Want to be like Santa? Here's how you can adopt a family in need for Christmas
CBC
Between inflation, Windsor's high unemployment rate and record-setting food bank usage, this year's holiday season is shaping up to be a difficult one for many families in our region.
That's why Windsor Family Homes and Community Partnerships (WFHCP) is eagerly looking to secure as many sponsors as possible for its adopt-a-family program to support families and individuals in need for the holidays — but this year it is proving to be more challenging than previous years.
"I think everyone's seeing the effects of the inflation and prices and there's been a little bit of a lacking in participation this year," explained Danielle Atogwe, the co-ordinator of programs at WFHCP.
Last year, they supported a record 75 families and they're hoping to match it this year. So far, they've secured approximately 50 sponsors this year, with many families and individuals still hoping to be matched.
Sponsors are paired with a family or an individual in need, depending on what they request, they receive a wish list, shop and then deliver those items to the agency. The family or individual is then called in to pick up the items in time for the holidays.
"This is Christmas to me. This is everything," said Courtney Rivait, a long-time sponsor and self-proclaimed elf.
"You're helping people get something that they wouldn't ordinarily have and helping them have a genuine Christmas, which is something that I got to experience as a child. So I think it's really important that other people grown and young get to experience that."
Sponsor — and self-proclaimed Mrs. Claus — Christina Delmedico has been taking part in the program since 2017, and this year, her family is sponsoring 39 individuals.
When she sponsored for the very first time, it "changed the meaning of Christmas forever," she said.
"The kids are asking for basic necessities. It absolutely breaks my heart. This year on almost every single wish list, we have bed sheets, we have boots, we have socks, underwear, things that, you know, you and I maybe wouldn't even think twice about."
Angela Yakonich, the executive director at WFHCP, says this program is incredibly important this time of year for the organization's clients.
"We are finding that a lot of people are having to choose between paying their gas bill or rent or hydro, any of their utilities over groceries," she said.
"In addition to that, they're going to have to choose feeding their families over providing those gifts and those extras that we get every year at Christmas."
It's not just families with kids who are in need — it's single adults who need support too.