Culture January 21, 2019

Jon Bon Jovi's restaurant to provide free meals to furloughed government workers

WATCH: Dems reject Trump's proposal as shutdown continues

Furloughed federal workers who've been without pay since the government shutdown will get a helping hand on Monday, thanks to rock legend Jon Bon Jovi and others.

The rocker's JBJ Soul Kitchen, a Red Bank, New Jersey, community restaurant that allows people to pay what they wish for a meal, or volunteer there in exchange for food, is offering free meals for furloughed government workers and their families on Martin Luther King Jr. Day.

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In partnership with the Murphy Family Foundation, run by New Jersey Gov. Phil Murphy and his wife, the restaurant will be serving the workers from noon to 2 p.m.

All you need to do is bring proof of federal employment.

The eatery said in a Facebook posting, "In line with our mission, Federal workers are encouraged to join us for a delicious meal and to learn about additional support and resources available in our community."

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Jon Bon Jovi and his wife Dorothea established the JBJ Soul Kitchen in 2011.

Since then, it's served more than 94,000 meals, the Bon Jovi Foundation says.