Feeding the Community
Campus Kitchen also delivers meals off campus to the Auburn and Lee County communities. It partners with the Food Bank of East Alabama, Meals on Wheels and area churches to deliver to food insecure. Feeding America estimates that 1 in 7 people in Alabama are facing hunger, some 746,550 people.
“In community deliveries, we see the impact Campus Kitchen has. With Meals on Wheels, we go door-to-door to deliver meals,” Fitzgerald said. “Typically, they’re elderly residents that are disabled and don’t really have transportation or a way to get meals from the grocery store. I’ll never forget, I handed six meals to this older male and he just gave me a hug and he was like, ‘This is such a blessing. These meals mean so much to me.’”
Mobile Food Pantry
This year, Campus Kitchen is working on a new project to expand access to nonperishable food by piloting a Free Little Pantry on campus. They’re working with Eagle Scout Ethan McCulloch to build the prototype.
“I learned about food insecurity in our community through the Scouting For Food program,” McCulloch said. “I didn’t know that the same problem existed in the college population until I learned about Campus Kitchen from a family friend. I hope that this food pantry will expand food availability to those in need on campus and in our community.”
Inspired by the design of the free little libraries, the small pantry will have shelves stocked with nonperishable items supplied by the Campus Kitchen partnership with the Food Bank of East Alabama. The idea is that eventually community members will help to stock the pantry with donations and keep the community fed on a consistent basis.
“We plan on planting little food pantries around the community that are for anyone who needs food,” FItzgerald said. “We’re working with Ethan to build the first food pantry. It will give us an idea of how much it costs and we’ll be able to see how it works in the community. Our hope is that by Tiger Giving Day we can have a goal in mind so that we can say how much money we want to raise to get the program off the ground.”
Their current plan is to build five of the mobile food pantries and test how it works.
“We want to gauge how manageable it is,” Fitzgerald said. “How often we need to refill them, where they are most needed. If it works, we’ll add more. Right now we’re laying the groundwork, partnering with the Food Bank of East Alabama to stock them and with a variety of nutritious food. Once it catches on in the community, we may not have to spend as much out of pocket to restock them because we’ll have that community support. That’s the hope! We want it to have a real, lasting impact.”
Winner of the 2023 Fred & Charlene Kam “Human Touch” Service Award, Campus Kitchen is always looking for volunteers, community partners and those who are combating hunger. Visit their website to learn how you can help in the fight against hunger.