2013 C&U Census: Adding gluten-free items tops college operators' to-do list
Meal plans participation, trayless dining and local sourcing also included in the 2013 College and University Census. Operators not making changes to meal plan offerings.
April 7, 2013
Meal Plans’ Popularity Static
For those operations that offer a meal plan, 49% of students take advantage of those programs. Students in the Northeast (64%) and at colleges with fewer than 2,000 students (78%) were significantly more likely than other colleges to have students on a meal plan. Universities in the West (26%) and with more than 30,000 students (25%) were the least likely to have students on a meal plan. Student participation in meal plans has remained flat the past two years. The same percent of students—49%—purchased meal plans in the 2011-2012 school year as in the 2012-2013 school year.
Meal plan offerings have not been altered much in the past two years. The majority of operators—86%—haven’t made changes to their meal plans. For those operators who have made a change to their meal plans in the past two years, most added declining balance options. Only one college bucked this trend, by dropped declining balance in favor of a meals-per-week plan. The most frequent change was switching from a meals-per-week plan to a combination of meals per week and declining balance. Six percent of respondents made this change. Four percent of operators moved from a combination of meals per week and declining balance to declining balance only, and 3% switched from a meals-per-week plan to a declining balance plan.
Going Trayless
Our survey included respondents from 101 colleges across the nation, with varying sizes of enrollment and annual food and beverage purchases.
67% are self-operated, 29% are contract managed and 4% are partly self-operated and partly contact managed.
The mean enrollment in the fall of 2012 was 15,603 students, up slightly from 2011’s enrollment of 15,470.
48% of students are residential and 52% are commuter. Colleges in the Northeast—at 66%— and those with fewer than 2,000 students—at 73%— are significantly more likely than other regions and larger colleges to have a higher percentage of residential students.
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