Santa Claus is coming to town this month for annual parades
Santa Claus parade organizers in Ottawa are getting ready to usher in the Christmas season.
The Ottawa Professional Firefighters Association says the annual Help Santa Toy Parade and the Orléans Parade of Lights are back this year in their traditional forms.
The Help Santa Toy Parade will be held on Saturday, Nov. 16, starting at 11 a.m.
"It will take its traditional route starting in front of City Hall on Laurier Avenue, proceeding west on Laurier Avenue, turning south on Bank Street and ending at Lansdowne Park," the Association says.
People looking to put an entry into the parade, volunteer, or make a monetary donation can visit https://www.toyparade.ca.
Cash donations will be accepted on the parade route, along with a cashless tap option.
This is 55th year for the Help Santa Toy Parade.
Donations of new, unwrapped toys will be accepted at all fire stations from now until Christmas. Rural fire stations are not staffed and will only be able to take donations on training nights: Mondays from 7 to 9 p.m. for stations 61, 62, 71, 72, 73, 81, 82, and 83; and Wednesdays from 7 to 9 p.m. for stations 63, 64, 66, 84, 91, 92, 93, and 94.
Santa's Parade of Lights in Orléans, now in its 26th year, will be held on Saturday, Nov. 30, starting at 6 p.m. It will take its traditional route down St. Joseph Boulevard from Youville Drive to Prestone Drive.
These are not the only parades on Santa's busy schedule in November.
The Barrhaven Santa Claus Parade is scheduled for Sunday, Nov. 17, at 5:30 p.m. The parade will go straight down Strandherd Drive this year, starting at Beatrice Drive and ending at the OC Transpo Park & Ride behind the Canadian Tire on Greenbank Road.
The Hazeldean Mall Kanata Santa Claus Parade will take place Saturday, Nov. 23, departing at 10 a.m., benefitting the Kanata Food Cupboard.
The Riverside South Community Association's Toy Mountain Parade will be held Saturday, Nov. 30, at 11 a.m. It will make its way from St. Jerome Elementary (4330 Spratt Rd.) and head north to École Bernard-Grandmaître (4170 Spratt Rd.)
CTVNews.ca Top Stories
Canada Post strike: Talks deadlocked as sides clash on wages
Negotiations between Canada Post and the union representing its workers appear to be in a deadlock as the two sides remain far apart on wages and other issues.
Meta working on resolving Facebook, Instagram outage
Meta users are experiencing a widespread outage, including applications like WhatsApp, Instagram, Facebook and Facebook Messenger, according to third-party website Downdetector.com. Meta acknowledged the issue and is working on resolving the outage.
Bank of Canada drops key interest rate to 3.25%, Trump tariff threat 'new source of uncertainty'
Canada's central bank has cut its key rate for the fifth consecutive time – now sitting at 3.25 per cent – as the country's economy grows at a slower rate than projected.
George Kresge Jr., who wowed talk show audiences as the The Amazing Kreskin, dies at age 89
George Joseph Kresge Jr., who was known to generations of TV watchers as the mesmerizing entertainer and mentalist The Amazing Kreskin, has died at age 89.
'Baseball-sized hail': Toronto man owes car rental company $18K after hailstorm
A Toronto man is on the hook for about $18,000 after a car he rented over the summer was pelted by baseball-sized hail.
Police locate labyrinth of tunnels connecting tents to generator in Hamilton encampment
Hamilton police say that they discovered a series of “man-made holes and tunnels” during a patrol of a downtown encampment earlier this week.
Poilievre's Conservatives still in majority territory: Nanos seat projections
The Liberals' promise of a temporary GST break and $250 rebate cheques haven't benefited Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and his minority government when it comes to public support, according to Nanos Research data.
New Vancouver mom temporarily discharged from hospital to see Taylor Swift concert
A Vancouver woman didn’t let an emergency C-section keep her from Saturday’s Taylor Swift concert.
Manitoba nurse found not criminally responsible for killing parents has licence to practice suspended
A Manitoba nurse who was found not criminally responsible for killing his parents and attacking another nurse in a Winnipeg hospital has been suspended from practicing.