Does UC San Diego really care about student basic needs? The survey asks about this. 🏠

PatrickL

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Mar 8, 2026
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The UCUES survey asks about "basic needs" — food, housing, financial stability . I was skeptical at first. Like, is anyone actually going to read my answers? But apparently this survey has real impact.

The survey measures "obstacles to academic success" and basic needs insecurity . The results help the university figure out where students are struggling.

What students have reported in past years:
  • Food insecurity (not knowing where next meal comes from)
  • Housing insecurity (can't pay rent, couch-surfing)
  • Financial stress affecting academics
  • Mental health challenges from basic needs stress
A sophomore I know said: "I didn't realize how many students were struggling until the survey results came out. They actually created a basic needs center after that."

The university uses the data to:
  • Allocate funding to food pantries and emergency aid
  • Advocate for more affordable housing near campus
  • Improve mental health services
  • Create programs for first-gen and low-income students
Why this matters:
UC San Diego has a Basic Needs Initiative now — food pantry, CalFresh assistance, emergency grants. Students I've talked to say it's helped them stay enrolled when they otherwise might have dropped out.

The survey results also get shared with state legislators to advocate for more funding for UC students. So it's not just campus-level change — it can affect policy statewide.

I'm taking the survey this week. If enough of us respond honestly, maybe they'll actually fix things. Anyone else planning to take it?
 
The fact that UCUES asks about basic needs AND mental health AND academics all in one survey is smart because they're all connected. You can't focus on school if you're hungry. You can't do well in classes if you're sleeping in your car. Admin needs to see those connections in the data.

Also, the state legislature thing is real. When the UC system goes to Sacramento asking for more funding, they bring UCUES data. "X% of our students report food insecurity" is way more powerful than "students are struggling." Numbers matter.
 
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