The Times Herald (Norristown, PA)

Where college students can find emergency money and housing

- By Anna Helhoski

College students without a financial safety net are in a tough spot when unexpected costs arise.

“The chances their parents can pick up the bill are not as high,” says Sara Goldrick-Rab, a professor at Temple University in Philadelph­ia and founder of the Wisconsin HOPE Lab, a research center at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. “It’s not for lack of families wanting to; they don’t have it.”

A 2018 national survey led by Goldrick-Rab found that over a third of university students out of over 20,000 surveyed said they were food insecure, or had had limited or uncertain access to food in the previous 30 days. And 36 percent of those students said they were housing insecure in the last year, which means they had trouble paying housing bills or had to move frequently.

Recognizin­g that a financial crisis can force a student to withdraw from classes, about three-quarters of colleges and other postsecond­ary schools offer some kind of help, according to a 2016 survey of emergency college aid programs by the profession­al associatio­n NASPAStude­nt Affairs Administra­tors in Higher Education. Programs include loans and small cash grants, dining hall vouchers and food pantries, and scholarshi­ps to complete a semester.

The impact can be significan­t. “We found that if you can alleviate their need in one place, it’s going to free up their finances to support other things like tuition, books, housing or rent,” says Stan Jackson, director of student affairs communicat­ions and marketing initiative­s at the University of Georgia in Athens, Georgia.

Go to your school’s financial aid or student affairs office to ask about emergency programs, which could include grants, completion scholarshi­ps, emergency loans or vouchers. Usually this money can pay for tuition, housing, books, supplies and transporta­tion.

For example, at Grand Rapids Community College in Grand Rapids, Michigan, assistance is available for students who face emergencie­s such as losing their job, eviction or utility shut-off. The fund has provided students with over $78,000 in grants and loans since 2014, according to Dave Murray, a school spokespers­on.

If you don’t have consistent access to food, contact your school’s student affairs office to learn about programs such as food vouchers, scholarshi­ps, free meal plans, access to SNAP benefits and food pantries.

At the University of Georgia, where Jackson says 10 percent of the population is affected by food insecurity, students can apply for yearlong food scholarshi­ps that award meal plans. T here’s also a campus food pantry.

Food pantries usually stock nonperisha­ble foods, but some may also have fresh food and items such as cleaning supplies and hygiene products, says Clare Cady, co-founder and director of the College and University Food Bank Alliance, which has 626 member schools.

The food pantry at Oregon State University in Corvallis, Oregon, provides about 20,000 meals per semester, says Nicole Hindes, assistant director of the university’s human services resource center. Hindes says free dining hall vouchers are the most heavily utilized program.

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