BY TARA BAHRAMPOUR
When
Paul Vaughn, an economics major, was in his third year at George Mason
University, he decided to save money by moving off campus. He figured that
skipping the basic campus meal plan, which costs $1,575 for 10 meals a week
each semester, and buying his own food would make life easier.
But
he had trouble affording the $50 a week he had budgeted for food and ended up
having to get two jobs to pay for it. “Almost as bad as the hunger itself is
the stress that you’re going to be hungry,” said Vaughn, 22, now in his fifth
year at GMU. “I spend more time thinking ‘How am I going to make some money so
I can go eat?’ and I focus on that when I should be doing homework or studying
for a test.”
A
problem known as “food insecurity” — a lack of nutritional food — is not
typically associated with U.S. college students. But it is increasingly on the
radar of administrators, who report seeing more hungry students, especially at
schools that enroll a high percentage of youths who are from low-income
families or are the first generation to attend college.
At
the same time that higher education is seen as key to financial security,
tuition and living expenses are rising astronomically,
making it all the more tempting for students to cut corners on food.
“Between
paying rent, paying utilities and then trying to buy food, that’s where we see
the most insecurity because that’s the most flexible,” said Monica Gray,
director of programs at the College Success Foundation-District of Columbia,
which helps low-income high school students go to college.
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