The following questions were asked in regard to the CalFresh requirement criteria. Criteria include U.S. citizenship (or lawful permanent resident), receiving Cal Grant A/B, and receiving food from a campus meal plan. Household size and monthly income are also accounted for and broken down into a chart to determine Calfresh eligibility. Students were also determined to be eligible or not for CalFresh based on their responses to these criteria questions.

CalFresh Criteria

Below are a series of Yes/No questions asked in order to help determine if a person is potentially eligible for CalFresh benefits.
Yes (%)
Are you a U.S. citizen (n = 127)? 110 (86.6%)
I received Cal Grant A or B (n = 108)? 94 (87.0%)
I was approved for “work study” even though I may not actually have a work study job placement (n = 72)? 26 (36.1%)
If not a U.S. citizen, are you a lawful permanent resident (i.e. have a ‘green card’) (n = 17)? 11 (64.7%)
Are you on a campus meal plan (n = 126)? 2 (1.6%)

Of the participants in the survey 110 claim to be U.S. citizens and 17 claim to not be U.S. citizens. For those who did not claim U.S. citizenship, 11 people claim to be lawful permanent residents while 6 people do not claim to be lawful permanent residents. There are 46 people who claim not to be approved for work study and 26 who do claim to be approved for work study. There are 14 students who do not receive Cal Grant A or B (consisting 12.4% of the data), and 94 students who do receive Cal Grant A or B. The majority of people in the data (124 people) do not receive any meals from a campus meal plan. Further breakdown of the 2 people that are on a campus meal plan claim the following assistance below:


Meals Per Week

How many meals per week do you get on your meal plan? (n=1, 1% of 137 reporting).




Figure 5.1: Meals Per Week from Meal Plan

Of people who receive a campus meal plan, 1 person receive more than 11 meals per week , while 0 people receive less than 11 meals per week.


Household Size & Income

The following two questions were asked about household size and monthly income, which were then combined into a single plot:

  • How many people in your household do you purchase and prepare food with, including yourself? This may or may not include your roommate(s). (n=114, 83% of 137 reporting).
  • How much is your household’s gross monthly income (before taxes and not including financial aid)? (n=101, 74% of 137 reporting).
12345678
$150 or less32000000
$151-$2,082914774622
$2,083-$2,82011223211
$2,821-$3,55632140121
$3,557-$4,29210011000
$4,293-$5,03000101000
$5,031-$5,69400100000
$5,695-$6,34410010000
$6,345-$7,06401000010
$7,065 or more00000000

Table 5.1: Housing Size vs. Income (CalFresh Eligibility)

In the above graph, cells highlighted in green & bold indicate a person is potentially eligible for CalFresh based on their income and cells highlighted in red & italics indicate a person is not eligible. This information is pulled from the CalFresh requirements section A2 (see below for link).

Of people who claim to purchase/prepare food (household size) for 2 person (24 people claimed this). This is followed by 22 people claiming to have a household size of 1 person, and 17 people claiming to have a household size of 4 people. The majority of people’s household income (despite household size) seems to be in the range $151-$2,082 (54 people). As the income bracket increases, the number of people within those bracket decreases drastically. Only 7 people claim to have a monthly income greater than $4,292.


CalFresh Eligible

This variable was created under the following criteria (n=94, 69% of 137 reporting).

Disclaimer: only county eligibility workers have the authority to determine official eligibility for CalFresh. These students are just most likely to be eligible based on the below listed criteria.

  • The person is between the ages 18 to 49.
  • The person is at least a part-time student (6 units per semester for the three campuses in this survey).
  • The person is either a U.S. citizen or lawful permanent resident.
  • Does not get more than half of their meals from meals plans (< 11 per week or none).
  • Identifies as an EOP student.
  • Falls under the household size/income from the Department of Social Services requirements.





Figure 5.2: Eligible for CalFresh

We can see that the majority of participants are most likely eligible for CalFresh (75 people), while 19 people are most likely not eligible for these benefits.