEW YORK – Every afternoon, Sandra Pérez and Francisco Ramírez go over their list of fellow New Yorkers who need help because of the coronavirus pandemic.
Some are sick. Others lost jobs, but have children to feed. Others are elderly or disabled. All are immigrants, like them. Then, the friends, both originally from Mexico, stock up on rice, beans, vegetables, cereal, soups and fruit at an East Harlem supermarket, and make deliveries by car to as many as 15 families a day. “I feel that if we are well, physically, emotionally, then we can help others," said Ramírez, a 52-year-old day laborer who used to do construction jobs, but now finds work scarce because of the crisis.