Unprecedented Demand at the University of Manitoba Food Bank
The University of Manitoba (UM), one of Canada's leading research-intensive institutions, is grappling with a stark reality: more than 600 students now rely on its campus food bank each month. This figure marks a dramatic escalation from pre-pandemic levels, when usage hovered around 75 to 200 visits monthly. Located in Room 518 of the UMSU University Centre on the Fort Garry Campus, the food bank provides essential groceries to currently registered full- or part-time students once every 28 days, helping them offset rising grocery bills during times of financial strain.
This surge underscores a broader affordability crisis affecting higher education in Canada, particularly in Manitoba, where living costs have outpaced wage growth and student support systems. Students must present their ID and bring reusable bags, while Bannatyne Campus users email for hampers. The service's growth reflects not just immediate hunger but systemic pressures squeezing young adults pursuing degrees in fields from agricultural sciences to engineering.
From 75 to Over 600: Tracking the Sharp Rise in Usage
Historical data paints a clear picture of escalation. Before COVID-19, the UM Food Bank assisted roughly 75 students monthly, according to University of Manitoba Students' Union (UMSU) reports. By late 2023, numbers climbed to over 600 amid inflation spikes, a trend persisting into 2026. Official UM sustainability pages confirm this 'unprecedented surge,' tying it directly to food insecurity—defined as the limited or uncertain availability of nutritionally adequate and safe foods, or the inability to acquire them consistently.
Manitoba-wide, food bank visits reached 64,975 in March 2025 alone, up 17 percent year-over-year and 97 percent since 2021, per Food Banks Canada's Hunger Count 2025. Nationally, visits doubled to over 2.1 million monthly since 2019, with post-secondary educated individuals now comprising 60 percent of users in Manitoba, up from one-third in 2020 according to Harvest Manitoba's Voices report.
- Pre-2020: 75-200 UM students/month
- 2023-2026: 600+ UM students/month
- Manitoba increase: 97% since 2021
- Canada-wide: 99% rise since 2019
Root Causes: Inflation, Housing, and Tuition Pressures
The affordability crisis stems from multiple interconnected factors. Grocery prices in Canada are projected to rise another $994 per family in 2026, per Dalhousie University's Food Price Report. In Winnipeg, average one-bedroom rents exceed $1,500 monthly, consuming over 50 percent of many students' budgets. Even with Manitoba's relatively low undergraduate tuition—averaging $4,728 annually for domestics, 22.5 percent below the national $6,211—combined costs for tuition, housing, and food total $25,000-$35,000 yearly.
International students face steeper hurdles, with fees up to $29,700 plus $10,000-$17,000 for residence and meals. Part-time jobs, once a buffer, now yield stagnant wages amid 25 percent food and shelter cost hikes since 2021. UMSU's 2025-26 budget boosted food bank funding by $2,000 to $17,000, acknowledging these strains.
Exploring university salaries reveals faculty earn modestly, limiting parental support for many first-generation students prevalent at UM.
Academic and Health Impacts on Students
Food insecurity profoundly hampers academic success. Studies link it to lower GPAs, reduced class attendance, and higher dropout risks—effects three to four times more prevalent among postsecondary students (20-50 percent affected) than the general population. At UM, nutrient deficiencies impair concentration, while chronic stress exacerbates mental health issues like anxiety, already high among 39 percent of Canadian students reporting moderate-to-severe insecurity.
Physical tolls include fatigue, weakened immunity, and developmental delays for younger undergrads. A 2023 Canadian Journal of Higher Education study found insecure students 1.5 times more likely to miss exams or extracurriculars, stunting networking vital for higher ed jobs.
Photo by Huzefa Pithawala on Unsplash
Voices from the Frontlines: Student and Staff Perspectives
UM Food Bank Coordinator Mauricio Munoz notes, 'We used to help 100-200 students monthly pre-pandemic; now it's over 600, reflecting deep economic pressures.' Students echo this: many skip meals, opting for ramen over balanced diets, prioritizing rent and books. A 2017 UM study found one-third experienced insecurity, with marginalized groups—Indigenous, newcomers, single parents—hit hardest.
Harvest Manitoba reports women, over two-thirds of clients, face compounded vulnerabilities. For career-bound students, this diverts focus from resumes to survival; resources like free resume templates help, but stability is foundational.
UM's Multifaceted Response: Beyond the Food Bank
UM deploys comprehensive supports. Alongside the food bank, emergency student loans prevent hunger, while the Permaculture Garden yields sustainable produce. Rainbow Gardens aids immigrant families with cultural foods, and Nutrition Education Outreach delivers evidence-based advice. Degrees Diner offers affordable vegan options; Bannatyne is Winnipeg's sole Fair Trade Campus.
UMSU holiday hampers reached record numbers in 2025. For long-term relief, check scholarships and higher ed career advice.
- Food bank: 600+ hampers/month
- Emergency loans: Immediate cash aid
- Community gardens: Local food production
- Fair Trade initiatives: Ethical sourcing
National and Provincial Policy Landscape
Federally, Prime Minister Carney's 2026 Canada Groceries and Essentials Benefit targets 12 million, including students, amid record insecurity. Manitoba adjusted student aid shelter allowances in 2024 for realistic housing costs. Yet critics note symbolic gestures fall short; Food Banks Canada urges 50 percent insecurity reduction by 2030 via income boosts.
Tuition rose modestly (0.9 percent nationally for grads), but provinces like Saskatchewan charge 39 percent more than Manitoba. Housing tax credits for developers aim at supply.
Learn more about UM Food Bank services.Innovative Solutions from Campuses Across Canada
Peers innovate: UBC's Meal Share grants meals thrice yearly; uOttawa fights with emergency funds. Meal Exchange's surveys push policy. Long-term: targeted bursaries, on-campus jobs, financial literacy. UM could expand these, partnering with faculty jobs for stipends.
Step-by-step affordability strategy:
- Assess budget via apps
- Apply scholarships/bursaries
- Access food banks/loans
- Seek part-time work
- Advocate policy change
Photo by Roman Kraft on Unsplash
Future Outlook: Toward Sustainable Food Security
Projections warn persistent rises without intervention, but optimism lies in UM's 1,130 agriculture students tackling sustainability. Calls grow for federal tuition relief, universal campus meals. Stakeholders urge multi-perspective action: governments fund, unis innovate, communities donate.
Students, rate experiences at Rate My Professor; explore university jobs, higher ed jobs, career advice. Post a position at post a job. Collective effort can reverse this surge.
Discussion
0 comments from the academic community
Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.