Angel’s Run in 2nd year
Michael Miller
Now two months away from her 4th birthday, Angel Hansen still hasn’t
mastered the skills that most children her age did years ago. Barring
a miracle of science, she may never reach them.
“The only skill she has is that she can laugh, and she can cry,
and she can smile,” said her father, Doug Hansen. “She makes kind of
baby sounds and she can grab objects, and that’s about all she can do
at the moment.”
Despite her disabilities, which she has had since birth, Angel
will be mobile -- in her own way -- for the second year in a row this
Friday. When her father leads the second annual Angel’s Run around
the track at Newport Harbor High School, he’ll be accompanied by
Angel, who rides around the track with him in a special jogging
stroller. She’ll only join him part of the way, though -- Hansen will
circle the track for 24 hours straight.
In 2003, Hansen and his wife, Jennifer, founded Angels Charity to
raise money for families of children with birth defects. The next
year, to benefit the charity, they held the first annual Angel’s Run
at Corona del Mar High School, with Doug Hansen and several others
walking, jogging and running around the track for one entire day.
Proceeds from the event, which included pledges and straight
donations, totaled more than $40,000. This year, the Hansens are
hoping to reach the $100,000 mark.
“So far, we’ve probably collected about $5,000 this year,” Hansen
said. “People know Angel’s Run is coming up, and a few people have
sent checks around the country.”
The second annual Angel’s Run will begin at 5 p.m. Friday and
continue until 5 p.m. Saturday. On Saturday, between 9 a.m. and 4
p.m., the event will be complemented by a health fair on the Newport
Harbor track, as Blue Cross, March of Dimes, One Legacy and other
local organizations will set up booths to advertise their
health-related causes.
“We very much like to partner with other nonprofit organizations
to share resources and causes and what have you, and we were just
very happy to be part of his promotion for his charity,” Nancy
Franks, executive director of the Pediatric Cancer Research
Foundation, said about Hansen. “He was looking for family-oriented
health issues, so it was a good fit.”
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.