The for observing a safer Halloween during the COVID-19 pandemic includes tips for those who want to give out candy to kids safely.
The health experts first suggestion was taking a folding table out to the driveway, sidewalk or stoop, and spreading out candy on a folding table, so kids could pick up without reaching into a bowl or pile.
Safer? Yes. Fun? No way.
But then came their last suggestion: “a candy chute.”
Yes!

As long as the chute was more than 6 feet long, the health department said. A quick glance at Amazon determined candy chutes weren’t already mass-produced and ready to be shipped to my home. So, I’d have to make one myself.
If I had a long, thick, corrugated cardboard tube, I would have been all set. But they’re never piling up in the garage when you need them.
A trip to a plumbing department turned up the solution: PVC pipe. A 10-foot section cost about $8.
Once I got it to my SUV, I realized it was a couple feet too long to fit inside, even with the seats down. So I opened the front passenger window, and the pipe stuck out, nestling next to the side-view mirror.
Since the happiness of children was at stake, I picked up a small(ish) variety bag of Halloween chocolates on the way home — purely for testing purposes.
At the grocery store, while I was looking for some orange or Halloween-themed wrapping paper to decorate the pipe, I stumbled upon a decorated Halloween paper table covering — even better!
A little tape, and the candy chute was ready for testing on the front steps of my house.
I slipped a Hershey’s chocolate bar into the top of the chute and whoosh — one second later, it plopped into the plastic candy bucket strategically placed at the bottom of the stairs.
²ÝÝ®´«Ã½’s Halloween investigative team has learned that Reese’s Peanut Butter Cups will get stuck if the tube’s diameter isn’t large enough; Almond Joys and KitKats are no problem. The team solved this problem by eating most of the peanut butter cups.
