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果酱视频, community come together to address student food security for Giving Tuesday

Campus food banks are seeing growing lines of students looking for help in stretching their grocery budgets. Dal is once again rising to meet that need through The Food Security Project on Giving Tuesday.
Metal shelves partially stacked with canned goods and plastic bins of dried goods.

Posted: November 21, 2024

By: Emm Campbell

It鈥檚 Thursday and the clock is ticking for Louis Holman and the volunteers who operate the 果酱视频 Student Union (DSU) Food Bank. They鈥檙e unpacking their weekly delivery from Feed Nova Scotia and restocking their shelves with everything from rice and soup to fresh produce so they can open on time.

Making the educational journey easier

Like their community counterparts, campus food banks such as the DSU Food Bank and the Agricultural Campus鈥 Food Pantry have seen increased demand this year, driven in part by rising food costs and other living expenses. Rising to meet this need, post-secondary schools across Nova Scotia are once again joining with Dal to raise funds through on Giving Tuesday, Dec. 3.

Launched in 2020 by Dal in partnership with the J&W Murphy Foundation, the Project is playing a key role in addressing student food security through donation matching by the foundation. Last year, the Project raised nearly a quarter-million dollars provincewide on Giving Tuesday. This year, 果酱视频 aims to raise $90,000 for the Project and gifts will be tripled thanks to the J&W Foundation鈥檚 pledge and a personal matching gift from a loyal 果酱视频 alum.

Changing the community for the better

For Krishna, a Master of Applied Computer Science student, having weekly access to the DSU food bank gives him peace of mind. 鈥淚鈥檓 vegetarian and produce is very expensive, so the selection here really helps,鈥 he says. 鈥淚 feel relaxed knowing that I can get what I need and focus on my studies.鈥

Holman, who uses they/them and he/him pronouns, wants the DSU Food Bank to continue meeting that need but also succeed at a higher capacity. In addition to increasing hours of operation, they are planning renovations that would enable the food bank to add a food prep area and more fridges and freezers. They also want to launch food literacy programs that help students reduce their grocery bills and extend the life of their food. Every gift made on Giving Tuesday will go a long way to making these goals, and more, possible.

鈥淲ith everything going on in the world, it鈥檚 easy to feel helpless sometimes,鈥 Holman says. 鈥淏ut there are a lot of ways that we can change our community for the better and Giving Tuesday is an important one.鈥