Homelessness at George Mason University: 'It Does Exist'
It's hard to believe, but it's true—and this student fought for nearly two years to help get these fellow students fed.
http://fairfaxcity.patch.com/groups/giving/p/homelessness-at-george-mason-university-it-does-exist
It goes without saying that college in the 21st century is expensive.
For some students, it’s so expensive that, after paying their tuition bill, there’s not enough left over for a roof over their heads, or a meal in their belly—but to them, the chance at a quality education is worth the struggle.
One student at Fairfax’s George Mason University, Yara Mowafy, made the discovery last year that there are homeless students on her campus, and for the next 18 months, she fought to get the university to support a program to help make sure they don’t go hungry.
Now, students and the community can donate to an account that provides meals for homeless students.
It wasn’t the route Mowafy envisioned this program taking. In the beginning, it was just a class project.
A Class Project That Became So Much More
Mowafy, now a senior at GMU studying international development, was given an assignment by her public speaking professor in Spring 2012 to describe a real-world problem that she is passionate about; one on which she could realistically make an impact.
Her idea started small: simply wondering what happens to unused meals in the meal plan program used by students who live on campus.
At GMU, students who lived in the dorms are required to purchase meal plans, Mowafy said. Some choose a semester-long plan, and others choose a weekly plan. Based on the plan, students are given a meal card and a certain number of “meal swipes” for that time period.
However, unused meal swipes didn’t roll over. As unused meals were set to expire, they’d buy meals for their friends or dorm-mates. She thought, what if those students could donate their unused meals to other students in need?
Some research showed that other universities were doing something with those wasted dollars on meal plans. Some donated them to local shelters or students in need on campus, others let students roll the meals over.
“They all had differences, but they all had some type of system created to accommodate this issue of unused meal plans,” Mowafy said.
Initial suggestions and meetings with meal card program managers at Mason Dining fell flat, Mowafy said, but she was more convinced than ever—this would be the project she would complete for her public speaking class.
Discovering There Were Homeless Students at GMU
Mowafy decided to talk to a few local shelters to see if they had any ideas, including Facets, a local nonprofit organization that provides emergency shelter and other types of assistance to people in the Fairfax area.
It was there that Mowafy learned that there were homeless students at GMU.
“They told me that there are homeless students that come to them for assistance,” she recalled. “It’s not frequent, but they said, 'it does exist.'"
Mowafy consulted a few on-campus departments to see if the school was aware of the problem, and said several departments did confirm it.
An engineering professor said a student had confessed to her that at night, he sleeps in the auditorium or one of the concert halls, among a few other spots on campus.
A fellow student who volunteered at Facets told Mowafy that, at her best guess, there were at least 12 homeless students at GMU at the time, based on the number who had come to Facets that year for assistance.
Mowafy knew that meant there could be even more.
“Not everybody speaks out about it. It can be very humiliating,” she said.
They told her, the students were all employed full-time, but all of their income went toward tuition, and they had little, if anything, left for housing or food.
Upon learning this, Mowafy said she was inspired to approach the university once more about trying to create a program to help them, by allowing students to donate their unused meals.
Crunching the Numbers
In August of last year, Mowafy approached Mason Dining again—but once again, they shot her down, for a number of reasons, she said.
A university staff member provided Mowafy with some statistics, that told her approximately how many meals were going unused each year.
Depending on the plan, the staff member told her that anywhere from 7 to 25 percent of meals went unused in 2011. It ranged from 7 percent of semester-long plans, to up to 25 percent of weekly plans, Mowafy said. The plans usually consist of 15 meals per week, or three per day on Mondays through Fridays.
Mowafy said she was told that Sodexo, GMU’s contracted food provider, already factors in the number of unused meals into its budget, so spending unused meals on the homeless would mean raising prices for everyone.
Since they weren’t willing to listen to one person, Mowafy thought—maybe they would be willing to listen to a few thousand.
Gathering Support From Fellow Patriots
Mowafy, who is the president of her campus’s Oxfam America chapter, decided to start a petition to show how many students would be willing to donate their meal plans if there was a way for them to do it.
It wasn’t long before she had 2,000 signatures. She decided to call her proposed program “Patriot 2 Patriot.”
