Students secure $160K more for Ryerson food bank in landslide referendum vote

75% of student voters support a $2.50 levy on full-time student tuition for Good Food Centre

Image | Claire Davis

Caption: Claire Davis, 21, works at Ryerson University's Good Food Centre. The food bank has secured biannual funding with a $2.50 levy increase. (Christine Pagulayan/CBC)

Students at Ryerson have overwhelmingly voted in a referendum to increase funding for the university's Good Food Centre.
About 75 per cent of voters approved a $2.50 bi-annual levy on full-time student tuition so the food bank can keep up with skyrocketing demand for its services.
The referendum ballot was for both the Good Food Centre and the Ryerson Sexual Assault Survivor Support Line. The organizations will now split a $5-per-semester tuition increase. The change takes effect in September 2018.
"It was a really big win for us," said Good Food Centre coordinator Claire Davis.
The Good Food Centre, which currently has more than 600 members who visit approximately 3,000 times annually, is funded under the Ryerson Students Union budget. This year, the food bank got $24,900, but is now poised to receive more than $186,000 annually.
"It means we can restock our shelves," Davis told CBC Toronto on Wednesday.

Image | Good Food Centre

Caption: Claire Davis says Good Food Centre runs 'out of food a lot' due to increasing demand. (Christine Pagulayan/CBC)

The small food bank in the Ryerson Student Centre on Gould Street is stocked with donated canned food, rice, cereal, as well as milk, eggs, frozen meats and sometimes fresh produce. The campus facility opened 25 years ago.
With the soaring cost of rent in downtown Toronto and tuition ranging from $7,000 and $11,000, Davis explains more students are using the service each year and the food bank has been running out of food as a result.
"It's really hard living in Toronto as a student to balance the cost of living," she said, noting many students rely on the Good Food Centre because downtown grocery stores are too expensive for their budget.
But she says this infusion of funds will ensure the food bank won't have to turn any students away next fall.
"It will be a lot better to operate a service that is able to keep up with demand," said Davis.