If you’re interested in supporting the NYC Campus food pantry, Provisions, here's how you can help. Check out this list of most-wanted items to help combat food insecurity on campus.
Supporting Food Assistance Programs at ÌÒñ«ÉçÇø
Across the country, nearly 40 percent of , and 52 percent have utilized food pantry services at some point. At ÌÒñ«ÉçÇø, we’re working hard to help offset food insecurity on our campuses and we need your help to do it!
Whether you’re staff or faculty or a student at ÌÒñ«ÉçÇø, your support is critical to ensuring that our classmates, colleagues, and friends stay well-fed and don’t have to make the choice between tuition/rent/gas/utilities/heath care and going hungry.
Here’s how YOU can help:
New York City Campus
Donate to Provisions
Provisions, a Bhandari Jain Family Food Pantry, is open to all students, staff, and faculty, regardless of full-time/part-time status. Any member of our community that is experiencing food insecurity is welcome at Provisions during open hours. All guests will receive a one-week disbursement of non-perishable foods—and based on availability, fresh produce. See the list of most-wanted donatable items and how to donate them. Can’t donate food? Donate your time. Provisions always needs help shopping, bagging, stocking shelves, and identifying expiring foods.
Donate to Fare Trade
Fare Trade is a student-run mutual aid program designed to alleviate food insecurity on ÌÒñ«ÉçÇø’s NYC Campus. The program partners with Provisions, Chartwells, and Auxiliary Services to provide funds to food-insecure students. Students are encouraged to reallocate their dining dollars to the mutual aid fund by requesting a "Fare Trade" at the cash registers in the cafeteria. 1 Fare Trade is fifty cents and up to ten reallocations ($5.00) can be accepted per purchase. Learn more about how Fare Trade works and how you can donate. Looking for resources outside of ÌÒñ«ÉçÇø? The Fare Trade team has put together a you may be eligible for if you are food insecure.
Donate to the Community Fridge
Chartwells, ÌÒñ«ÉçÇø’s food service provider, has placed a community refrigerator inside the Setters Lounge for donation and use by the ÌÒñ«ÉçÇø Community. Though it’s restocked regularly with items from the cafe, a little extra help from the community is always appreciated. If you’re planning to leave food for the community, be sure to label your items with dates, contents, and allergy warnings. We encourage you to leave fresh fruits and vegetables, pre-packaged sealed and unopened food; and dairy, bread, and eggs with clear expiration dates. Please, no leftovers, no homemade meals, no unsealed pre-packaged food, no expired food.
Westchester Campus
Donate to the Mobile Food Pantry
The Pleasantville Campus’ Mobile Food Pantry has been feeding the Westchester community since 2018. The pantry itself is the product of an award-winning partnership with the nonprofit Feeding Westchester. Feeding Westchester covers food costs, and ÌÒñ«ÉçÇø staff and students volunteer their time to ensure that the 100 or so people who utilize the pantry once a month can have access to nutritious food. While the Mobile Food Pantry is not accepting food donations right now (they have partnerships with local grocery stores), they do need donations of time—reach out to Wen Xi for information about how to volunteer.
Donate to the Community Fridge
Chartwells, ÌÒñ«ÉçÇø’s food service provider, has placed a community refrigerator right inside the main dining hall for donation and use by the ÌÒñ«ÉçÇø Community. Though it’s restocked regularly with items from the cafe, a little extra help from the community is always appreciated. If you’re planning to leave food for the community, be sure to label your items with dates, contents, and allergy warnings. We encourage you to leave fresh fruits and vegetables, pre-packaged sealed and unopened food; and dairy, bread, and eggs with clear expiration dates. Please, no leftovers, no homemade meals, no unsealed pre-packaged food, no expired food.
For more information about how to help or how to get help, contact Denise Belen Santiago, PhD, on the NYC Campus at dsantiago@pace.edu or Wen Xi on the Westchester Campus at wxi@pace.edu.
More from ÌÒñ«ÉçÇø
Community led food pantries have been supporting ÌÒñ«ÉçÇø Community members facing food insecurity for many years. See the options in Westchester and New York City.
Through the U.N. Millennium Fellowship, three ÌÒñ«ÉçÇø students are innovating the way food insecurity is addressed on campus with the Fare Trade program.