Shaw Center Alumna Turns Crisis Into Community: Policy Studies Alumna Feeds Millions

Jaclinn Tanney’s food enterprise has donated 4 million meals while creating opportunity for its largely immigrant workforce.

Alumna Jaclinn Tanney  shown on the far right, joined volunteers to distribute 1,000 meals in Jackson Heights, Queens, during the USTA/U.S. Open. The catering and restaurant chain she co-owns, The Migrant Kitchen, was among the vendors selected for the famed tennis event, and as a way of giving back, it joined the nonprofit Love Wins New York City for the meal distribution.

There was always an extra seat at the table in Jaclinn Tanney’s childhood home.

Raised in a family that emphasized helping those in need—a value shaped in part by her grandparents, Holocaust survivors who emigrated to New York after World War II—Tanney learned early that food could be an expression of dignity and hope.

That belief was tested in early 2020.

The Migrant Kitchen, a newly launched New York City catering business, faced uncertainty at the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic—including a canceled order for 1,000 meals that had already been prepared.

The cancellation became the catalyst for a scalable social enterprise. Rather than discard the food, staff donated the meals to a nearby hospital, feeding health care workers treating an influx of critically ill patients. Within days, demand surged.

Article originally published on SU Today by Jessica Youngman on February 24, 2026 here.