Hunger-Free Campus Designations Expand Across Louisiana

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Members of the Board of Regents approved hunger-free campus designations for 31 public and 4 private Louisiana higher education institutions across the state.

Act 719 established criteria for Louisiana higher education institutions to earn a hunger-free campus designation and authorized the Hunger-Free Campus competitive grant program to support the institutions in their efforts.

A 2020 national study indicated that approximately 29% of students at four-year colleges and 38% at two-year institutions experience food insecurity.  The numbers for students of color are even higher. These data are not surprising given Louisiana’s high rate of students living in poverty.

Act 719 established very specific criteria for campuses to receive the Hunger-Free Campus designation, requiring them to do all of the following:

  • Establish a Hunger-Free Task Force;
  • Inform students who receive need-based financial aid of their potential eligibility to receive Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) benefits;
  • Provide a summary of campus efforts in the following areas:
    • Hunger-Free Campus Task Force,
    • SNAP benefits communication informing students of potential eligibility,
    • Anti-Hunger campus event (date, time, location, participating schools), and
    • Access to charitable food distribution on your campus(es) or local community food pantry.

To carry out this legislative mandate, the Board of Regents launched several strategies and outreach efforts, including:

  • Surveyed public and private institutions to create a landscape analysis of hunger-free activities at Louisiana institutions;
  • Determined exemplary institutions leading this work in Louisiana and met with staff;
  • Created the Hunger-Free Campus designation application and distributed it to institutional student affairs teams;
  • Worked with Feeding Louisiana, the Louisiana Charitable Food Summit, and the Louisiana Anti-Hunger Coalition to help support on-campus food pantries; and
  • Facilitated two rounds of application submission and review.

Every institution across the four public higher education systems (LCTCS, LSU, Southern, and UL) and four of the state’s private institutions applied for and received the HFC designation.

Institutions receiving the Hunger-Free Designation:

LOUISIANA ASSOCIATION OF INDEPENDENT COLLEGES AND UNIVERSITIES (LAICU)Centenary College of LouisianaFranciscan Missionaries of Our Lady UniversityLoyola University New OrleansTulane University

LOUISIANA COMMUNITY AND TECHNICAL COLLEGE SYSTEM (LCTCS)Baton Rouge Community CollegeBossier Parish Community CollegeCentral Louisiana Technical Community CollegeDelgado Community CollegeFletcher Technical Community CollegeLouisiana Delta Community CollegeNorthshore Technical Community CollegeNorthwest Technical Community CollegeNunez Community CollegeRiver Parishes Community CollegeSouth Louisiana Community CollegeSOWELA Technical Community College

LOUISIANA STATE UNIVERSITY SYSTEMLouisiana State University and A&M CollegeLouisiana State University of AlexandriaLouisiana State University EuniceLouisiana State University ShreveportLouisiana State University Health Sciences Center New OrleansLouisiana State University Health Sciences Center Shreveport

SOUTHERN UNIVERSITY SYSTEMSouthern University and A&M CollegeSouthern University at New OrleansSouthern University ShreveportSouthern University Law Center

UNIVERSITY OF LOUISIANA SYSTEMGrambling State UniversityLouisiana Tech UniversityMcNeese State UniversityNicholls State UniversityNorthwestern State UniversitySoutheastern Louisiana UniversityUniversity of Louisiana at LafayetteUniversity of Louisiana at MonroeUniversity of New Orleans

ContactDr. Chris Yandle, Assistant Commissioner for Public Affairschris.yandle@laregents.edu • 985-373-5845

By Sarah Seavey
Sarah Seavey