SocietyCampus We Need To Address The Issue Of Food Security In Residential Campuses

We Need To Address The Issue Of Food Security In Residential Campuses

Caste inclusivity and poverty inclusivity is something that NALSAR doesn’t seem to evidently understand or know when it comes to food security.

In college, food is one of the most important essentials of survival in a residential campus away from home. Each time I go back home, my parents complain about how thin I have gotten and how ill I look because of that.

While most of us blame the quality of mess food for that, a lot of it also delves down to the accessibility of food on campus. NALSAR is unique in its nature as the only options available for food is inside the college as it is quite far from any plausible eatery. It is quite important to analyze food security in the NALSAR campus itself.

In NALSAR, the mess serves food three times a day. Breakfast (8-9:30), lunch (12:30-2) and dinner (7:30-9). The lunch to dinner gap is a huge one with only a tea break and some biscuits (or light snacks) in between. Food is supposed to be served every four hours for a healthy human body.

Most students end up buying food in the evening from the many stalls that are there on campus. Not only at this time, but after dinner as well, this becomes a problem. The mess closes at 9 and students often stay up till 2 AM doing their work, which is when the library closes as well.

Students then have to buy food at the stalls available. The food from these stalls is extremely costly. A plate of chowmein costs 50 INR at the lowest and a sandwich costs 40 INR at the lowest. Both of which qualify as a sad excuse for a filling meal. A meal with dal and rotis cost up to 100-120 INR.

mess closes at 9 and students stay up till 2 AM doing their work, which is when the library closes as well.

There is no form of subsidised food that is available for the poorer sections of students and often they have to sleep hungry almost every day or go around the hostel begging for food from their peers. In a survey conducted by the author, only 20% responded saying that they thought the food in the canteens wasn’t costly. This is a major problem that needs to be addressed in terms of food security on campus.

Another problem along the same lines is that of having a system of paid veg and non-veg. These payments are in addition to whatever the students have to compulsorily pay every day to get food in the mess. A sum is taken from the students on a yearly basis.

A lot of students cannot afford to pay 50 rupees extra and just have to sit at the table watching their peers eat the better part of the food. Having paid veg and non-veg as a blanket thing is a major case of relative impoverishment in college.

The injustice regarding food is not restricted to just students on campus. The cleaning and security staff have to buy food from the mess and eat. The cleaning staff, who belong to non-dominant castes, are in fact prohibited from eating food in the mess let alone buying food. They have to get their food from home.

Also Read: Siphoning Of Dalit And Tribal Student Scholarships Worth 45 Crore

They work on a daily wage labour basis under the college contractor. They are given a break for an hour in the afternoon and, at this time, the cleaning staff and security guards request students to get them food from the mess because it is either too costly for them to buy food from the mess or they were unable to bring food from home.

The teachers and non-teaching staff (except for one teacher, they all belong to dominant castes) are all allowed to eat in the mess. Certain members of the security staff like the Security Head Officers (SHO), more commonly known as the ‘head guards’, are allowed to take food from the mess. They all belong to dominant castes as well. Mess workers also eat in the mess.

There is also a possibility that the teaching and non-teaching staff of the college eat food in the mess without paying the Rs. 50 that is needed to be paid per meal for non-students but this could not be ascertained as there is no formal policy regarding mess rules. A conversation with one of the cleaning ladies also revealed that when they go to the mess to get something as basic as water, they are often ill-treated. Caste inclusivity and poverty inclusivity is something that NALSAR doesn’t seem to evidently understand or know when it comes to food security.

Talking about these issues also boils down to considering the alternative. The argument given for the high prices at food stalls is that very few students eat from these joints and thus to cover the costs of coming to college and running a shop, it is required that food be expensive. To reduce the cost of running these shops, the college can easily waive off the rent that is paid to them given that the college mess closes so fast and food isn’t available at the mess at all times.

The cleaning staff, who belong to non-dominant castes, are prohibited from eating food in the mess.

If the prices of these joints are reduced, maybe along with the quantity, it will see an increase in sales as the demand clearly exists in college. Moreover, there can be external options as well. Many colleges in DU-run subsidised canteens and all colleges run by Jesuits (Xavier’s) have subsidised canteens.

IRCTC also provides canteen services and their rates are far cheaper than the ones in our college – another option that can be explored. With the advent of Amma and Indira canteens, it is not a long shot for a premier government college to have one of those on campus to ensure accessibility of food on campus.

There are several alternatives and keeping our hands folded and complaining about the prices will not yield desired results. The alternatives need to be explored starting with the waiving off of rent and subsequent reduction of prices in the existing eateries on campus.

It is also important to ensure that all classes of workers, irrespective of the nature of work and caste, have access to mess food whenever they want to for free. If all fails then external options like IRCTC, Amma and Indira canteens can be explored. Food is one of the most important concerns in college life and restricting access to it by virtue of price is just unfair and discriminatory in nature.

Also Read: In NALSAR, Casteism Pervades Every Aspect Of University Life


Featured Image Source: GNITS

Comments:

  1. Nalsar student says:

    Without prejudice to other facts – An aloo sandwich costs Rs 20 at Adil and Venky and noodles Rs 30. One can get Dal and 3 rotis for Rs 70 and 2 Aloo parantha for Rs 40 at Adil. The concept of paid food is to ensure that it is not added to the base mess fess – which will make it difficult for people who do not wish to eat it. If I am a vegetarian I shouldn’t paying an additional 70-80 bucks for a chicken biryani.

  2. Kumarjeet Ray says:

    I dont know when these prices are from. All the prices mentioned in my piece is from this current semester. Veg Noodles costs 50 INR. Aloo toast costs 35/40 in either places.

    Also addressing your second concern, I take your point that is not the alternative that I suggested neither is it the problem. The problem is the disparity that it creates amongst peers and the solution has to be figured out after figuring out the mess policy which doesn’t exist publicly at least.

  3. Sidharth Chauhan says:

    I am posting this clarification here since the article is meant for a wider public audience. Faculty and staff members at NALSAR are very much required to pay for meals and items bought in the dining hall. The mess contractor maintains registers to record consumption and payments are usually made on a monthly basis. While I have only been teaching at NALSAR for the last 5 years, I gathered that this has been the practice since the inception of the institution. Our service contracts do not entitle us to free meals. The author has been a student with us for 2 years now and he could have easily verified this instead of including an ambiguous sentence in this article. I agree with the concerns expressed about the exclusion of workers engaged on a daily-wage basis for cleaning and gardening. The rates charged by the mess contractor (which works out to Rs. 110 for 3 meals in a day) are beyond their means. So there is a case for providing subsidised or free meals to the daily-wage workers.

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