Tall black-and-silver shelving units line the wall, filled with row upon row of canned goods neatly arranged so their labels face front and center. Carrots, green beans, peaches, pears, ravioli and chicken noodle soup. Black beans, pinto beans, baked beans and butter beans. Other shelves are stocked with macaroni and cheese — including varieties for those with dairy- or gluten-free diets — and blue plastic baskets brimming with that college staple: ramen noodles.
Unlike the usual grocery store, one area features racks of slacks, skirts, ties, scrubs and other professional clothing, grouped by “masculine” or “feminine” styles. And, it’s free to all students.
UT Outpost, located on University Avenue next to the Student Services Building, opened in 2018 as an on-campus food pantry and soon grew to include a career clothing closet. The resource is almost fully operated by students and volunteers. Valeria Martin, the University’s assistant director for basic needs, has been in charge of UT Outpost for over three years.
“It is really inspiring to me that the students that are here every day care about serving their peers and helping others, and they bring a lot of fun into our space. They make my day way more exciting,” Martin says. “They pull me away from my computer, which is very OK with me. It is so much fun to spend time with them and see the great things that they’re doing.”
Martin, originally from Northern California, attended Saint Mary’s College of California before coming to UT to pursue a master’s degree in educational leadership and policy.
“I distinctly remember walking on the campus and feeling like, ‘Oh my gosh, this is a big university.’ It just felt so big coming from a small, little college,” Martin says. “In the program that I was in with educational leadership and policy, I really valued what we learned in that setting, that the faculty really cared about giving us a well-rounded education and talking a lot about social justice and how students are impacted in different ways.”
Martin started her career at UT as a complex coordinator in 2019 and became UT Outpost coordinator in 2021 in the midst of the COVID-19 pandemic. Martin helped the location return to its original in-person operations.
“We essentially spent a year-ish going back to a regular walk-in shopping model. And that’s where we’re at today,” Martin says. “Students can walk in five days out of the week. We’re open to shop in either the food pantry or the career closet. We’ve really been able to home in on what the day-to-day operations are here while continuing to grow, whether in life, student-led initiatives, programs, events and bigger picture things.”