HERMITAGE, Pa. - It's a shopping spree that is the epitome of the Christmas spirit. Every year in Hubbard, the entire community works together trying to give some kids in the school district a Christmas to remember.

The shopping itself happens one day a year. Brandie Yobe and Susan Rentz roam the aisles at WalMart in Hermitage filling cart after cart.

Susan calls out the items and Brandie tracks them down.

"Christmas isn't about what you get. Christmas is about what you give," said Rentz, the secretary to the principal at Hubbard High School.

It's a concept they embrace each year in Hubbard. It's called the Children's Christmas Fund for Hubbard Schools. Through donations, they've raised about $10,000 this year; all to give 153 kids in 60 families a Christmas to remember.

"I don't think there's a program like it anywhere else," said Rentz. "It's all donated money. It's all community money and it goes back into the community."

"We work really hard to try to service the children with getting what they actually want," said Yobe, Hubbard High School principal.

Whether it's toys, video games, or clothes they'll track it down, which makes for a pretty intense day of shopping.

"You just pull off the rack and you go, 'I need Thomas the Train?' Well, how many Thomas do I need? And you just start grabbing. How many Hot Wheels? You just grab and grab, and you realize you filled up 15 carts," said Yobe. "You're like, Holy moly, where's all this going?"

One after another, the carts are all rolled back to the automotive department and by the end of the day they've basically taken over the place.

After all, $10,000 buys a lot of stuff. There's no price tag on this experience as a whole. Hubbard students end up wrapping a lot of these presents, then just about the whole community comes out to help deliver everything just in time for Christmas.

"On that morning of delivery I have 45 kids, plus police, plus fire trucks decorated to the hilts," said Yobe.

 "You'll hear them say, 'Wow I didn't think about this. I didn't think about if we didn't do this, that these kids may not have much for Christmas'," said Rentz.

"My favorite story over the years is; there was a delivery and this little girl, all she wanted was an American Girl doll. Our student that night went home, gave her her American Girl doll, took it back, wrapped it up and put it on that young little girl's porch so she would have an American Girl doll. To me, that's why we do it," said Yobe.

Some special people, putting a little magic into Christmas for an entire community.