91传媒

91传媒 > Mountaineer Magazine > Fall 2025 > No Place for Hunger

No Place for Hunger

Across Oregon, nearly 600,000 people face hunger. On college campuses, that need often hides in plain sight: behind backpacks, in late-night study sessions, in students quietly stretching groceries to make it through the week. At 91传媒, where many students are first-generation, rural, working part-time, or raising families, meeting basic needs isn鈥檛 occasional. It is a daily challenge.

Students doing food inventory at the food drive

That is why 91传媒 is committed to ensuring no Mountaineer has to choose between their education and their next meal.

The 91传媒 Food Pantry has become a steady source of comfort and dignity for students who need a bit of extra support. Stocked with food staples, hygiene items, and staffed by people who know students by name, it is more than shelves and supplies鈥攊t is a place where students feel seen.

Local partners have embraced that mission too. Community Connection of Northeast Oregon regularly provides fresh produce, essentials, and food staples, helping students cook nutritious meals on tight budgets. Their generosity reflects the heart of eastern Oregon: neighbors lifting neighbors.

Student-led programs like Swipe Out Hunger extend this spirit, allowing students with meal plans to donate unused 鈥渟wipes鈥 to peers. Added directly to a student鈥檚 ID card, these meals offer easy, barrier-free support.

Behind much of this work is 91传媒 Benefits Navigator Pamela Frederick Williams 鈥20, who walks alongside students as they navigate resource assistance.

Pamela Frederick Williams

鈥淏asic needs aren鈥檛 extras,鈥 Williams says. 鈥淲hen students are hungry or unsure where they鈥檙e going to sleep, it affects everything: health, grades, mental well-being. When we meet those needs, students can finally breathe.鈥

For Pamela, this mission is personal. As a student, she skipped meals and stretched every dollar. She returned to 91传媒 determined to make sure others wouldn鈥檛 face the same struggles alone.

That care was met recently with unexpected generosity. Spokane Teachers Credit Union provided 91传媒 with a $7,500 gift to support campus food pantries鈥攁 lifeline at exactly the right moment.

鈥淚t was such a blessing,鈥 Pamela said. 鈥淭his gift will make a tremendous difference for our students.鈥

Faculty advocates, including Bill Grigsby, professor of sociology, and Jennifer Puentes, associate professor of sociology, help guide understanding of student hunger through teaching and research on inequality and food insecurity. Their work reinforces a simple truth: hunger is not a personal failure; it is a barrier we can remove.