She drafted a proposal to go along with her petition that suggested the campus make donating unused meal plans voluntary, and perhaps something the students could indicate by checking a box when they sign up for and pay for their meal plans online through the GMU website.
Mowafy approached the Student Government. They discussed the possibility of putting the idea—not the implementation, but at least the idea—of her proposal up to a vote, to gauge student support.
The government voted unanimously, yes.
“This was big for me. Finally someone was listening,” Mowafy said, of earning the Student Government’s support.
Big Change On Campus
Around that time, school administration announced that the on-campus dining program will soon change to “24/7 Dining.” Beginning in the fall of 2014, meal swipes will be replaced with a flat fee per day that allows unlimited access to food at certain campus eateries.
In essence, the new program will mean there is no longer such a thing as unused meals.
“I thought, so this whole thing is out the window. I don't know what I can do now,” she said.
Around that time, the former, unsupportive director of Mason Dining left his job; Mowafy set up an appointment with his successor to present her proposal and petition.
It was the new director of Mason Dining who offered a suggestion: Mowafy could set up a university account to collect monetary donations that could be used to buy meals for students in need—and he would even make the first $1,000 deposit.
With the help of the Student Support and Case Management Office on campus, Mowafy started an account to benefit students in need. The account is called the Patriot 2 Patriot Fund.
Now, she is hard at work soliciting donations to keep the account up and running and helping more students.
Though the project didn’t turn out quite the way she had envisioned it, Mowafy is thrilled that her hard work—more than 18 months’ worth—has paid off, and students in need are getting help.
“After two years, something is finally happening,” she said. “It's not the ideal; I didn't want it to have to [involve monetary donations], but it's something.”
Mowafy is also trying hard to spread the word of her program; to try and shine a light on the homeless or needy students that no one knows about, or who may think there is no help out there for them.
“My worry is that there are students like this who aren't speaking out, who are afraid; and who don't know about this new resource,” she said.
If you wish to make a donation to the Patriot 2 Patriot Fund, see the downloadable PDF form included in the photos section of this article for instructions.
Contact Yara Mowafy at yelmowaf@masonlive.gmu.edu for more information.
It's hard to believe, but it's true—and this student fought for nearly two years to help get these fellow students fed.
http://fairfaxcity.patch.com/groups/giving/p/homelessness-at-george-mason-university-it-does-exist
It goes without saying that college in the 21st century is expensive.
For some students, it’s so expensive that, after paying their tuition bill, there’s not enough left over for a roof over their heads, or a meal in their belly—but to them, the chance at a quality education is worth the struggle.
One student at Fairfax’s George Mason University, Yara Mowafy, made the discovery last year that there are homeless students on her campus, and for the next 18 months, she fought to get the university to support a program to help make sure they don’t go hungry.
Now, students and the community can donate to an account that provides meals for homeless students.
It wasn’t the route Mowafy envisioned this program taking. In the beginning, it was just a class project.
A Class Project That Became So Much More
Mowafy, now a senior at GMU studying international development, was given an assignment by her public speaking professor in Spring 2012 to describe a real-world problem that she is passionate about; one on which she could realistically make an impact.
Her idea started small: simply wondering what happens to unused meals in the meal plan program used by students who live on campus.
At GMU, students who lived in the dorms are required to purchase meal plans, Mowafy said. Some choose a semester-long plan, and others choose a weekly plan. Based on the plan, students are given a meal card and a certain number of “meal swipes” for that time period.
However, unused meal swipes didn’t roll over. As unused meals were set to expire, they’d buy meals for their friends or dorm-mates. She thought, what if those students could donate their unused meals to other students in need?
Some research showed that other universities were doing something with those wasted dollars on meal plans. Some donated them to local shelters or students in need on campus, others let students roll the meals over.
“They all had differences, but they all had some type of system created to accommodate this issue of unused meal plans,” Mowafy said.
Initial suggestions and meetings with meal card program managers at Mason Dining fell flat, Mowafy said, but she was more convinced than ever—this would be the project she would complete for her public speaking class.
Discovering There Were Homeless Students at GMU
Mowafy decided to talk to a few local shelters to see if they had any ideas, including Facets, a local nonprofit organization that provides emergency shelter and other types of assistance to people in the Fairfax area.
