NYC couple has given 10,000 backpacks, 200 gallons of sanitizer to homeless during pandemic

The backpacks have food, hand sanitizer, masks, toiletries, emergency blankets inside

Even before the coronavirus hit the U.S., Jeffrey Newman and Jayson Conner were committed to helping the homeless

But as New York City started shutting down in March, the couple knew they had to work even harder to help those in need.

“We knew we were an essential service,” Newman told Fox News. “We knew we had a job to do.”

Newman and Conner run a nonprofit program called Backpacks for the Street, which gives packs filled with between 45 and 50 items including food, toiletries, emergency blankets, sewing kits, feminine hygiene products, hand sanitizer and masks to people in need around New York City. 

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Since March 13, Backpacks for the Street has handed out more than 10,000 backpacks, 200 gallons of hand sanitizer and 18,000 masks, the couple told Fox News. 

Newman said they hand out about 300 backpacks a week.

Jeffrey Newman (right) is giving someone a backpack filled with necessities. (Courtesy of Backpacks for the Street)

“Everything about the backpack is about hope, it’s a band-aid,” Newman said. “We understand that it’s not going to cure homelessness, we don’t pretend it’s going to cure homelessness. But it does say to somebody, 'Hey, you know what? We care.'”

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When Newman and Conner first met, Conner had been homeless for about two years, according to the Backpacks for the Street website.

Jeffrey Newman (left) and Jayson Conner (right) run Backpacks for the Street, which has given away more than 10,000 backpacks during the pandemic. (Courtesy of Backpacks for the Street)

After Conner was able to find his footing, he and Newman were committed to volunteering at food pantries and soup kitchens until they decided to start their own nonprofit, called Together Helping Others, in 2018.

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Backpacks for the Street was their first program, which launched in March of 2018. At the time, they only planned for it to be a quarterly program. But, Newman said, the program really resonated with people and they decided to keep it going year-round.

Jayson Conner hands someone a backpack. Conner himself experienced homelessness in the early 2000s. (Courtesy of Backpacks for the Street)

He said that what makes the program stand apart is how Backpacks for the Street focuses on starting conversations with people, rather than just handing them a bag and leaving. 

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“So many people who are homeless feel ignored and just missed and totally treated like they don’t even exist and if they do exist, they’re worthless,” Newman said. “And the one thing we want to do is say ‘Hey, you know what? You’re not. We want to treat you with the same dignity and compassion and respect that I would want to be treated with, that [others] would want to be treated with.’”

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