Sunday, December 21, 2025
ADVT 
National

Mandatory And Costly Meal Plans Often Fail To Satisfy, Student Leaders Say

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 28 Mar, 2015 03:17 PM
    ST. JOHN'S, N.L. — A social media eruption this week over raw meat and mouldy food at Memorial University of Newfoundland highlights growing frustration across Canada with mandatory meal plans, say student leaders.
     
    "There's certainly a trend with privatized food services on campus not meeting the needs and requirements of the campus community," said Bilan Arte, deputy chairwoman of the Canadian Federation of Students.
     
    Issues range from inflexible meal times and locations to lack of vegetarian, kosher and other faith-based options, she said.
     
    "It becomes a very stressful and entrapping kind of feeling for a lot of students."
     
    Those who can't make meal times or get enough of the foods they need wind up racking up even more debt buying groceries, Arte said.
     
    "We hear about it often."
     
    Mandatory meal plans that generally cost about $2,000 per semester are typical at many Canadian universities, especially for first- and second-year dormitory students.
     
    Arte described "a clear distinction" between dining halls run by catering giants such as Aramark and those that are locally operated.
     
    "There's a remarkable difference in quality, options and in service," she said. "It's a testament to the direction we think institutions should be taking, which is looking at more locally sourced, in-house options for food service."
     
    Aramark started a five-year contract at Memorial University in 2013. Spokeswoman Karen Cutler said in an emailed statement earlier this week that the company's food safety procedures are "industry leading and if questions are raised we fix them quickly."
     
    "Serving safe, nutritious food is our top priority," she said after photos circulated online of undercooked pork chops, a mouldy lemon and a fly in a taco dish.
     
    "We are very concerned about the images posted on social media as they are not at all reflective of our high quality standards."
     
    Scott Rairdan, residence representative for the student union at Dalhousie University in Halifax, said complaints about Aramark on that campus are not as serious as at Memorial University.
     
    Still, students are forced to pay "massive amounts of money" for relatively little variety, he said.
     
    "There's generally not the healthiest food across campus coming out of these meal halls. There are healthier alternatives, but they're the same every week and typically those alternatives are not the tastiest."
     
    Rairdan said the lack of any opt-out for students tied to meal plans offers little incentive for spicing up daily menus.
     
    "If you're not happy eating that, you're not going to be eating it as much. You're going to be getting Ichiban noodles in your dorm room," he said. "That's a trend that I've been seeing from a lot of students across campus."
     
    There is another way, said Rorie Mcleod Arnould, president of the University of Winnipeg Students' Association.
     
    Diversity Food Services is a joint venture between the university and SEED Winnipeg, a non-profit agency that fights poverty and promotes inner-city economic programs.
     
    "They're putting together rotating, innovative meal options for students that look at using quality ingredients, innovative packaging and good taste as being important," Mcleod Arnould said.
     
    "Diversity throws out the box and tries to create something ideal as opposed to something that's just serviceable."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Man Shot By US Border Patrol Agent Near BC Border Wanted For Murder, Assaulted Agent With Spray

    Man Shot By US Border Patrol Agent Near BC Border Wanted For Murder, Assaulted Agent With Spray
    SUMAS, Wash. — American officials say a man fatally shot by a U.S. Border Patrol agent Thursday near the British Columbia border was wanted for murder in another jurisdiction and assaulted the agent with a chemical spray.

    Man Shot By US Border Patrol Agent Near BC Border Wanted For Murder, Assaulted Agent With Spray

    Canadian Man Accused Of Travelling To Florida For Sex Tourism Scheduled To Plead Guilty

    MIAMI — A Canadian man is scheduled to plead guilty to charges he travelled to Florida to have sex with someone investigators say he believed was an underage boy.

    Canadian Man Accused Of Travelling To Florida For Sex Tourism Scheduled To Plead Guilty

    TV Producers Fear A La Carte Channel Selection Threatens Jobs, Kids' Content

    TV Producers Fear A La Carte Channel Selection Threatens Jobs, Kids' Content
    TORONTO — An a la carte system gives TV fans more choice but they'll ultimately have fewer channels to choose from, say some Canadian producers who predict job losses and less programming for kids.

    TV Producers Fear A La Carte Channel Selection Threatens Jobs, Kids' Content

    Alberta Warns Workers In Slumping Oilpatch To Beware Of Bogus Job Offers On Web

    Alberta Warns Workers In Slumping Oilpatch To Beware Of Bogus Job Offers On Web
    EDMONTON — Alberta is warning workers in the slumping oilpatch to beware of fraudulent websites that offer energy industry jobs for an upfront fee.

    Alberta Warns Workers In Slumping Oilpatch To Beware Of Bogus Job Offers On Web

    Manitoba Crown Will Hold New Trial For Man In School Girl's Death

    Manitoba Crown Will Hold New Trial For Man In School Girl's Death
    WINNIPEG — The Crown will hold a new trial for a Winnipeg man in the grisly killing of a teenaged girl more than 30 years ago, Manitoba's prosecution service said Friday.

    Manitoba Crown Will Hold New Trial For Man In School Girl's Death

    Alberta Woman Who Ordered Pitbulls To Attack Friend Sentenced To 4 Years In Jail

    Alberta Woman Who Ordered Pitbulls To Attack Friend Sentenced To 4 Years In Jail
    CALGARY — A central Alberta woman who ordered her pitbulls to attack her friend during an argument has been sentenced to four years in prison.

    Alberta Woman Who Ordered Pitbulls To Attack Friend Sentenced To 4 Years In Jail