Hunger-Free Campus

Sponsored by Rep. Barbara Freiberg, Act 719 of the 2022 Regular Legislative Session created a Hunger-Free Campus designation program. The Hunger-Free Campus designation and grant program are a two-part mandate not only to recognize those campuses that have established critical student services around hunger and related concerns but also for the Board of Regents to develop a competitive grant program to support our institutions in these efforts.

2024 REPORT

FACT SHEET

2024 HFC Awards

Six campuses were named recipients of the 2024 Hunger-Free Campus Awards and were each awarded $8,000 to support their Hunger-Free efforts. The 2024 recipients of the Hunger-Free Campus Award are:

    • Louisiana Delta Community College
    • LSU Health Sciences Center – Shreveport
    • South Louisiana Community College
    • Southern University Shreveport
    • University of Louisiana at Monroe
    • University of New Orleans

 

Meetings

 

FAQ

Hunger-Free Campuses

The Master Plan

To move Louisiana aggressively forward, the Board of Regents has embraced a robust new attainment goal that calls for 60% of all working-age adults (ages 25-64) in Louisiana to hold a degree or high-value credential by 2030. As we stand on the brink of a new decade, this Master Plan, born of the Board of Regents’ unique charge to guide postsecondary education across the state, will set the foundation to increase opportunity.  Our Talent Imperative is to Educate, Innovate, and Collaborate.

Master Plan for Higher Education