Here's what you need to know about Saturday's Help Santa Toy Parade in Ottawa
Santa Claus will arrive in Ottawa on Saturday to kick off the Christmas and holiday season.
The 55th Help Santa Toy Parade is set for Saturday, hosted by the Ottawa Professional Firefighters Association.
"We are going to be ready for Saturday. It's going to be a lot of fun and we hope to see the whole city out," Cameron Taylor, chair of the Help Santa Toy Parade, told CTV Morning Live.
The parade collects donations to help Toy Mountain provide toys for the holidays.
"Everybody can help Santa. People can bring new, unwrapped gifts to the parade – we would love that," Taylor said.
"We're going to have the giant red toy cart out there with our team collecting all those toys. We are going to be collecting cash on the route."
Firefighters will also be carrying boots with a tap feature to donate to the Help Santa Campaign.
Taylor says the parade will have bands, including the Ottawa Fire Service band, and large floats.
"I am so excited to come to Ottawa to see all the good little boys and girls and to throw some cheers," Santa Claus told CTV Morning Live's Stefan Keyes.
- Sign up now for daily CTV News Ottawa newsletters
- The information you need to know, sent directly to you: Download the CTV News App
Here's what you need to know about the Help Santa Toy Parade
The parade will begin at 11 a.m. on Saturday.
Route
The Help Santa Toy Parade starts at Elgin Street and Laurier Avenue.
The parade will travel west on Laurier Avenue to Bank Street, and then south on Bank Street to Lansdowne.
Donations
The Help Santa Toy Parade will be accepting toys and cash donations for the Help Santa Campaign, with donations supporting CTV and MOVE 100's Toy Mountain. Toy Mountain gives toys to local families for the holidays.
You can also donate online at www.toyparade.ca. New, unwrapped toys can also be dropped off at all Ottawa Fire Services stations until Christmas.
The Help Santa Toy Parade is the first of several Santa Claus parades in Ottawa this holiday season. The Barrhaven Santa Claus Parade is Sunday evening.
CTVNews.ca Top Stories
DEVELOPING Motive unclear as New York police hunt for masked killer who shot health insurance CEO
Investigators are searching for clues that could help them identify the masked gunman who killed the leader of one of the largest U.S. health insurance companies on a Manhattan sidewalk, then disappeared into Central Park.
AI modelling predicts these foods will be hit hardest by inflation next year
The new year won’t bring a resolution to rising food costs, according to a new report that predicts prices to rise as much as five per cent in 2025.
DEVELOPING School bus cancellations in parts of Canada due to wintry weather
School buses are cancelled in parts of Canada Thursday as wintry weather moves in during the first week of December.
Canada Post stores continue to operate during strike — but why?
As many postal workers continue to strike across the country, some Canadians have been puzzled by the fact some Canada Post offices and retail outlets remain open.
'It was like I was brainwashed': 2 Ontarians lose $230K to separate AI-generated cryptocurrency ad scams
Two Ontarians collectively lost $230,000 after falling victim to separate AI-generated social media posts advertising fraudulent cryptocurrency investments.
Gunman may have targeted California religious school in shooting that wounded 2 kindergartners
Two children were in 'extremely critical condition' after being shot at a tiny religious K-8 school in Northern California and the gunman died at the scene, apparently from a self-inflicted gunshot, police said.
Canada's new public-sector payment system is still years away from being implemented
After half a decade of testing and an investment of nearly $300 million, the federal government is still years away from fully implementing its next-generation pay and human resource cloud platform to replace the problem-plagued Phoenix payroll system.
'Name what things are': Recognizing 'femicide' 35 years after the Montreal massacre
Ahead of the 35th anniversary of the Montreal Massacre, Annie Ross, a mechanical engineering professor at Polytechnique Montreal, said she often thinks of those who lived through the tragedy but still suffer silently.
Congo government says it's 'on alert' over mystery flu-like disease that killed dozens
Congo's health minister said Thursday the government is on alert over a mystery flu-like disease that in recent weeks killed dozens of people, nearly half of which were children