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SUNY Old Westbury is launching the Panther Community Care Center. The center will provide access to resources for students in need of services and assistance for themselves and their families.

The college was awarded a three-year U.S. Department of Education $878,057 grant, via the fund for the Improvement of Postsecondary Education, Panther Community Care.

“Earning a college degree for many students today requires more than the traditional financial and academic supports institutions are used to providing,” SUNY Old Westbury President Timothy Sams said in a statement.

“With the cost of living going ever higher, we want to help students and their families to meet their financial needs,” Sams said. “Our goal is to have a single point of support, Panther Community Care Center, to help stabilize students by helping to meet their financial gaps, which will allow them to better focus on their studies.”

The college will coordinate with federal, state, local and community-based agencies to enhance support related to basic needs security in four key areas.

Those areas include assessing students’ situations and connecting them to resources available to themselves and their families, as appropriate. This work will be done in collaboration with Single Stop, a nonprofit organization the combines community networks and cutting-edge technology to help organizations provide centralized access to essential tools and services.

An additional area includes expanding the Panther Pantry to enhance our efforts to address food insecurity challenges of our students. The college’s food pantry opened in fall 2018 and experienced more than 950 visitors last semester, more than double the prior semester.

It includes creating an “advancing wellness initiative” for outreach and support of mental, emotional, and social student wellness.

And it incudes establishing a transportation fund to help offset the costs of transportation for those with greatest needs.

Panther Community Care will be staffed by a social worker and mental health counselor funded via the grant and will support students with proactive case management, needs assessment, advising, and career professional development.

“Receiving this grant is further evidence to our college’s unwavering commitment to student success and well-being,” said Dr. Cristina Notaro, assistant provost, and principal investigator for the project. “Panther Community Care will deepen our continued focus on supporting the holistic needs of our students and help us build a team and space to achieve these objectives.”

“We cannot be complacent with a higher education system that leaves so many college students from diverse and underserved backgrounds without the supports and resources they need to succeed in school and, ultimately, graduate,” U.S. Department of Education Secretary Miguel Cardona said in a statement.

“The $30 million in grants announced – including those of the new Postsecondary Student Success Program – will help colleges and universities advance innovative and evidence-based strategies to better support their students and help address students’ basic needs, launch affordable open textbook programs, improve campus resources for veterans, and create opportunities for youth who’ve struggled with violence to get their lives back on track,” Cardona added. “These investments reflect the Biden-Harris Administration’s continued commitment to raising the bar for equitable outcomes in higher education and making sure students from all walks of life can thrive.”

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Image and article originally from libn.com. Read the original article here.