With the difficulties presented by COVID-19, the Alaska National Guard once again managed to spread joy to remote villages in difficult times. This year’s iteration of Op Santa brought the Christmas spirit to the villages of Birch Creek, Stevens Village, and Nanwalek. Due to COVID-19 precautionary measures, the Guardsmen and volunteers delivered the gifts to the villages for their distribution to the children. None of the personnel involved in the missions interacted with the local citizens.
JOINT BASE ELMENDORF-RICHARDSON, Alaska — The Alaska National Guard shared their time-honored tradition of Operation Santa Claus by spreading goodwill and joy to remote Alaskan communities again this year. Despite the challenges of a global pandemic, they delivered gifts from Santa Claus to three villages last week and today.
With the difficulties presented by COVID-19, the Alaska National Guard, in partnership with the Salvation Army, found a way to maintain the program by delivering it differently this year. They took necessary precautions to ensure safety, while staying committed to the mission of spreading joy and friendship with rural villages experiencing hardship. This year’s iteration of Op Santa shared the Christmas spirit with the villages of Birch Creek, Stevens Village, and Nanwalek. According to available records, none of the three villages have previously been visited by the Op Santa program.
“Our commitment to rural communities through Op Santa is a priority every holiday season,” said Maj. Gen. Torrence Saxe, adjutant general of the Alaska National Guard. “We found a way to conduct the mission this year safely and effectively, while still sharing in the joy of the season with our neighbors.”
2020 marks the 65th year of the program, which began in 1956 after spring floods, followed by a drought, impacted subsistence fishing and hunting, requiring St. Mary’s Mission to purchase food. This created a challenge for them to provide Christmas gifts for the children, so the National Guard flew in donated gifts and supplies.
“The Alaska National Guard has shared Operation Santa Claus with communities in remote Alaska since 1956,” said Lt. Col. Candis Olmstead, the project officer for Op Santa. “It started in the village of St. Mary’s when they experienced a year of particular hardship and they still wanted to provide gifts for the children at their school, so the Anchorage community came together and gathered up gifts and the Alaska Air National Guard flew the gifts out to the village.”
For this year’s program, volunteers from the Alaska National Guard and the Salvation Army worked like Santa’s elves, packaging up presents donated by the community. Each child in all three villages received backpacks containing a wrapped gift, books and stocking stuffers. These backpacks were put into boxes that also contained puzzles, board games, coffee and nonperishable food items for the families.
For the first two deliveries, an Army Guard C-12 Huron flew gifts from JBER to Fairbanks International Airport, where they were ground transported to Fort Wainwright and loaded to an Army Guard UH-60 Black Hawk helicopter for a final, special delivery. After the scheduled flight cancelled due to unfavorable weather conditions, the mission was successfully completed the next day on Dec. 2, delivering boxes of goodies to Birch Creek, a village with only five children, and Stevens Village, a community with nine children.
A CH-47 Chinook helicopter participated in Op Santa for the very first time this year by delivering gifts to Nanwalek Dec. 11. The Alaska Army National Guard acquired the CH-47 helicopters two years ago this month, and they have undergone extensive maintenance, training flights and missions with newly trained, yet highly experienced aircrews.
“This is the first year that one of our new Army National Guard Chinook helicopters participated in Op Santa,” said Olmstead, “We’re excited for them to carry on our long-standing tradition of delivering gifts to Alaskans in rural communities with military aircraft.”
Due to COVID-19 precautionary measures, the Guardsmen and volunteers delivered gifts to the villages for their distribution to the children. None of the personnel involved in the missions interacted closely with the local citizens, maintaining a safe distance.
“We offloaded the boxes, flew off and then the folks from the villages came in to pick up the boxes,” said Olmstead. “This limited our interaction with them to ensure their safety.”
Despite the limitations involved in trying to prevent the spread of COVID-19, it was important to the Alaska National Guard and the Salvation Army to continue the tradition.
“We wanted to keep our commitment to the program and the communities alive, despite the challenges of a pandemic,” explained Saxe. “The children and families are so excited and appreciative, and we really enjoy sharing in the spirit of the holiday season, continuing to grow relationships with all Alaskans.”
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