Berit Ollestad is working to bring a Tunnel to Towers event to the region, an effort shaped by years of personal experience, a growing desire to create something meaningful for her community, and a life-changing experience with Tunnel to Towers.
By day, Berit runs a cleaning business, but much of her energy has shifted toward community involvement and honoring first responders and veterans. That sense of purpose was shaped in part by her experiences surrounding September 11th. At the time she was traveling in Italy and later spent time in New York and New Jersey during the recovery period. While living on the East Coast, she also worked in local journalism, covering police, fire departments, and civic life during a time when public service and community response were especially visible in daily life. The local response to the tragedy touched Berit, but she didn’t know how much the experience would come to mean to her.
Her connection to Tunnel to Towers came years later when she participated in one of the organization’s signature events in New York, which includes a 5K run through the Brooklyn Battery Tunnel and a stair climb at One World Trade Center.
“I remember standing there with thousands of people and realizing this was not just a race. It was something completely different. Everybody was there for a reason and you could feel it,” she says. “I just felt like I needed to do something more with this.”
That experience stayed with her for a long time. While training locally in Sandpoint at War Memorial Stadium, she spent early mornings running stadium stairs in preparation for another climb event. What began as training gradually became something more reflective.
“I would be out there early in the morning with the sun coming up over the stadium and I kept thinking how beautiful it was,” she says. “Then it hit me that this needs to be shared. This could be something meaningful here.”
From that moment, the idea began to take shape: bringing a Tunnel to Towers-style 5K and climb event to Sandpoint on July 4th. The proposed route would cross the Long Bridge, move through town, and finish at Memorial Field. For Ollestad, the bridge quickly became central to the vision.
“The bridge is really what makes it special,” she says. “When you run across it you are looking at the water and the mountains. It just feels like home. That became the hook for me.”
The event is still in early planning stages, but its mission is rooted in supporting veterans, first responders, and their families. Tunnel to Towers is widely known for paying off mortgages for families of fallen first responders, building smart homes for catastrophically injured veterans, and providing long-term support for families left behind. Berit also points to the foundation’s broader efforts supporting homeless veterans through housing programs, case management, and wraparound services aimed at long-term stability.
“They try to take care of the whole veteran,” she says. “It is not just housing, it is everything around it, making sure people actually have a chance to rebuild their lives.”
As planning continues, Ollestad says the focus is now on building community participation. Volunteers, sponsors, and local partners will all play an important role, but she emphasizes that showing up is what matters most.
“I think people underestimate how much just showing up matters,” she says. “Whether you are running, walking, volunteering, or cheering on the bridge, it all matters.”
She is also hoping for a strong turnout on race day, while acknowledging the ambition of the goal.
“I would love to see a thousand people out there,” she says. “I know that is a big number, but I also do not think it is impossible. This community shows up when it matters.”
More than anything, she hopes the event captures the emotional meaning she experienced in New York, where participants were running and climbing in honor of loved ones lost.
“Everyone was climbing for someone,” she says. “People had pictures on their shirts, names written on their hands. You get to the top and it is quiet for a moment and you realize everybody in that room is carrying a story.”
As she continues preparing for another climb in New York while organizing the Sandpoint event, Ollestad says the experience has deepened her sense of purpose.
“I am really grateful I get to do it again,” she says.
Her hope is that the Sandpoint Tunnel to Towers becomes more than a race by creating a shared moment of remembrance, service, and community connection.













