The food pantry at St. Louis Community College - Florissant Valley is a staple for students like Nyla Coleman. She often grabs a quick snack between classes. With rising food costs, the pantry鈥檚 source of groceries has become a source of support.
鈥淚f you need groceries, if you don't have the money to go to the grocery store, they have everything you need,鈥 Coleman said. 鈥淎nd I think that's really neat, that it's open to everyone because 鈥 it just saves a lot of money. It saves a lot of money.鈥
Students like Coleman have increasingly relied on local pantries. There are several possible factors, said Jo Britt-Rankin, administrative director of SNAP-Ed. That includes the expiration this year of relaxed pandemic rules, which allowed 3 million college students who typically wouldn't to qualify for the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program.
鈥淲e do see a number of places around the state where we find people of all ages that have food insecurity,鈥 said Britt-Rankin. 鈥淏ut it is alarming to know the number of college students who are struggling to be food secure.鈥
Pantries like at St. Louis Community College - Florissant Valley, at the University of Missouri-St. Louis and at Southern Illinois University Edwardsville are accessible to all students, with few barriers.
SNAP, on the other hand, requires application and approval that can often be challenging for nontraditional students, said Shannon Quinn, a case manager at UMSL鈥檚 Advocacy and Care center.
Quinn helps students apply for SNAP. The process isn鈥檛 simple, and its household status and work eligibility requirements can be challenging for students who work, still live with their parents or are supporting families of their own.
鈥淐ollege students are very busy. Time poverty is a thing, not just for nontraditional students,鈥 Quinn said, adding: 鈥淭here's a lot of barriers when they get to the application. They're like, 鈥業 don't know how to answer this,鈥 and they just need assistance.鈥
Food security is often the most basic need students seek. Pantries at SLCC, UMSL and SIUE are now equipped with specialists who work to connect them with other resources like housing assistance.
鈥淭here's still more we can do to help support college students that are hungry and are needing to be more food secure,鈥 Britt-Rankin said.
For the full conversation with Shannon Quinn and Jo Britt-Rankin about how local colleges are supporting students, listen to the full St. Louis on the Air conversation on , , , , or by clicking the play button below.
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