With trucks covered in Christmas lights,
sirens blaring and Santa on board, fire fighters led by Lt. Garvin “Chip” Jones
pulled up to five different homes to deliver gifts, food and gift certificates
to brighten the holiday for five single parents and their families last Sunday.
The five families were chosen by the Windham Food Pantry and the fire
department collected around 250 gifts from area businesses to help with the
Santa Run.
The weather cooperated as three trucks,
close to 50 people and one Santa delivered presents from one end of Windham to
the other.
“It went really well,” said Jones. Each
family received a box filled with food, an envelope of gift cards from area
businesses to use for themselves or their kids, and gifts already wrapped to go
under the tree.
“The first family was just blown away. They
had even made cookies for Santa,” Jones said. Although the parent knew they
were getting a visit, they didn’t realize until the trucks arrived how
elaborate it would be. “The trucks looked gorgeous. They didn’t think it was
going to be this extravagent,” he added. “The kids were in awe of Santa.”
The second and third families were equally
blown away. “They couldn’t believe the amount of stuff coming into their
house,” Jones said.
Getting ready for the Sunday night event took
a full month of planning and lots of help from the community. Saturday night two dozen people wrapped gifts.
On Sunday, dozens of people including students who live and work in the fire
stations, decorated Haz Mat 2, Engine 5 and the Haz Mat Rehab Bus,
which took them many hours. There were around 4,000 lights on Engine 5 and
between 5,000 and 6,000 lights on the Haz Mat trucks.
Gifts were donated by employees at Dominos and
waitstaff at Buck’s Naked BBQ. Between 35 and 40 businesses donated as well.
Cash donations were turned into gift certificates for local businesses like
Renys, Marshalls and restaurants in town. Even Sunday morning, items were
trickling in to be delivered that night.
“It’s a great time,” said Jones, who had been
doing something like this since he lived in New Jersey. In Maine he’s been in
charge of the Santa Run for six years. “Every year I build on it. We started
with two families, then three and four families. This year we did five
families,” he said.
One parent told Jones that she bought her
daughter a jacket around Thanksgiving and that was all she was getting for
Christmas. He was glad that wasn’t going to happen now.
“Usually they’re single parents with one or two
kids who work one or two jobs and barely are keeping the heat and lights on,”
Jones said. “It’s just a big gratification. That’s why I keep on doing it.”
Jones is thankful for all the support the Santa Run gets
from the community, especially the following businesses: Hannaford, Marshalls, Man Cave Hair Lounge, Smitty's Cinema,
Reny's, Friendly's, Bucks Naked BBQ, The Nail Spa, Cleaning Genies, Domino's, Applebee's,
Pizza Hut, Benny's Barbershop, Windham Jewelers, Auto Zone, Bull Moose, U.S.
Cellular, Shaw's, Pet Life, Advanced Auto, DQ, Rustler's Steakhouse, G & K
Motors, Hall Implement, Little Caesars, Windham Primary School, Danielle's
Sebago Café, Mr. Bagels, McDonald's and Hair Gone Wild. Special thanks to Dena's Lobsterhouse, comedian Crazy Jake
and Atienza & Chebuske Dentistry as well as the private donations dropped
off by the public, members and families of the Windham Fire/Rescue and
Gorham/Windham Professional Fire Fighters Association and Santa Claus.