Saturday, April 16, 2016

New Moon Chinese Retaurant


(My theme is places I have visited or lived)

New Moon Chinese Restaurant

This is my favorite Chinese Restaurant. It is the best in the world! It is located in Longview. A perfect Sunday is a good time of worship and fellowship at the North Kelso Baptist Church, lunch at New Moon, watching the Seahawks win, and learning that the NE Patriots lost. That is a perfect Sunday!

I wish you all could eat here at least once. Try the Kung Pao Chicken with a few spring rolls. You'll love it.

New Moon Chinese restaurantNineteen criminal offenders have Annie Chen to thank for their new found footholds in the working world.

Chen has owned New Moon Chinese restaurant in Longview for 10 years and employed all of those 19 people through Goodwill's Offender Re-entry Program. Tuesday, Goodwill honored her willingness to help recovering offenders, naming Chen its 2010 Community Partner of the Year.

Prior to taking part in the program, Chen said she hung a "Help Wanted" sign in her window when she needed to replace an employee. Her introduction to Goodwill came by chance, when one of the clients in the offender re-entry program showed up at New Moon looking for work.

"I found out ... Goodwill will refer people to me, and I can hire them," said Chen, 40.

The bubbly woman, who moved to the United States 15 years ago from Canton, China, said she found the Goodwill workers to be "good helpers."

"They are willing to work, and they really work hard, too. That's the best part I like," she said.

Jerry Hastings, job developer with the Goodwill program, said that inmates serving prison sentences become eligible for admission when they are sent to the Work Release Center in the last six months of their sentences. Participants also include offenders drawn from local and state prisons and even walk-ins who have a criminal background and are having problems finding work because of it, Hastings said.

The positions are usually minimum wage, he said.

"I have a few who are $10, $12, $14 an hour. It depends on the employer," he said.

Program participants take classes to hone their skills.

"They learn how to go about finding a job," Hastings said. "How to dress. We work on resumes with them, help them fill out applications, and refer them to employers who will hire them."

Chen, he said, "is one we've always counted on. I always said that if I could clone her, I would."
Hastings said he's always been impressed with the way Chen dealt with her employees.

"Not everybody who goes to work stays out of trouble, but we can count on all of them who come here," Hastings said. "They stay out of trouble, they stay here, and they get out."

Chen said she chooses to look at the person, rather than their past. She said her dream job has always been to be a counselor. As a restaurateur, she's glad to have found an outlet for her desire to guide people.

"I love people," she said. "Lots of them have made a mistake in their lives, but they are not bad people. Lots of them have really good hearts."

4 comments:

Arlee Bird said...

I'd like to eat in this restaurant or some Chinese restaurant. It's difficult to convince my wife to go to Asian restaurants. She's not so fond of the food while I greatly am. Usually we concede to her wishes, but sometimes she'll agree to go to an Asian restaurant--usually Thai.

Reentry programs for released offenders are so important. More employers need to do this though I can understand the reluctance to do so.

Arlee Bird
A to Z Challenge Co-host
Tossing It Out

kc bob said...

"Chen said she chooses to look at the person, rather than their past."

Love that Gregg. My fav Chinese dish is Moo Shu Pork.

nashvillecats2 said...

This was a wonderful post to read Gregg, though I am not into Chinese food myself, pleased there is a place for those who do.
Yvonne.

shortybear said...

sounds good