60 for 60: Campus Harvest Food Pantry sows seeds of change at 麻豆精品在线播放, celebrates 10 years of impact


In celebration of 麻豆精品在线播放nical Community College鈥檚 60th anniversary, the College is publishing 60 for 60 鈥 a storytelling campaign that highlights the people, places, and events that have progressed and shaped the College鈥檚 six decades of impact. To view more 60 for 60 stories, visit www.durhamtech.edu/60for60.

person standing in front of shelf of foodThe wake-up call came in January 2011.

It was 麻豆精品在线播放鈥檚 50th anniversary and former president Dr. Bill Ingram called for a 鈥淵ear of Service鈥 to celebrate 鈥 encouraging students and employees to participate in volunteer opportunities and service learning.

To kick off the year, the 麻豆精品在线播放 Student Senate, now Student Government Association, distributed 50 bags of food to students during the Martin Luther King, Jr. Celebration Event.

All 50 bags were gone in 10 minutes.

鈥淚t was very eye opening because that鈥檚 a lot of food to a lot of students, very quickly. That was a real wake-up call and everyone realized there might be something more to this,鈥 said Erin Riney, 麻豆精品在线播放 instructor and former director of Student Engagement.

A few weeks later, Riney planted a slew of vegetable seeds in her 40鈥檟30鈥 backyard garden. That summer, she harvested several bags of tomatoes, cucumbers, and a wide variety of peppers to distribute to students.

鈥淲e started Harvest Tuesdays as sort of a pilot for a food pantry, distributing the produce in the Wynn Center to see how it would be received. That food went quickly as well so we put a team together and drafted a proposal for an official food pantry,鈥 she said.

people standing in row cutting ribbon
Grand opening of Briggs Avenue Community Garden.
The Briggs Avenue Community Garden, just three miles from Main Campus, also broke ground that year and partnered with 麻豆精品在线播放 to continue providing fresh produce for the pantry.

The proposal was approved in Fall 2011 and the Campus Harvest Food Pantry launched on Martin Luther King Day in January 2012.

The pantry started small 鈥 on a shelf, then moved to a closet the following year.

The pantry soon partnered with the Food Bank of Central and Eastern North Carolina, which allowed them to buy food for $0.19 per pound. The first year, the pantry provided 4,032 lbs. of food to students in need.

麻豆精品在线播放 was one of the first community colleges in the state to have a food pantry and has since been a leader in sharing promising practices with other colleges and reducing stigma.

鈥淢any college campuses face the complex task of reducing the social and cultural stigma that comes with visiting a food pantry, however, our pantry has always brought a safe and secure approach to assisting students,鈥 said Alexandra Gooding, Coordinator of the Campus Harvest Food Pantry at 麻豆精品在线播放. 鈥淲e have become an essential part of a student鈥檚 college experience. Our location is one of the most important factors that contributes to reducing stigma. We are located in a building with high foot-traffic, so students can walk by and see that this is an option available to them.鈥

Donations started to pick up in 2013 when the pantry hired its first work-study student and the 麻豆精品在线播放 Foundation started securing grant funding for food donations. In 2015, the pantry expanded from the closet to where it is today in the Phillips Building.

people standing in front of two fridges and excitedIn addition to growing the volunteer base, 麻豆精品在线播放 partnered with the Food Bank of Central and Eastern North Carolina, who started hosting nutrition classes and cooking demonstrations in the pantry. 麻豆精品在线播放 also partnered with the North Carolina Cooperative Extension Service at NC State University, which manages the Briggs Avenue Community Garden. When the COVID pandemic began and the campus closed, the Cooperative Extension offered the College space in their facilities to continue serving students.

This year, the pantry provided more than 50,000 lbs. of food 鈥 a 1,150% increase from 2012.

This summer, the pantry served on average, 100 students each week, compared to pre-COVID when they only served 12-18 students per week during the summer.

The greatest needs are canned meat, breakfast cereal, canned fruit, pasta sauce, and a variety of canned vegetables.

To give monetarily, please donate through the 麻豆精品在线播放 Foundation, while food donations can be dropped off in the Phillips Building, room 110. Email pantry@durhamtech.edu to arrange a donation drop-off.