Elena Ramos lost her housekeeping job just as the pandemic hit. 

"I don't know, I was walking. I was walking aimlessly, looking for work,” said Ramos. “And I found there was a line, there were people, so I approached them.”

She says the bright yellow t-shirts worn by NICE — or New Immigrant Community Empowerment volunteers — first caught her attention. She found the group when she needed help the most.

At the time, COVID-19 was running rampant through Queens.


What You Need To Know

  • Elena Ramos lost her housekeeping job when the pandemic forced New York City into a state of lockdown

  • Shortly after, her 42 year-old brother Juan died from COVID-19

  • With the help of NICE, New Immigrant Community Empowerment, she was able to bury her brother
  • She also got an OSHA certificate through NICE, allowing her to find a new job. Now she volunteers with the group

"We were caught off guard,” said Ramos. “I didn't think I was going to do something like that. Why was I taking it? I heard about coronavirus, but I thought it was like a game, like a flu-like illness. I don't know, but unfortunately that pandemic touched my family. So we all had to stay at home locked up, but I didn't have the luxury of staying at home.”

Her brother, 42-year-old Juan died from COVID-19. She believes he contracted it while cleaning a restaurant. An ambulance took him to Mount Sinai Queens on March 23, 2020 — 24 hours later, he was dead. 

"His dream was to work, to have his papers. He wanted to go to Mexico. So he hadn't been there for 30 years and he wanted to go, but unfortunately he spent his life working and that was it, that was his routine, he would come home, go to sleep, wake up and go back to work,” said Ramos.

​NICE helped Ramos bury her brother and provided her with free classes to get an Occupational Safety and Health Administration certification. That helped her find a new job cleaning construction sites.

Ramos was inspired by the work NICE is doing in the community.

"I started working with them as a volunteer, helping out. I liked it a lot. It was an altruistic way for them to help people,” said Ramos.

During the pandemic, NICE’s mission to improve the lives of immigrants — particularly day laborers — became an emergency situation. Volunteers began distributing food and supplies to families in need.

"We saw folks who were left with no social safety nets after they lost their jobs. We saw folks who were left either at the point of the brink of eviction or being evicted from their homes when they were unable to pay rent,” said  Diana Moreno, the chief of staff of NICE. 

While the lockdown is over, NICE continues to advocate. A big focus is on the state’s Excluded Workers Fund right now. It provided relief for undocumented people who are not eligible for other programs due to their immigration status.

For volunteers like Ramos, advocating for immigration reform is a personal fight, one she continues in her brother’s memory.

“We are working people who are not hurting anyone. We just want to move forward. We want to be in the light. We don't want to hide. We don't want to be pushed aside. We want to walk quietly, to be normal, like any other human being,” said Ramos.