Toronto Star

Near-empty dining halls deliver another hit to colleges

Pandemic cuts revenue that schools usually use to supplement budgets

- JANET LORIN

The effect of COVID-19 pandemic has hit all corners of college life — even the lunch line.

With just a fraction of university students buying food from campus dining halls, customers are down while virus-related expenses for items such as disposable cutlery and carry-out containers are up.

The drop-off in dining revenue is another blow to university budgets at a time when limited campus activity and falling enrolment caused by the pandemic have led to unpreceden­ted financial stress. The impact of this year’s shutdowns have hit everything — from room and board to parking fees and conference centre rentals — that schools usually use to supplement their budgets, such as for scholarshi­ps and athletics.

“We’ve got fewer residentia­l students and less dining revenue,” said Steve Mangan, senior director of dining services at the University of Michigan, where the number of students in college accommodat­ion in the fall semester was down by a third. “You can’t run at deficits forever.”

Michigan said last week that classes will be mostly virtual in the semester that begins in January, with the use of campus housing expected to dramatical­ly decline. Rutgers University also announced a mostly virtual next term beginning in 2021.

With the pandemic raging across the U.S., the pain could last for many more months. And it comes on top of the damage that’s already been done: earlier this year, schools issued refunds for room and board when they closed campuses, a move that cost Harvard, for example, $32 million (U.S.).

The impact is also being felt by food services companies. Sodexo SA’s revenue from universiti­es fell 48 per cent in the fiscal fourth quarter, according to company filings. At Aramark, revenue from its U.S. education business declined in the third quarter due to school shutdowns, the company said.

“It’s unlikely to be a full recovery in the short term” for the industry, said Eshan Toorabally, a Bloomberg Intelligen­ce analyst who follows Sodexo.

Representa­tives from both companies declined to comment.

This fall semester’s enrolment of first-year college students, avid users of meal plans, is down 16 per cent, according to the National Student Clearingho­use Research Center. Schools also face additional costs for COVID testing, Plexiglas shields and opening spaces for dining due to physical distancing.

Some schools have renegotiat­ed their contracts with food service providers. George Mason University’s new agreement with Sodexo saved the university about $1.5 million in March, said Bill Dracos, associate vicepresid­ent for business services at the public school in Virginia.

Revenue dropped by almost 60 per cent for board plans and more than 70 per cent for Mason-managed retail restaurant­s, from which the school earns commission­s, he said.

 ?? ANTHONY BAGGETT DREAMSTIME ?? The dining hall at Christ Church College, which is losing money with just a fraction of students buying food.
ANTHONY BAGGETT DREAMSTIME The dining hall at Christ Church College, which is losing money with just a fraction of students buying food.

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