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Associated Press
Tens of thousands of gifts have been sent to Newtown, Conn., in the wake of the Dec. 14 massacre at the Sandy Hook Elementary School, forcing officials to set up an infrastructure to deal with the donations.

Buried by worldwide giving

Newtown, Conn., still on pause as gifts, mail pile up

– Chris Kelsey is the tax assessor in Newtown, but for the better part of three weeks, his job has been setting up and organizing a warehouse to hold the toys, school supplies and other gifts donated in the wake of the massacre at the Sandy Hook Elementary school.

Despite the town’s pleas to stop sending gifts, Kelsey said trucks have been arriving daily with tokens of support from across the world, some for the families of those killed, others for the children of Sandy Hook, still others for the town.

“A lot of the town’s normal business is still on pause,” he said. “I have a couple of people still doing assessor’s business, and then if they can, open mail a couple hours too. We’re all kind of doing what we can to get this done.”

A task force has been set up to coordinate the more than 800 volunteers who have been working to sort the gifts, open mail and answer the thousands of emails and phone calls offering assistance.

The volunteers have begun making a dent in the pile of tens of thousands of teddy bears that stretched to the warehouse ceiling.

By last week, they had sorted 30,000 of them into small, medium and large sizes, catalogued them and put them in boxes. They are also separating and boxing piles of crayons, pencils, books and much more.

“It’s a ton of stuff, and we have an operation just as big for mail as well,” Kelsey said.

There are also 26 large moving boxes in the warehouse, each labeled with a victim’s name.

When a gift comes in specifically addressed to those families, it goes in those boxes. The families have been coming in periodically to empty them.

A toy giveaway was held for all Newtown children before Christmas and some of the remaining toys and stuffed animals have been taken to children’s hospitals.

The rest will be stored until the town decides where they should go, Kelsey said.

He said letters have been sent to each of the victim’s families asking for their advice. His cellphone is filled with emails from charities across the country.

The work organizing the warehouse is being done by volunteers from Adventist Community Services, a religious group that has done similar work after hurricanes and other natural disasters.

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