Campus ID News
Card, mobile credential, payment and security
FEATURED
PARTNERS
Lehigh app

Lehigh mobile app links students with leftover food on campus

Andrew Hudson   ||   Feb 09, 2022  ||   ,

Lehigh University's Hungry Hawks app is helping to address food waste and food insecurity on campus by providing students with access to leftover food from campus events. The app service was initially the brainchild of a group of Lehigh students, but has since grown to a fully featured app for the campus community.

According to an official university release, the first iteration of the meal leftover program consisted of group text messaging that spread the word about free leftover food on an informal basis. The messaging method has now been taken to the next level with a new mobile app, which now provides a more secure and efficient platform for connecting students in need with leftover food.

Computer Science and Business students Connor Greene, Dave Jha, and Joshua Yang were behind the initial messaging solution. The trio then approached Lehigh Sustainability Officer Katharine Targett Gross in early 2020 with the idea for the mobile app and an accompanying web interface that would link hungry students with locations where they pick up unused food from Lehigh-catered campus events.

“Every day departments, offices and clubs hold events and meetings across campus with Lehigh-catered food,” says Targett Gross. “Often, when these events and meetings end, there is leftover food that gets thrown away. Our goal is to end this wasteful cycle at Lehigh.”

Over the past two years, the Hungry Hawks team met regularly to plot out the future of the service. The current Hungry Hawks mobile app and web interface now enables faculty, staff and students to post leftover food from Lehigh-catered events and meetings and for hungry students to view active events.

When students search for leftover food, all active food events will appear. Hungry Hawks also includes a campus map, walking directions and filters to make it easier for students to find leftover food on campus.

“We can estimate that over 1,000 Lehigh students are very food insecure,” says Audrey McSain, Lehigh sustainability program manager. “Though this platform is available for our entire Lehigh community to use, Hungry Hawks could be an excellent resource for our food-insecure students that does not single them out."

The Hungry Hawks app is available for free download on the Apple Store and Google Play Store, and students must sign in with their Lehigh credentials. The web interface version is also available.

Subscribe to our weekly newsletter

RECENT ARTICLES

Football fan wearing TouchNet jersey

Streamlining payments and access in college athletics with transaction systems

College athletic departments are more than just sports programs – they are complex business operations that manage major events, high-traffic facilities, and thousands of student and fan interactions. Many, however, still manage operations using a series of disparate systems for critical processes like payments, ticketing, access control, and reporting. According to TouchNet’s article Rethinking Commerce […]
Aly Heinrich, Washington State University

Self-service kiosks provide temporary replacement cards at Washington State

Washington State University (WSU) has transformed how students regain access to their residence halls when they’ve lost their campus card. A network of self-service kiosks designed to issue temporary cards provides a way to solve late-night access problems and ease the associated burden on staff. “Our temporary campus card system started originally as a 24/7 […]
Hurricane Katrina Historial Marker
Sep 12, 25 /

On the 20-year anniversary of Hurricane Katrina, lost student ID is reunited with owner

It was 20 years ago when Hurricane Katrina hit the Gulf Coast, devastating cities and towns across Louisiana and Mississippi. Nearly 1400 people lost their lives and – adjusted for inflation – it remains the most costly hurricane in U.S. history. For countless families and individuals, life was changed forever, and negative impacts are still […]
CIDN logo reversed
The only publication dedicated to the use of campus cards, mobile credentials, identity and security technology in the education market. CampusIDNews – formerly CR80News – has served more than 6,500 subscribers for more than two decades.
Twitter

Attn: friends in the biometrics space. Nominations close Friday for the annual Women in Biometrics Awards. Take five minutes to recognize a colleague or even yourself. http://WomenInBiometrics.com

Feb. 1 webinar explores how mobile ordering enhanced campus life, increased sales at UVA and Central Washington @Grubhub @CBORD

Load More...
Contact
CampusIDNews is published by AVISIAN Publishing
315 E. Georgia St.
Tallahassee, FL 32301
www.AVISIAN.com[email protected]
Use our contact form to submit tips, corrections, or questions to our team.
©2025 CampusIDNews. All rights reserved.