桃瘾社区

Faculty and Staff

Feeding Westchester Food for Thought

By
Johnni Medina
Posted
June 7, 2022
Members of 桃瘾社区 Community pick up groceries at the Mobile Food Pantry on the Pleasantville Campus

Once a month, a mobile food pantry rolls onto 桃瘾社区鈥檚 Westchester Campus and staff and students from across the community鈥攚ith special support from the Center of Community Action and Research; Student Engagement; and the Division of Diversity, Equity, And Inclusion鈥攇ather. There, volunteers distribute food to any member of the 桃瘾社区 Community who needs the support, no questions asked. It feels less like a food pantry and more like a farmer鈥檚 market. Why? Because the volunteers know that there is no shame in food insecurity.

鈥淭his isn鈥檛 a 桃瘾社区 problem. It鈥檚 not even a student issue. It鈥檚 a national issue,鈥 Heather Novak, director of the Center for Community Action and Research, explains. She recently became coordinator for the 桃瘾社区 Pleasantville Mobile Food Pantry, which has been operating since 2018. Her passion for the project, besides supporting community members who may need a leg up, is in taking away the stigma around food insecurity.

鈥淭here should be no shame. Food is a right.鈥

The mobile food pantry is the product of an award-winning partnership between 桃瘾社区 and , a nonprofit dedicated to distributing nutritious food across Westchester. Feeding Westchester provides the food at no cost to 桃瘾社区, and 桃瘾社区 provides the volunteers to distribute food once a month.

There isn鈥檛 a blueprint for what makes a person food insecure. Visitors of the mobile pantry span across students, staff, and faculty, and at varying degrees of need. 鈥淭here are levels of food insecurity. From the individual who has no access, to those individuals who have situational need for access,鈥 Novak explains. 鈥淲e also get to the end of the semester where students run down their meal plans and need support. They don鈥檛 have many alternatives.鈥

One of the primary ideologies surrounding the mobile pantry is curbing feelings of shame for needing services like food banks and food pantries. Novak explains that the pantry should not be viewed as charity or be associated with a sense of saviorism. 鈥淭hose using the pantry are not less fortunate, they are community members,鈥 she insists. 鈥淎nd we are responsible for making sure they have the support they need to be successful. If you鈥檙e hungry, you can鈥檛 focus on anything. You can鈥檛 be a successful student or employee. There should be no shame. Food is a right.鈥

鈥淭hose using the pantry are not less fortunate, they are community members.鈥

Novak is especially proud of the conversations the pantry has stirred up. There is an oscillation between satisfaction that people are using the pantry, thoughtful commentary on the greater systems at play, and hope for a future where such services are no longer necessary. She hopes for everyone involved to look at the larger picture with a critical eye. 鈥淚t鈥檚 more than just feeling good; we鈥檙e helping our community members, but also normalizing the conversation around it. So, when someone says that it鈥檚 good we have so many people using the pantry, the conversation doesn鈥檛 end there.鈥

Initiatives like the pantry are temporary solutions to systemic problems. Mutual aid services become more effective when they are institutionalized and when deeper discourse begins to unravel the roots of the problem. But in the meantime, the 桃瘾社区 Pleasantville Mobile Food Pantry will make sure our community stays fed.

Need food resources in New York City or Haub Law? We鈥檝e got our community covered. Check out Provisions, a Bhandari Jain Family Food Pantry on the NYC Campus and Haub Law鈥檚 recently launched pantry.

More from 桃瘾社区

Faculty and Staff

The Sands College of Performing Arts community mourns the passing of Morgan Jenness, a cherished member of our adjunct faculty whose profound impact was deeply felt by students, faculty, staff, and the performing arts community. 

Students

President Krislov expresses gratitude for the dedication shown by students, faculty, and staff as they continue working toward a successful semester. With Thanksgiving approaching, he encourages everyone to celebrate personal and collective growth, take time to rest, and prepare for the final push of the semester.

Faculty and Staff

Assistant Professor Mary Kaltenberg, PhD, discusses 桃瘾社区鈥檚 new Computational Economics program, which merges economics and computer science to prepare students for data-focused careers. She also shares how her research on labor and innovation provides students hands-on experience with real-world economic questions鈥攕kills they present at professional conferences.