Colorado
Food pantry programs aim to reduce hunger on Colorado college campuses where half of students go hungry
GREELEY — When he was a freshman living in the dorms at the University of Northern Colorado, Ryan Wood would sometimes face a choice late at night: Would he be exhausted the next day, or should he steal some dinner from the communal refrigerator?
“I was so hungry at times,” Wood said, “that I couldn’t sleep.”
Wood no longer has to make that impossible decision. He volunteers at the Bear Pantry, UNC’s food bank for students, but he remains a client. Many students in universities across Colorado face the same occasional hunger: More than half of UNC’s students, 57%, said in a survey that they faced food insecurity.
UNC hopes to address student hunger by opening a new Center for Student Well Being at the start of the spring semester that will triple the size of the Bear Pantry and will help students find other resources, such as federal food benefits, to keep them full.
The survey suggests that a majority of UNC’s students don’t always have access to food, or they might skip snacks, or rely a little too much on dollar deals at fast-food joints or eat too much of one food, like cans of soup.
The reasons vary widely, and just like those who use a food bank, they’re not always strictly about money.
Wood, 22 and a senior now, admits he’s not dirt poor. He doesn’t have student loans, for example. But he also doesn’t have a car and Greeley is far from his family just outside of San Francisco. He relies on UNC’s meal plan to feed himself, and the limited hours don’t always jibe with his schedule. Places to buy groceries are scarce around UNC: The closest is a King Soopers a mile walk away. Wood also doesn’t have the money to spend on DoorDash or pay for a ride to the store.
Still, he felt ashamed for asking UNC for food, and guilty for taking it, given that he could pay for college without borrowing money. He remembers hovering close to the Bear Pantry entry for a few minutes before a student volunteer coaxed him inside. This is why Freddie Horn, a graduate student who runs the pantry to get clinical hours for a degree in mental health counseling, tries to say hello to everyone who walks inside. He wants them to feel welcome. Apparently it’s working.
“Sometimes they won’t get any food at all,” Horn said of his regulars. “They just want to stop in and say hello.”
A national crisis
Student hunger isn’t just a UNC problem. Colorado State University, for example, estimates more than 40% of its students face some sort of food insecurity. But really, it’s a nationwide problem, said John Hancock, UNC’s assistant vice president for wellness and support. This year, for the first time, the Council for the Advancement of Standards in Higher Education, an organization with a lofty goal of enhancing student learning, development and success, chose to measure, in part, a university’s ability to meet its students’ basic needs. The move, Hancock said, was a stunning confirmation of just how many students are going without food or housing that meets minimum standards across the country.
Data released in July by the U.S. General Accountability Office showed about 3.8 million college students, or about 23%, experienced food insecurity in 2020, the majority of whom reported multiple instances of eating less than they should or skipping meals because they could not afford food.
“Just about every college is thinking about this,” Hancock said, “and it’s getting worse.”
In 2014, UNC started the pantry on the urging of students, who then ran the service by volunteering. Now UNC is not only tripling the size of it, it also has hired a full-time staff person to supervise the work.
Here’s yet another way to measure the problem: On Mondays, Horn said, the food pantry’s restocking day, there’s a line out the door that stretches the length of the University Center, where more fortunate students can snack on Subway sandwiches or eat a lunch on their meal plan.
The staff member overseeing the pantry, Taylor Schiestel, went after her job hard a few months ago after she learned in the interview about the Bear Pantry expansion. She was born and raised in Greeley, a traditionally blue-collar city that has lower income rates than its neighbors Fort Collins or Loveland, and she’s worked with economically vulnerable populations, including those at the Rodarte Center in Greeley, for years.
“Anything I can do to build my community,” Schiestel said.
Students, she said, are a unique case. Yes, they’ve always traditionally struggled: A standard joke is they keep instant Ramen companies in business (the cheap homemade noodle packets, not the trendy restaurant fare).
“But they shouldn’t have to struggle,” Schiestel said. “Your education should be enough. If we can ease this burden for you, let us do that.”
The Bear Pantry goes beyond just supplying food. Horn tries to teach students how to shop for groceries, keep the food fresh and use healthy recipes that may provide leftovers for a couple days.
“Groceries are expensive now,” Schiestel said. “I think we can all acknowledge that.”
UNC’s hiring of her, she said, does show that the university cares. “It was an act of love.”
But it was also an investment, Schiestel and Hancock said. Student retention rates go up when they thrive. When students are hungry, they’re likely struggling with other things. Wood is a good example of how hunger can affect sleep or an ability to focus or have the energy to go work out. When those things slip, grades do as well, and it becomes more likely that they will drop out.

