Donations to Fill the Bus 2023 poured in by the boxful, by Christmas-tree-shaped stacks, by the bundle and by the handful. Every can proved the generosity of the Rotorua community.
Yesterday a CityRide bus drove across Rotorua calling on businesses, schools and the public to donate food items to the Salvation Army Rotorua’s foodbank ahead of Christmas for the Hits Rotorua 97.5FM’s campaign.
The Hits Rotorua presenter Paul Hickey was on the bus all day from 7am until 6pm on Wednesday and presenting his radio show live from 9am to 3pm, chatting to the locals who make donations at the designated public stop-offs.
Xavier, 12, donated about 120 cans to his school’s collection all by himself.
He said it was for the “Christmas spirit”.
Xavier was one of many individuals who helped Fill the Bus, even when it wasn’t convenient for them.
Image 1 of 32: Fill the Bus 2023. Lynmore School. 08 December 2023 The Daily Post Photo / Andrew Warner
Nurse Hine Isaac saw the bus parked at New World as she was getting groceries after a night shift. She decided to stop and donate a few cans of spaghetti.
”I like to help out where I can.”
Bryn Parry, who brought the day’s first donation, said he was on his way out the door on his way to the gym when his wife Julz stopped him.
”She gave me a bag of cans and told me to give it to the bus at the shopping centre. I’m glad she did.”
CityRide employee and today’s Fill the Bus driver Anita Williams said Fill the Bus was about the same things as Christmas: “Giving and family”.
Williams said she was happy to see people give from the heart.
Fill the Bus drove to the doors of 14 schools for this year’s appeal
As the team approached each gate kids ran out with cans in each hand. Some chanted “It’s the Grinch”, over and over again. Others hopped up and down around their collected donations while teachers tried to hold them back from running up to the bus. One school even started singing Christmas carols.
Kawaha Point School student Theresa Mary Uluave-Bell, 9, said she brought a tin of tuna. ”Because I can give food to the people who need it.”
Malfroy year one and two teacher Delyse Bell said the day was important to “give back to the community”. She said the school had held discos to raise food donations.
Westbrook student Sophia Chapman, 11, said she was “excited” because donations meant other kids could have food over Christmas too.