New Haven Register (Sunday) (New Haven, CT)

Food insecurity a ‘growing epidemic’ for college students

- By Maya Moore

Though debt-free college took the lion’s share headlines this legislativ­e session, another bill with little financial impact but huge consequenc­es for a growing number of college students facing hunger cleared both the state House and Senate without fanfare or fuss.

On the last day of the session, on the heels of midnight, Sen. Will Haskell, D-Westport, spoke about what he called a “growing epidemic” among his college-aged peers: food insecurity — or the inability to “access to a sufficient quantity of affordable, nutritious food.”

The bill mandates the collection of data on food insecurity from the state’s public colleges and universiti­es.

Haskell, who at 23 yearsold is the youngest member of the General Assembly, said the issue had been a recurring theme in his meetings with administra­tors and students as part of the Higher Education and Employment Advancemen­t Committee. He classified the matter as urgent and in need of further research—36 of his fellow senators agreed.

“There are students out there who are too rich for Pell Grants and too poor to afford college,” Haskell said. “There are students who are falling through the cracks and as much as we’d like to believe that we have a strong safety net in place, young people are being overlooked… and going to class hungry.”

According to Marlene Schwartz, director of the Rudd Center for Food Policy & Obesity, safety nets such as the Supplement­al Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) often fail because the majority of full-time college students are not eligible for benefits unless they fulfill the 20-hour a week work requiremen­t.

“There’s also an assumption that all college students have families that can give them the money they need. But that is not the reality today —especially in light of work to make college accessible to students from different background­s,” Schwartz said.

Specifical­ly, the legislatio­n requires the University of Connecticu­t and the Connecticu­t State Colleges and Universiti­es to each study the policies affecting students experienci­ng food insecurity and collect data from their respective universiti­es and colleges.

The term food insecurity has become commonplac­e in the lexicon of Connecticu­t’s colleges and universiti­es with food pantries popping up at the University of Connecticu­t and larger scale ones, like the Cougar Pantry at Manchester Community College, expanding in size since its inception in 2015.

Nationally, at least 40 percent of college students experience food insecurity before graduating, according to a 2018 study released by The Hope Center for College, Community, and Justice, which surveyed over 160,000 students at 120 colleges and universiti­es across the United States.

A study released by the U.S. Government Accountabi­lity Office late last year revealed an issue the bill attempts to address: informatio­n about the prevalence of food insecurity among college students is limited, both nationally and locally.

The GAO review of 31 national studies provided some insight despite limitation­s: 25 estimated that food insecurity affects between 9 percent to well over 50 percent of college students. Nearly two dozen of those studies estimated food insecurity rates of more than 30 percent.

This year, during the month of October, CSCU’s four state universiti­es, 12 community colleges and all of UConn’s campuses will be required to record the number of students who reported experienci­ng food insecurity or attempted to access benefits offered by each institutio­n. Additional­ly, each school must report the dispersal of any emergency aid or grants.

The bill’s House champion, Rep. Gregg Haddad, D-Mansfield, said the decision to limit the collection of data to one month was reached as a compromise to accommodat­e the smaller schools that may not have the infrastruc­ture in place to roll out large scale data collection without interrupti­ng services that already exist to help food insecure students.

In addition, the schools must report whether they currently operate a food pantry and disclose the number of students served and the number of pounds of food they distribute­d during that one month period.

Haddad, who also chairs the Higher Education and Employment Advancemen­t Committee, classified the bill as explorator­y and said its goal is not to establish a comprehens­ive database.

“We’re looking for [the colleges and universiti­es in the study] to paint a picture of what is occurring on college campuses now,” Haddad said. “We will use that informatio­n to have further conversati­ons with the same institutio­ns to determine if there’s something more we could do through the state.”

Food insecurity had been recognized long before it reached the House floor, and advocates hope now that it has received legislativ­e backing this session, through a bill that would study its scope, it can further be dragged from the shadows.

Schwartz said food insecurity is a significan­t issue that has received ” relatively little research or policy attention.”

“A legislatur­e is a place that embraces incrementa­lism and sometimes it just takes longer to do the obvious,” Haddad said. “Sometimes it just takes time, but I was pleased with the progress that we’ve made this year.”

Haddad said he attributed the successful passage of the bill to the persistenc­e of the bill’s sponsors and cosponsors, but also to “the advocacy of students who helped increase awareness and helped to move a number of legislator­s to feel comfortabl­e with authorizin­g and requiring additional research.”

One such student was UConn senior Wawa Gatheru, who spearheade­d a grassroots initiative to address food insecurity on the university’s Storrs campus through a series of “pop-up” food pantries which served over 600 students over the course of two events. Currently, UConn does not operate a food pantry on campus, but Gatheru said she hopes the study will lead to the funding of a permanent one.

Gordon Plouffe, a member of the CT Food Justice Project, who is at the helm of Manchester Community College’s Cougar Pantry, said on average they serve 6,000 students a semester.

At least eight of the 12 community colleges that will take part in the study this October currently have food pantries on campus to serve its food insecure students, two other community colleges are stops on a mobile pantry bus route and both Central Connecticu­t State University and Eastern have on-site pantries.

Maureen Chalmers, president of the Congress of Connecticu­t Community Colleges (4Cs), said within the last five years, community college faculty and staff have ramped up efforts to support students struggling to have their basic needs met— according to both Schwartz and Haskell, community college students are disproport­ionally food insecure.

“When students are hungry or worrying about other essentials like where they will sleep that night, they cannot focus on academics,” Chalmers said. “Students should not be forced to choose between an education that could serve as a pathway out of poverty or paying for food and housing.”

Haskell said it’s a “piecemeal approach” to a problem that needs to be addressed at the root cause.

“I’m concerned and I think many other committee members are concerned that without a comprehens­ive solution, what we’re doing is putting a Band-Aid on the larger wound,” Haskell said. “We need to look at why they are food insecure, to begin with, and explore ways can we help them be on a more steady financial footing to make sure that they don’t have to visit the food pantry in the first place.”

 ?? Brian A. Pounds / Hearst Connecticu­t Media ?? Siblings Andrew and Amanda Ciarlelli, of Watertown, eat at the Barone Campus Center Dining Hall at Fairfield University. Sen. Will Haskell, D-Westport, said there’s been a growing problem of college-aged people not having access to a “sufficient quantity of affordable, nutritious food.”
Brian A. Pounds / Hearst Connecticu­t Media Siblings Andrew and Amanda Ciarlelli, of Watertown, eat at the Barone Campus Center Dining Hall at Fairfield University. Sen. Will Haskell, D-Westport, said there’s been a growing problem of college-aged people not having access to a “sufficient quantity of affordable, nutritious food.”

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