The high cost of college
So here’s the elephant in the room: Would students be hungry if they weren’t paying such high tuition rates? Hancock admits that the high costs of education are part of the problem, along with unprecedented increases in the cost of housing since the pandemic.
“It’s an uncomfortable truth that when students go hungry,” said Michael Buttram, CSU’s basic needs manager, “it’s partly because they’re paying such high tuition.”
Hunger, in fact, is the easiest to solve, Buttram said. Tuition won’t go down, and neither will rents, he said. Transportation can also be an issue, as Wood shows.
“The best work we are doing is around food insecurity,” Buttram said.
When Buttram started at CSU, in 2017, it had a mobile food pantry. That wasn’t his primary job, but once the pandemic hit, CSU got some of the dollars that followed and created a position for Buttram (he actually wrote the job description and was fortunate enough to be hired, he said).
“The pandemic gave higher education the liberty to really act upon it,” Buttram said. “It showed us all how close we all were to food insecurity, and it helped us have a bigger heart for everyone.”
He helped create a meal program where up to 50 meals a month are distributed tor those who sign up, much like a Meals on Wheels program. Rams Against Hunger also runs a pantry with the assistance of the Food Bank for Larimer County (Weld Food Bank helps UNC), and pocket pantries scattered across the Fort Collins campus for CSU students who just want to grab a lunch. There’s a meal swipe card program, where a limited number of students can get free meal plans. There’s even a text chain to 2,000 students to pick up food leftover from catered events. The pandemic ended three years ago, but the programs have continued.
“Once you start something like that,” Buttram said, “you aren’t going to stop.”
Universities won’t cut tuition, but Hancock said UNC tries to keep costs affordable, especially when compared to other Colorado schools. Housing remains a challenge, but textbooks can be replaced at times with free online materials.
“I’ve done a lot of thinking about this,” Hancock said. “The key is just to support students as much as possible.”
Shoving aside the stigma

The new Bear Pantry will be smack dab in the middle of the University Center at UNC, next to a snack shop, a few strides from Subway and in the main walkway of one of UNC’s busiest buildings.
“It won’t be tucked away,” Hancock said, “It will be front and center.”
The idea behind the visibility is to reduce the stigma that students may feel for using the pantry. It will also make it easier to find for students, as far too many still don’t know they can get free food when they need it.
The larger goal of the pantry is to help students not rely on it so much, and that’s why it will be contained in a Center for Student Well Being. The center will help students navigate resources, Hancock said, including counseling and applying for an emergency support fund that can help them pay for a car repair or sign up for food stamps. Many students qualify for the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, commonly called SNAP, but few enroll.
That could be, partly, because students don’t like to think of themselves as needing food stamps when the whole point of college is to eventually avoid them. And getting students to pick up leftovers from an event or have a meal delivered may feel just as icky.
Ideally, all students could get a free meal swipe card because that puts them in the same category as everyone else, Buttram said, and no one knows the difference between the free swipes and the paid ones. But that’s expensive.
“We’re always searching or ways to get more free meal swipes,” Buttram said. “That’s a very dignity affirming approach.”
Instead, Buttram encourages students to think of it as reducing food waste. The leftovers they don’t accept from catering will just be thrown away, he said, and food in the pantry that isn’t used will go bad.
“As a society we waste 40% of the food we create,” Buttram said. “We’re just trying to reduce that amount.”
It’s also why Horn makes eye contact with every student who comes in the door. Just five minutes of his time, he said, can make anyone feel seen or validated. He didn’t learn that from his counseling classes. He learned it from his time at the Bear Pantry.
Colorado
UPDATE: Northbound Powers reopned after major crash
UPDATE: SUNDAY 4/19/2026 7:12 p.m.
(COLORADO SPRINGS) — Northbound Powers Boulevards is back open at Palmer Park Boulevard, according to the Colorado Springs Police Department (CSPD). However, the center and right northbound lanes as well as the right turn lane remain closed south of Constitution Avenue. Law enforcement asked the community to avoid the area if possible, and drive carefully.
ORIGINAL STORY: CSPD: Major crash closes northbound Powers
The northbound lanes of Powers Boulevard are closed at Palmer Park Boulevard for a major crash at Powers and Constitution as of 5 p.m. on Sunday, April 19, according to the Colorado Springs Police Department (CSPD). Drivers are asked to avoid the area.
According to FOX21 News crew who spoke to an officer at the scene, the crash involved at least two cars and two motorcycles, and multiple people have been taken to the hospital.
