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California to Feed College Students via ‘CalFresh for Students Act’

Why do California college students receive food stamps?

By Katy Grimes, February 10, 2026 11:31 am

Why is California providing college students CalFresh, in addition to housing them and paying tuition? With its friendly sounding name, CalFresh was previously known nationwide, and is sometimes still referred to, as “food stamps.”

The welfare system is wrought with fraud, but notably is the primary way Democrat politicians guarantee votes. Why not start with young people in college?

“Senate Majority Leader Angelique Ashby (D-Sacramento), through Senate Bill 961, paves the way for California to lead transformative support to college students across the state with the CalFresh for Students Act. This bill would streamline the process for students across California’s institutions of higher education to gain access to food assistance, increasing their educational success and promoting campus and community well-being.”

Oh really. Why? I remember working to pay for rent and food while going to college. Do students not do that anymore?

Whatever happened to the silly concept of a “starving student?” It only meant that money was tight and Ramen and Mac n’ Cheese was cheap. We also didn’t spend $7.35 on a Cafe Mocha at Starbucks.

Have you been on a college campus recently? They should be called “stout students.”

But here’s the real reason – California is backfilling CalFresh after the Trump federal government made cuts to the program.

“As federal support for students is scaled back, California must step up,” said Senate Majority Leader Angelique Ashby. “The CalFresh for Students Act cuts red tape and ensures eligible students know help is available. When students have reliable access to food, they are more likely to stay in school, complete their degrees, and strengthen California’s workforce and economy.”

So it’s food that keeps college students motivated, or is it free food?

Two words: “sack lunch.”

Read these statements in support of the bill from the CalFresh Welfare Industrial Complex:

“The number one deterrent for students from historically marginalized communities from attending college is the cost of attendance, which includes the cost of paying for food. It’s essential that we help students get connected with all the support systems available, including CalFresh, that will help them succeed,” says Alison De Lucca, Executive Director at Southern California College Attainment Network.

“In September 2022, the Biden Administration hosted the first White House Conference on Hunger, Nutrition, and Health in over 50 years. And for the first time, college student hunger was part of that conversation. While there is much to do at the federal level, states were called out as being essential partners to improve internal data-sharing systems and processes to better serve students”, says Alex Zucco, Junior Leagues of California State Public Affairs Committee. “Our call to action is to help remove self-imposed restrictions on the data redundantly collected by various government agencies and institutions, and to streamline the process through improved data-sharing systems. One step in removing some of the stigma students experience in receiving food benefits is to reduce the number of places students must present themselves as “needy” and submit the same or similar proof they are eligible for benefits. This bill puts students first and supports the mission of CalFresh by providing food assistance and ensuring everyone has access to the resources they need to lead healthy lives.”

“Students are facing unprecedented pressures, from covering the full cost of college attendance to navigating the stress of their communities being under attack. For many students in Los Angeles County and across California, hunger has become another barrier layered onto an already complex path to completion. The CalFresh for Students Act helps ease that burden by reducing unnecessary administrative hurdles and ensuring students can access the food support they deserve,” says Vanessa Aramayo, Alliance for a Better Community.

“Students across the state are relying on our state leaders to take action and invest in our success through holistic resources and support services, especially when over 400,000 California students participate in CalFresh, yet an estimated 300,000 more are eligible, losing out on $140 million of missed benefits for the state,” says Aditi Hariharan, President of the UC Student Association. “We are proud to co-sponsor the CalFresh for Students Act to ensure every student has access to the nourishment they need to be successful in their education.”

Notably, a recent study found that nearly 21% of UC Davis students were enrolled in CalFresh two years ago. Roughly 14% of community college students and 12% of graduate students were also enrolled. Data isn’t yet available for the CSU system, NPR reported in November.

“Continued efforts to streamline public benefits access, such as the CalFresh for Students Act, are essential to addressing the basic needs crisis, reducing administrative barriers across state, campus, and county systems, maximizing the investment of federal funds into local and statewide economies, and supporting student persistence to graduation that sustains California’s innovation, community, and competitive workforce, says Aaron Kunst, Co-Director of the CalFresh Higher Ed Contract. Chico State announced that the Center for Healthy Communities (CHC) received a renewal of $3 million in funding to maintain and elevate its CalFresh Food support efforts across all three segments of higher education in California—California community colleges and California State University and University of California campuses—through the year 2025.

“Too many students face unnecessary administrative barriers when seeking food assistance, the CalFresh for Students Act improves access to critical benefits to ensure that hunger is never a barrier to college completion, academic success, and student well-being,” says McKenna Mustazza, Policy & Executive Associate at NextGen California.

