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Hometown Holiday Festival draws a crowd at Burrell High School | TribLIVE.com
Valley News Dispatch

Hometown Holiday Festival draws a crowd at Burrell High School

Paula Reed Ward
6850314_web1_Nicole-Butler-and-Toys-for-Tots
Paula Reed Ward | Tribune-Review
Nicole Butler, a supervisor with Lower Burrell EMS, was at the Hometown Holiday Festival collecting new toys for Toys for Tots of Tarentum. The EMS service was hoping to fill an ambulance with toys for distribution this holiday season. “They had a huge need this year, and not a lot of people were doing drives like this,” Butler said. Toys will continue to be accepted for the next week, Butler said, and can be donated at Lower Burrell Volunteer Fire Company No. 3 at 3255 Leechburg Road.
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Paula Reed Ward | Tribune-Review
Fifty-two competitive dancers from A Step Above Dance Academy of New Kensington performed at the Hometown Holiday Festival. The show included tap, jazz, lyrical and hip hop performances with dancers ages 8 to 18.
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Paula Reed Ward | Tribune-Review
Sarge, a 5-year-old bulldog, was at the Hometown Holiday Festival with TinyCause Rescue, of Vandergrift. Anyone interested in adopting him can email darlaheld65@gmail.com to obtain an application.
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Paula Reed Ward | Tribune-Review
Sherry Lucchetti, owner of Kindred Spirit Soaps and a teacher at Stewart Elementary in Burrell School District, sells a bar of Candy Cane Confetti Soap to Hollie Robron, of Ford City.
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Paula Reed Ward | Tribune-Review
Mason Zimmerman, 4, gets his face painted by Ashley Hardwick during the Hometown Holiday Festival Saturday at Burrell High School.
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Paula Reed Ward | Tribune-Review
Maya Tunstall, 4, decorates a cookie as part of the Lower Burrell Hometown Holiday Festival on Saturday.
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Paula Reed Ward | Tribune-Review
Michael Tobin, 4, Arabella Tunstall, 9, and Maya Tunstall, 4, decorate sugar cookies made by Kellie Newcomb, far right, of Aunt Kellie’s Cookies in Lower Burrell.
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Paula Reed Ward | Tribune-Review
Michael Tobin, 4, of Lower Burrell, used a lot of sprinkles on his cookie.
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Paula Reed Ward | Tribune-Review
Abbie Mollica, of Team Tabbie Custom Crafts, of Kennedy, attended the holiday festival selling hand-made wooden decorations.

Hundreds of people visited Burrell High School on Saturday for its first Hometown Holiday Festival, featuring musical performances, local craft vendors, food trucks and family activities.

Nicole Butler, supervisor of Lower Burrell EMS, spent the day filling an ambulance for Toys for Tots of Tarentum.

She said the organization serves a large district and had a huge need for toys this year.

“So much of our world is bad things,” Butler said. “We needed something good.”

The ambulance service workers, wearing their best ugly Christmas sweaters, passed out peppermints and lollipops to kids who donated.

Arabella Tunstall, 9, who visited with her grandmother, Lynelle Tunstall, of Lower Burrell, and her 4-year-old sister, Maya, donated a board game.

Caitlin Tobin, who moved to Lower Burrell in 2018, took her son and daughter to the event.

“It’s a nice family event, and we’re looking forward to the parade,” she said.

Sherry Lucchetti, a teacher at Burrell’s Stewart Elementary School, attended the festival as a vendor.

She’s operated Kindred Spirit Soaps for about eight years, selling handcrafted bath and body products.

“Knowing the community came together and supports small business and being a community against is what matters most to me,” Lucchetti said. “It’s just fulfilling.”

Paula Reed Ward is a TribLive reporter covering federal and Allegheny County courts. She joined the Trib in 2019 after spending nearly 17 years at the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, where she was part of a Pulitzer Prize-winning team. She is the author of “Death by Cyanide.” She can be reached at pward@triblive.com.

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Categories: Local | Top Stories | Valley News Dispatch
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