Sensitive Santa comes to Saint John kids with autism - Action News
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New Brunswick

Sensitive Santa comes to Saint John kids with autism

Sensitive Santa events for kids with sensory processing issues are becoming popular across Canada - and this year they're being offered for the first time at McAllister Place in Saint John.

Dimmed lights, lower noise levels, and a flexible approach let all kids enjoy visits with Santa

Children play on the floor with Santa at the Avalon Mall in St. John's, N.L., at a Sensitive Santa event last year. On Sunday, Dec. 10, 2017, a similar event for kids with sensory processing disorders will be held at McAllister Place in Saint John from 9 a.m. to 11 a.m. (Jeremy Eaton/CBC)

Jangling Christmas carols. Impatient shoppers. Fluorescent lights. Cracklingannouncements over the loudspeaker.

The mall in December can be stressful for many people and even moreso for little ones who have sensory processing disorders like autism. For families of such kids, attempting to snap a photo on Santa's knee can be a one-way ticket to a meltdown.

Now, Sensitive Santaevents are gaining popularity in urban centres from Sudbury, Ont., to St. John's, N.L. Such events looka lot like a regular visit to Santa, only with adjustments designed specifically to make it easier on kids with sensitivitiesand their families.

First time this year

"It's new for McAllister Place. I haven't heard of it anywhere else in Saint John," said Tanya McCluskey-Kelly, marketing manager for Primaris Management Inc. The company owns both McAllister Place and the Regent Mall in Fredericton.

Sometimes we get families who cry with happiness because they'reso excited.- Angele Collette, Autism Resource Centre

"Santa speaks lower, his ho-ho-hos will be less, and if children don't want to sit on Santa's knee, that's fine.Santa can get down on the floor with them," she said.

The appointment-only event will be held from 9 a.m. to 11 a.m. on Sunday, Dec. 10, before the mall opens.Lights and music are kept down low, Santa leaves his jingling bells at home, and flash photography is kept to a minimum.

Flexible approach

"The children get the same Santa as their friends, and Santa has received training on how to deal with children with sensitivities," said McCluskey-Kelly.

Angele Collette is the executive director of the Autism Resource Centre in Moncton, which has assisted Champlain Place with organizing a Sensitive Santa event for the past four years.

"A lot of the kids that are on the autism spectrum have sensory difficulties," she said. "The sound, lights, music from surrounding stores and long lineups are very chaotic. For some families, it's just not possible."

McAllister Place in Saint John is following in the footsteps of shopping centres across the country by organizing opportunities for kids to have a low-key visit with Santa before the mall opens. (Discover Saint John) (McAllister Place Facebook)

As many as 40 families sign up for the event each year, she said. This year's Sensitive Santa at Champlain Place will take place Sunday, Dec. 3 from 9 a.m. to 11 a.m.

"Sometimes we get families who cry with happiness because they're so excited," she said. "For some families, this is the only way they can get a picture with Santa."


The photos aren'talways the conventional sitting-on-the-knee shot.

"You have kids that are really, really scared of Santa," she said. "We've had pictures where he peeks out from behind the chair and the kid doesn'teven know that Santa is there. We take all kinds of different pictures."

A flexible approach is key, said Collette.

"I've heard nothing but positive things from the families."

Overwhelming response

The decision by McAllister Placeto introduce the event in Saint John came after the mall receiveda few calls from parents of children with autism, according to McCluskey-Kelly.

"We thought, of course we could provide children with these visits with Santa," she said. "That's a great gift for families of children with sensory issues."

The response so far has been "overwhelming," she said.

"Dozens of families have responded," she said. "We may have to do two sessions. We wouldn't want to turn any child away."

Parents can book appointments via email or by sending a message tothe McAllister Place page on Facebook. There are no age restrictions.

"Santa is for children of all agesand of all abilities," she said.