It was there that Mowafy learned that there were homeless students at GMU.
“They told me that there are homeless students that come to them for assistance,” she recalled. “It’s not frequent, but they said, 'it does exist.'"
Mowafy consulted a few on-campus departments to see if the school was aware of the problem, and said several departments did confirm it.
An engineering professor said a student had confessed to her that at night, he sleeps in the auditorium or one of the concert halls, among a few other spots on campus.
A fellow student who volunteered at Facets told Mowafy that, at her best guess, there were at least 12 homeless students at GMU at the time, based on the number who had come to Facets that year for assistance.
Mowafy knew that meant there could be even more.
“Not everybody speaks out about it. It can be very humiliating,” she said.
They told her, the students were all employed full-time, but all of their income went toward tuition, and they had little, if anything, left for housing or food.
Upon learning this, Mowafy said she was inspired to approach the university once more about trying to create a program to help them, by allowing students to donate their unused meals.
Crunching the Numbers
In August of last year, Mowafy approached Mason Dining again—but once again, they shot her down, for a number of reasons, she said.
A university staff member provided Mowafy with some statistics, that told her approximately how many meals were going unused each year.
Depending on the plan, the staff member told her that anywhere from 7 to 25 percent of meals went unused in 2011. It ranged from 7 percent of semester-long plans, to up to 25 percent of weekly plans, Mowafy said. The plans usually consist of 15 meals per week, or three per day on Mondays through Fridays.
Mowafy said she was told that Sodexo, GMU’s contracted food provider, already factors in the number of unused meals into its budget, so spending unused meals on the homeless would mean raising prices for everyone.
Since they weren’t willing to listen to one person, Mowafy thought—maybe they would be willing to listen to a few thousand.
Gathering Support From Fellow Patriots
Mowafy, who is the president of her campus’s Oxfam America chapter, decided to start a petition to show how many students would be willing to donate their meal plans if there was a way for them to do it.
It wasn’t long before she had 2,000 signatures. She decided to call her proposed program “Patriot 2 Patriot.”
She drafted a proposal to go along with her petition that suggested the campus make donating unused meal plans voluntary, and perhaps something the students could indicate by checking a box when they sign up for and pay for their meal plans online through the GMU website.
Mowafy approached the Student Government. They discussed the possibility of putting the idea—not the implementation, but at least the idea—of her proposal up to a vote, to gauge student support.
The government voted unanimously, yes.
“This was big for me. Finally someone was listening,” Mowafy said, of earning the Student Government’s support.
Big Change On Campus
Around that time, school administration announced that the on-campus dining program will soon change to “24/7 Dining.” Beginning in the fall of 2014, meal swipes will be replaced with a flat fee per day that allows unlimited access to food at certain campus eateries.
In essence, the new program will mean there is no longer such a thing as unused meals.
“I thought, so this whole thing is out the window. I don't know what I can do now,” she said.
Around that time, the former, unsupportive director of Mason Dining left his job; Mowafy set up an appointment with his successor to present her proposal and petition.
It was the new director of Mason Dining who offered a suggestion: Mowafy could set up a university account to collect monetary donations that could be used to buy meals for students in need—and he would even make the first $1,000 deposit.
With the help of the Student Support and Case Management Office on campus, Mowafy started an account to benefit students in need. The account is called the Patriot 2 Patriot Fund.
Now, she is hard at work soliciting donations to keep the account up and running and helping more students.
Though the project didn’t turn out quite the way she had envisioned it, Mowafy is thrilled that her hard work—more than 18 months’ worth—has paid off, and students in need are getting help.
“After two years, something is finally happening,” she said. “It's not the ideal; I didn't want it to have to [involve monetary donations], but it's something.”
Mowafy is also trying hard to spread the word of her program; to try and shine a light on the homeless or needy students that no one knows about, or who may think there is no help out there for them.
“My worry is that there are students like this who aren't speaking out, who are afraid; and who don't know about this new resource,” she said.
If you wish to make a donation to the Patriot 2 Patriot Fund, see the downloadable PDF form included in the photos section of this article for instructions.
Contact Yara Mowafy at yelmowaf@masonlive.gmu.edu for more information.