Free food for thought: Campus food pantries proliferate
SCHENECTADY, N.Y. — Free food pantries are becoming nearly as common as the campus book store at a growing number of colleges.
More than 570 campus food pantries nationwide are registered with the College and University Food Bank Alliance, which formed in 2012 and helps colleges set up food pantries and other hunger programs. New York recently required that they be established at all institutions in its state university system.
“You can’t concentrate when you’re hungry; you’re irritable, you’re not focusing. I did not perform well on some exams,” said 47-year-old Manhattan Community College student Melanie Aucello, who is working on a college degree in hopes of improving her family’s quality of life.
A report published this month by a lab at the University of Wisconsin found 36 per cent of 43,000 students attending two- and four-year colleges who were surveyed in 20 states had trouble getting enough to eat, threatening the academic success that’s key to overcoming poverty.


