_parenting   education

College Cafeterias Go Trayless

by Michele Cheplic | More from this Blogger

11 Aug 2009 06:14 AM

Imagine being a college coed who's stopping by the school cafeteria for a nice dinner. You choose a plate of chicken with mashed potatoes, gravy, corn-on-the-cob and a roll, but you also want a salad, some butter and a beverage. The problem is not finding the money to afford your well-rounded meal; rather there's not a tray in sight for you to haul your dinner to a table.

You'd laugh if it weren't so pathetic.

Unfortunately, it's no joke. In order to save money and the planet, hundreds of colleges and universities around the nation are getting rid of cafeteria trays. In states, such as Georgia and North Carolina, the goal is to conserve water by lightening the load on dishwashers. Meanwhile other schools are ditching trays in order to conserve energy, save money and reduce the use of water-polluting detergents.

School administrators add that by subtracting trays from college cafeterias, students might consume fewer calories and keep off those unhealthy pounds often gained during their freshman year.

But hungry coeds say that's not going to happen. Students from trayless schools say the new policy is an inconvenience, though it won't stop them from filling up on their favorite foods. Famished freshmen say they simply make more trips to the counter.

Going trayless has been especially hard for coeds at colleges in West Virginia. Many students there have been forced to MacGyver their own trays out of legal-size notebooks and binders. Meanwhile, other students reveal that they have perfected the fine art of balancing meals, drinks and condiments sans trays, but not without complaints.

Unfortunately, there is little students can do to stop the tray dumping. In fact, this fall hundreds of other college and university cafeterias will be operating without trays as well.

According to reports, 50 to 60 percent of Philadelphia-based Aramark's 500 campus partners and 230 of the 600 colleges and universities served by Gaithersburg, Maryland-based Sodexo are doing away with trays. That's in addition to the dozens of schools belonging to the National Association of College & University Food Services.

Schools like Georgia Tech, which has an enrollment of 18,000, has gone trayless and administrators there say they saved 3,000 gallons of water per day by doing so. Meanwhile, at 50,000-student University of Florida, 470,000 gallons of water were saved last year after the school got rid of its cafeteria trays.

What do you make of the trayless concept?

Related Articles:

Would You Allow Your Child to Live in a Co-ed Dorm Room?

How NOT to Help Your Kid Get Into College

Pink Haired Student Gets the Boot and College Co-eds Make the Most of Bad Weather

 
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Learn more about Michele Cheplic
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Michele Cheplic was born and raised in Hilo, Hawaii, but now lives in Wisconsin. Michele graduated from the University of Wisconsin-Madison with a degree in Journalism.

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User Comments

Samual (11722) 11 Aug 2009 06:16 AM

I don't think we've ever had trays here, we just use plates.

Andrea Hermitt Online! (5512) 11 Aug 2009 09:41 AM

I think Linens and things and Walmart can sell them to students who really want them and they can grab their own trays from the dorms before heading to the cafeteria. That will work from the freshmen anywhere.

Heck.. they can sell the trays in the school bookstore.

Michele Cheplic Online! (37349) 12 Aug 2009 10:42 AM

How do you juggle the plates if you are eating a multi-course meal plus a drink? Do you just keep going back and forth? Or do you just pack it all on one plate?

Michele Cheplic Online! (37349) 12 Aug 2009 10:43 AM

Andrea, I'm not sure how well it would go over with colleges in the north, after all, students need those trays to use as sleds in the winter. ;-)

ruthann8 (6378) 09 Sep 2009 10:59 AM

Samuel, here they give you a tray and you walk though a line and every item is on its own tiny plate (fruit, vegetable, meat, roll, dessert) that's 5 little plates plus your drink. Imagine trying to carry that without a tray plus having your books with you. To me it would make more sense to get rid of all the plates and just pile everything on the tray! Heck let's get rid of silverware too!

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