You are reading

Queens Community House reopens Social Adult Day Services program in Forest Hills after pandemic hiatus

Sep. 8, 2023 By Bill Parry

It took more than three years but Queens Community House, one of the borough’s largest social service organizations, has resumed its Social Adult Day Services (SADS) program at its Forest Hills headquarters Monday to Friday every week. This marks the first time the vital program has fully reopened for in-person activities for all five weekdays since the outbreak of the COVID-19 pandemic.

QCH’s SADS program is for adults 60 and older who are physically frail, socially isolated and/or memory impaired. The professional staff of the program have decades of experience providing high-quality programming in a safe, warm and welcoming environment. Staff encourages social interaction, and they engage participants in activities that optimize physical, mental and psycho-social capacity.

“Everyone deserves a caring community where they can feel safe and respected,” said Brooke Samuelson, QCH SADS program director. “We want our participants and caregivers to have a place where they have the support to navigate life’s challenges. We are excited to be able to once-again welcome our community members that are in need of a helping hand.”

Benefits of the program include transportation for seniors and their escorts, lunch and snacks provided daily, individual care plans, and a variety of activities including exercise, art, music and special events. The SADS program also includes caregiver support and professional assistance with mobility, toileting and feeding. Queens Community House staff will also provide informative workshops for caregivers as well.

“This program keeps my mom occupied after her diagnosis,” a caregiver said when the program reopened on Sept. 6. “Being in a friendly and safe environment has helped her function better in her daily life. Since I work, this program gives me peace of mind to know that my mom is in a safe place.”

The SADS program is located at QCH’s Forest Hills Community Center, located at 108-25 62nd Dr., which reopened last November after the organization purchased the building that served as its original administrative headquarters and then gave it a massive renovation. The entire project cost more than $15 million, which was provided through government grants and private funders.

Queens Community House reopened its Forest Hills headquarters last November after purchasing the building and giving it a massive renovation. Photo courtesy of QCH

“The purchase of the center presented us with the opportunity to undertake a major renovation to modernize the building’s infrastructure, add lounges, counseling rooms and areas for intergenerational activities and make the entire building more open and accessible,” QCH Executive Director Ben Thomases said during the reopening. “The improvement of and addition to these program spaces is critical to meet the needs of the communities QCH serves throughout the borough of Queens.”

The SADS program is part of QCH’s comprehensive, multi-faceted older adult programs and services that are designed to encourage senior independence and continued engagement. Through a broad network of programs operating out of 40 locations in 15 Queens neighborhoods, QCH serves more than 25,000 children, youth, adults and seniors every year.

Recent News

Southeast Queens leaders endorse Mark Levine for NYC comptroller

Apr. 17, 2025 By Athena Dawson

Cook cited Levine’s experience and problem-solving skills as a reason for her vote of confidence. “Mark is the clear choice to be our City’s next comptroller, and I am proud to back him today and every day. He has the experience and creative problem-solving skills to tackle some of our city’s most pressing issues while protecting New Yorkers from the dangers of Trump and the federal government,”  she shared in a statement. 

Op-ed: The power of representation in healthcare

Apr. 17, 2025 By Dr. Ifeanyi Oguagha

As physicians of color at Joseph P. Addabbo Family Health Center (JPAFHC), we regularly witness how representation in healthcare can save lives. Our patients – who, like us, are predominantly people of color – walk through our doors not only with medical concerns but also often carrying the weight of generations of inequities that have shaped their health outcomes.

Teen robbed of necklace at gunpoint while waiting for R train at Elmhurst subway: NYPD

Police from the 110th Precinct in Elmhurst and Transit District 20 are looking for a gunman who allegedly robbed a teenager at the Grand Avenue-Newtown subway station.

The 18-year-old victim was waiting for an R train at around 2 p.m. on Friday, April 10, when a stranger approached him, lifted his sweatshirt to show he had a firearm tucked into his waistband, and demanded the victim’s necklace. The teenager surrendered his necklace, and the armed robber fled the station onto Queens Boulevard at Broadway.