British Columbia

Canada Post removes deadline for Santa letter program as strike continues

Canada Post says it has removed the Dec. 6 deadline for its Santa Claus letter program amid an ongoing national workers' strike that has halted mail delivery leading up to the holiday season.  

Program delivers up to 1.5 million letters addressed to North Pole from Canadian kids each year

People in jackets and yellow vests stand outside a building with a sign reading "Canada Post."
Members of the Canadian Union of Postal Workers have been on strike since Nov. 15. (Sean Kilpatrick/The Canadian Press)

Canada Post says it has removed the deadline for its Santa Claus letter program amid an ongoing national workers' strike that has halted mail delivery leading up to the holiday season.  

Some 55,000 workers walked off the job more than two weeks ago, suspending mail service — and a program that helps deliver up to 1.5 million letters addressed to the North Pole that Canadian kids send each year. 

The postal service said in a statement that while the initial deadline to mail a letter to Santa with the H0H 0H0 postal code was Dec. 6, that deadline has now been removed from its website.  

It says once operations resume, it will ensure all letters make it to the North Pole and receive a reply, but it cannot guarantee delivery dates.

Canada Post says since the program began more than 40 years ago, Santa's North Pole post office has delivered replies to more than 45 million letters. 

During the strike, some communities have stepped up to deliver Santa's mail themselves, offering their own local programming on social media to make sure letter writers receive a reply by Christmas.  

A letter with handwriting sits on a table beside a coffee mug of a winking owl.
Canada Post says it will ensure that all letters make it to the North Pole. (Submitted by Shantanu Datta)