Multiple agencies are responding, according to the FOX21 News crew, and the Major Crash Unit may be called in. Reports indicate that no one has died as of 5:30 p.m.
Colorado
Outgoing Colorado Buffaloes Sebastian Rancik, Bangot Dak Make Transfer Portal Moves
Former Colorado Buffaloes stars Sebastian Rancik and Bangot Dak announced their transfer portal decisions on Sunday with Rancik committing to Florida State and Dak committing to Vanderbilt, per On3’s Joe Tipton. They join former Buffs guard Isaiah Johnson (now at Texas) as the third former Colorado player to leave the Big 12 conference as Rancik opts for the ACC and Dak heads to the SEC.
The trio of Johnson, Rancik, and Dak make up three of Colorado’s four most productive players with rising senior guard Barrington Hargress, and the Buffs are now tasked with replacing such production with Hargress as the only returner.
Rancik’s season ended prematurely with an injury, but he averaged 12.3 points and 5.6 rebounds per game for the Buffs. Dak was Colorado’s leading rebounder with 6.5 boards per game, scoring 11.5 points per contest as well.
While each player has his respective reasons for transferring, the most expected ones are for seeking better NIL deals or more development on a better team in a better league. The Buffs finished 12th in the Big 12, and the allure of the SEC was too strong for the program to hold onto key talent like Johnson and Dak.
Still, Colorado coach Tad Boyle proved his ability to recruit and build up a solid core, one that saw its headliners of Johnson, Dak, and Rancik all depart in the portal. Can he do it again?
Colorado Buffaloes Roster Outlook
Boyle and the Buffaloes did retain Hargress as well as three freshmen guards: Jalin Holland, Ian Inman, and Josiah Sanders.
As a freshman, Holland averaged 4.9 points and 2.7 rebounds per game as one of Colorado’s key pieces coming off of the bench. Meanwhile, Sanders appeared in 33 games as a constant presence in the Buffs backcourt, averaging 4.4 points and 1.7 assists per game.
Inman played the fewest minutes of the returning trio, but he flashed with a couple of double-digit scoring performances as a true freshman.
“When I think of those three together, I think of toughness. I think of the improvement they made over the course of the season and the togetherness they have. They’re great friends and have formed a bond during their freshman year. Their toughness, energy and work ethic, when you have those attributes to go along with talent, which they all have, you get a chance to have three really good sophomores next year that will take the next step,” Boyle said in a release announcing the return of the three freshmen.
With eight outgoing transfers to replace, the Buffaloes will certainly have a new look to them for the 2026-27 season.
Colorado has landed one transfer portal prospect so far in former North Dakota State foward Noah Feddersen. On the recruiting trail, Boyle and company are bringing in four-star forward Rider Portela as well as two prospects from the NBL in Australia: forward Goc Malual and guard Alex Dickeson.
The transfer portal for men’s college basketball closes on Tuesday, April 21, meaning players have to enter their names by then. Transfer athletes do not have to commit before the portal closes, though, so Colorado is expected to continue hosting prospects on visits while building out the roster.
Sign up to our free newsletter and follow us on Facebook for the latest news.
Follow
Colorado
Landeskog – April 18 | Colorado Avalanche
ColoradoAvalanche.com is the official Web site of the Colorado Avalanche. Colorado Avalanche and ColoradoAvalanche.com are trademarks of Colorado Avalanche, LLC. NHL, the NHL Shield, the word mark and image of the Stanley Cup and NHL Conference logos are registered trademarks of the National Hockey League. All NHL logos and marks and NHL team logos and marks as well as all other proprietary materials depicted herein are the property of the NHL and the respective NHL teams and may not be reproduced without the prior written consent of NHL Enterprises, L.P. Copyright © 1999-2025 Colorado Avalanche Hockey Team, Inc. and the National Hockey League. All Rights Reserved. NHL Stadium Series name and logo are trademarks of the National Hockey League.
-
Culture38 minutes agoWhat America’s Main Characters Tell Us
-
Lifestyle44 minutes agoWe beef with the Pope and admire the Stanley Cup : Wait Wait… Don’t Tell Me!
-
Technology56 minutes agoThis pasta sauce wants to record your family
-
World1 hour agoMassive 7.5-magnitude earthquake hits off Japanese coast, tsunami alert issued
-
Politics1 hour agoUS military announces another deadly strike against ‘narco-terrorists’
-
Health1 hour agoCancer tied to woman’s vaping habit since age 15 as she’s now given just months to live
-
Sports1 hour agoPolice report details Zachariah Branch’s arrest days before NFL Draft over sidewalk incident
-
Technology1 hour agoBMW puts humanoid robots to work building EVs