Los Angeles Times

Cal State to study need

The university aims to determine the scope of food and housing instabilit­y among its student body.

- By Carla Rivera carla.rivera@latimes.com

There is no doubt that hunger and homelessne­ss are realities for some California State University students, and now the school system is trying to chart the depths of those needs.

The one-year project will investigat­e the scope of food and housing insecurity and make recommenda­tions for how the university can support students in need.

With more than 460,000 students on 23 campuses, there is no firm grasp on the numbers of those lacking basic necessitie­s and whether the problem is increasing. It is believed that the actual number of students with no permanent housing is above what is reported.

“Students who experience homelessne­ss are not required to identify themselves, and because of the stigma associated with homelessne­ss, they purposeful­ly hide their circumstan­ces from those who might be able to help them,” said Rashida Crutchfiel­d, a Cal State Long Beach professor who will conduct the study. “There is a need for systems to be put in place at universiti­es across the nation to find these students.”

Students with food and housing instabilit­y face special challenges in just finding the means to study, Cal State Chancellor Timothy P. White said in a statement.

“Students should be focused on their education — but this focus is hard to maintain for those who do not know where they will sleep or when they will eat their next meal,” he said.

In 2013-14, nearly 340,000 Cal State students received financial aid, officials said. A third of undergradu­ates are the first in their families to attend college, and nearly half receive federal Pell Grants, which are awarded to low-income students.

A number of campuses already provide services such as donor-funded food pantries, clothing and hygiene products for students in need. The Long Beach campus recently started an emergency interventi­on program that includes donated meals, short-term housing and emergency funds. Fresno’s Food Security Project includes a student cupboard that had more than 900 visitors in the first 51 days, officials said.

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