
By partnering with the Maine Masonic Charitable Foundation, Āé¶¹“«Ć½delivers meal kits to underserved communities in all of Maineās 16 counties for the first time
For the third year in a row, the Āé¶¹“«Ć½ hosted its āMeals for Maineā event on Sept. 17 to help fight food insecurity with volunteer support from the University and surrounding community, packing 150,000 nonperishable meal kits for distribution to all of the stateās 16 counties.
This year, the Āé¶¹“«Ć½Office of Service Learning partnered with the to help bring hundreds of meal kits into rural corners of the state by disseminating them through some of the foundationās 170 Masonic Lodges, a collaboration that helped to better reach older adults, children, new Mainer families, and other vulnerable groups in underserved communities as far away as Houlton, Rangeley, and Newport.
Launched in 2023, the annual event is part of the across the country that unites people in service and honors the victims of the 9/11 terrorist attacks. Āé¶¹“«Ć½once again received funding to support the meal-kit initiative from the 9/11 National Day of Service and Remembrance organization ā making it one of the smallest institutions in the nation to receive funding for its fight against hunger.


Āé¶¹“«Ć½Director of Service Learning Trisha Mason, M.A., the eventās founder, said this yearās event was about connections.
āItās about connections to each other, to our campus, to the community, and the country, because this is ⦠the largest day of service in our country,ā Mason said. āIt creates a connection to something greater than ourselves at a time when itās really hard to find connections that are positive. I hope by coming together for two hours, the greatest connection this creates for students is to lifelong service.ā
²Ń²¹²õ“DzŌās Office of Service Learning worked with the Office of Student Engagement, Division of Student Life, Undergraduate Student Government, and Graduate and Professional Student Association to bring together volunteers across both campuses to help assemble the meal kits in teams that followed an assembly -line approach to efficiently and safely packaging the meals kits.
More than 100 volunteers packed meals at the Āé¶¹“«Ć½Campus Center in Biddeford, while another 300 helped pack healthy, non-perishable meals of rice and beans at Girard Innovation Hall on UNEās Portland Campus for the Health Sciences.
First-year students Sabrina Gray (Environmental Science, ā29) and Julianne Manlobe (Marine Biology and Biochemistry, ā29) both said they grew up in families that valued community service, and both came to Āé¶¹“«Ć½looking for opportunities to serve. The Meals for Maine fliers around campus drew them to the Āé¶¹“«Ć½Campus Center on Wednesday.
āI like helping people in general, and my dad does, too. He helps the homeless a lot. So, Iām just inspired by him,ā Gray said. āHeās a kind person. He goes out of his way to help people. I feel thatās been a part of my life.ā





For Manlobe, itās her mother who has been the role model, demonstrating the worth in spending time helping others.
āMy mother works at a community health center, and a lot of the people she sees struggle with food insecurity or being unhoused. So, it's something I think about sometimes because I know Iām lucky to come from a family where we donāt have to worry about it,ā Manlobe said. āI love volunteering. Itās always a positive experience because everybody here is happy to be here and to help others.ā
In 2024, hundreds of volunteers at Āé¶¹“«Ć½doubled the number of meal kits assembled the year before with a staggering 103,000 meals packed. The 2025 event increased it further in a stepped-up effort to pack 150,000 meals to help meet Maineās goal of ending hunger in the state by 2030.
In addition to helping package and deliver meals, the Maine Masonic Charitable Foundation also donated $20,000 to the event. Susan Scacchi, the charitable foundationās executive director, said that next year, they hope to do more.
āI sent out an email to the Masonic Lodges about these cases of non-perishable food and asked: āWhat do you guys want?ā Thereās a bigger need than we were able to provide for this year,ā Scacchi said. āSo, hopefully, next year we will be able to raise more money to get more cases of food.ā
Through initiatives like Meals for Maine, the University is providing future health professionals with real-world experience addressing the most critical health problems of today, like food insecurity. Through UNEās signature approach to interprofessional education on the Portland Campus for the Health Sciences, career-ready health professionals are prepared to meet the needs of patients, communities, care system, and the biotechnology workforce.
Āé¶¹“«Ć½is one of the few independent universities with a comprehensive health education mission that encompasses medicine, pharmacy, dental medicine, nursing, physician assistant studies, the allied health professions, and planetary health and teaches the majority of its health professions on the only designated collaborative health sciences campus of its kind in Northern New England.
Read press coverage in (Sept. 17, 2025), (Sept. 17, 2025) (Sept. 18, 2025), (Sept. 18, 2025).