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Patch Partners With Connecticut State Police On Operation Snuggle

Stuffed animals originally donated for Newtown will comfort children across Connecticut in memory of the 20 children killed in the Sandy Hook tragedy.

 

From Winnie the Pooh to Paddington, teddy bears are a universal symbol for comforting a scared or worried child. Perhaps this is why, in the wake of the tragedy at Sandy Hook Elemementary School in Newtown, during which 20 first-graders and six educators were murdered by a lone gunman, the world sent thousands of teddy bears to that community.

In our part of Connecticut, we also turned to teddy bears as a way to show our support for Newtown.

In December, Patch launched Operation Snuggle Newtown, and in four days, nearly 100 local businesses across our 41 sites helped us collect about 4,500 stuffed animals.

About 2,000 of those collected went to Newtown, to be given as gifts at a townwide Christmas party that was organized for kids in town right before the holiday. But Newtown was overrun with bears, and we did not want to complicate the situation there.

So we turned to the Connecticut State Police and asked Public Information Officer Lt. J. Paul Vance if the department had any type of program that gave out bears to children at traumatic or upsetting crime or accident scenes. He told us that there used to be such a program that kept bears in each cruiser, but funding dried up.

And so Operation Snuggle II was born.

Today, Jan. 25, a group of Patch editors packed up the remaining 2,500 bears where they were being stored in Manchester, and delivered them to the state Department of Public Safety headquarters in Middletown. From there, they will be distributed to each barracks in Connecticut, and to each cruiser. When the need arises, each trooper will have comfort on hand for a child in need.

Trooper Kelly Grant, a member of the CSP public information office, graciously welcomed us to headquarters Friday for the delivery. She told us a story about a recent car rollover in which two children had to be pulled from the car through the sunroof, uninjured but shaken and upset. The trooper at the scene had a stuffed animal in his cruiser and gave it to the children as they sat on the roadside.

"It made a big difference," Grant said. "It calmed them right down."

We hope it takes a long time for the Connecticut troopers to work their way through this collection of cuddly stuffed toys, but if and when they do start to run out, Patch will stage another Operation Snuggle collection in partnership with our awesome local businesses, and we will resupply.

Thank you to all the businesses who volunteered themselves as drop-off points.

The Clinton Patch thanks Christo Jewelers and James Milone Chiropractic Center for their assistance as drop off points and for donating bears.

Thank you to all the amazing people who donated one, two, 10, even 50 stuffed animals and fleece blankets. We could not have done this part of the program without the kindness of Patrick and Mike Greene, owners of Greene Moving & Storage in Manchester, who took such good care of the bears over the holidays while we found them a new home.

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JC May 22, 2013 at 11:36 am
Owners really need to pick up their dog's waste. It is a major polluter of the Long Island Sound.Read More Whenever your dog drops one and you leave it, think of that fish, lobster, or shellfish you ate from the Sound! Enjoy eating your dog poop bacteria!
Leslie S May 22, 2013 at 08:51 am
I'm so lucky!! For 10 years my dogs have frolicked safely in the back part of Bauer - away from theRead More roads, traffic and homes - closer to the back of the HS. I have never heard any dogs bark or 'yap', never saw a dog run into the gardens and destroy the plots, never saw a dog fight or kids being assaulted and luckily avoided all the poop they are leaving behind although I do dodge the deer pellets. My timing must be stellar to avoid all the bad dogs, their dismal behavior and threats to others. Whew!!
JC May 22, 2013 at 08:47 am
The whole state is tick infested. Luckily, dogs can use a product called Frontline Top Spot or itsRead More cheaper generic equivalent, which completely protects them from ticks and fleas. On the shoreline to Middletown, you should be using it on your dog year round. I once saw a deer tick crawling on SNOW in Madison near the Country School in February. The Lyme vacine is ineffective in most canines and most canines that get Lyme, shake it off in time - unlike humans. Top Spot keeps the ticks off or dead for the humans that pet the dog. Regardless, dogs running on cut grass some distance from woods or taller grass won't encounter many if any ticks. Especially if the outer perimeter of the fence is treated in spring and fall.