“CalFresh is essential to the survival of millions of young people and students across California,” says Katrina Linden, Western Regional Director at Young Invincibles. “California has long led the fight against hunger, yet looming federal cuts threaten to erase the progress our state has fought so hard to achieve. Access to food assistance is a necessary lifeline, and Young Invincibles is proud to support this investment in our students.”

“The economic pressures of high rent, rising food prices, and increased utility rates are squeezing students in unprecedented ways. While California has forged more equitable access to college pathways, there is much work still to be done in creating systems that support students after admission. Connecting students to all the benefits for which they are eligible not only supports the individual but also provides a great return on investment for the state. The Coalition of California Welfare Rights Organizations is proud to support the CalFresh for Students Act to help close equity gaps and increase college completion rates in California’s higher education systems”, says Heather Willoughby, CalFresh and CalWORKs Policy Analyst CCWRO.

Who are these squishy-sounding, rent-seeking organizations? Here are a few:

  • Alliance for a Better Community is “Advancing social, economic, racial equity and justice for the Latino community and the Los Angeles region through power building and policy advocacy.”
  • Alex Zucco is the State & Federal Policy Manager for the Junior League State of California. “She works to protect over $3 billion in need-based grant aid for Californians who want to access college.”
  • Aaron Kunst, Co-Director of the CalFresh Higher Ed Contract for Center for Healthy Communities.

The bill has already hit the ground running, “with widespread coalition support.” Essentially, the bill co-sponsors lobby for the CalFresh benefits, and include, Alliance for A Better Community, California Competes: Higher Education for a Strong Economy, Center for Healthy Communities, Coalition of California Welfare Rights Organizations, Junior Leagues of California State Public Affairs Committee, Michelson Center for Public Policy, NextGen California, Southern California College Attainment Network, uAspire, UC Student Association, and Young Invincibles.

Oh. So it’s really about “students from historically marginalized communities.” There are big government dollar$ attached to students from historically marginalized communities.

What are “students from historically marginalized communities?” This sounds more like a giant grift.

Listen to this drivel – it’s Fraud 101:

“The CalFresh for Students Act is about making government work smarter and maximizing our public investments. By streamlining access to essential food support, this bill can boost college completion, driving economic growth and shared prosperity for all Californians,” says Su Jin Jez, CEO at California Competes: Higher Education for a Strong Economy.

Here is what they base their proposal on for “marginalized students” and “marginalized communities:”

Marginalized groups, including Black, Indigenous, and people of color (BIPOC), members of the lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, queer or questioning, and two-spirit (LGBTQ2S+) community, people who are deaf, people who have disabilities, people from low-income backgrounds, and women continue to be severely underrepresented in science. Inequality with respect to access, retention, and success in science arise from overlapping systemic barriers that disadvantage historically underrepresented groups [] while benefitting the dominant group of white, cisgender, and straight men in science. Barriers for historically underrepresented groups include ongoing racism [], sexism [], discrimination based on sexual preference or gender identity [], ableism [], socioeconomic disparity [], and exclusionary learning environments [,]. These issues can compound to exacerbate the difficulty historically underrepresented groups face in achieving scientific success.

These children have been labeled “marginalized” for so many years, they expect free stuff now for being good little Democrat voters, and California lawmakers are going to give it to them.

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5 thoughts on “California to Feed College Students via ‘CalFresh for Students Act’

  1. combine additional CalFresh benefits for college students with your earlier reporting on 1/3 of college students allegedly being robots — it suggests that our lawmakers are cloaking payments to their favorite money laundering operations as “compassion.” the object is now “college students” because so many people’s compassion for the “homeless” has run out after people started getting indicted for stealing $124 million. The CA Globe has often reported on Newsom’s tripling of Jerry Brown’s budget. Californians have seen ZERO improvement in public services in that time…Which leads one to believe that at least 2/3rds of the budget is just plain fraud!

    1. Exactly! You beat me to it.

      I will add that virtually ALL social programs were probably initiated and designed to facilitate fraud.

  2. FREEBIES for ALL!!! Vote for your compassionate Democrats and get FREE FOOD, starving students!!!
    Just remember to pull the lever for EVERYONE with a (D) after their name, OK???
    So….. just WHO exactly is expected to PAY for all this “compassion” to “marginalized” students??? YOU AND ME, BABY!!!
    The DSA is busy, busy, busy buying votes these days, aren’t they???

  3. No mention of California Community College state chancellor Sonya Christian? This has her fingerprints all over it.

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