Metadata
Title
Our Story
Category
scholarships
UUID
1746b8eddfe34c46a8d4c3e7f458b700
Source URL
https://basicneeds.berkeley.edu/about-us/our-story
Parent URL
https://basicneeds.berkeley.edu/get-support/finances
Crawl Time
2026-03-10T04:41:18+00:00
Rendered Raw Markdown

Our Story

Source: https://basicneeds.berkeley.edu/about-us/our-story Parent: https://basicneeds.berkeley.edu/get-support/finances

Our Story

Basic needs efforts started on the UC Berkeley campus after student organizing led to the demand for a food pantry on campus. Student advocacy and efforts led to the opening of the first food pantry which opened off campus at Stiles Hall in 2014 as campus leaders were concerned around the optics of having a pantry on campus. Continued efforts by student leaders and staff within the division of Equity & Inclusion supported the move of the Basic Needs Food Pantry to its current location in the ASUC MLK Student Union in bNorth in 2017.

While the Food Pantry was the first basic needs-related program on campus, there was no dedicated staff or funding to inform the work. In 2017, the UCB campus received seed funding from the Global Food Initiative and UC Office of the President, as well as funding from the Wellness and CACSSF funds to support the hiring of a part-time Pantry Coordinator, and eventually the Basic Needs Manager in 2018. With dedicated staffing for these efforts, the small but mighty team was able to open the Basic Needs Center in the spring of 2019.

Basic Needs Center Annual Impact Reports

To access all of the Basic Needs Center's previous Annual Impact Reports and related data

Articles about the BNC's Opening

The Daily Cal "It Feels Like Justice and Love"

The BNC "is the result of a six-year process and joint partnership between the ASUC and the Basic Needs Committee, which is composed of alumni and students from many fields of study."

Berkeley News "One-of-a-Kind Basic Needs Center"

"Eliminating 'resource-seeking exhaustion' is a major goal of the center...students historically have become discouraged when handed referrals on campus to multiple off-campus social service agencies"