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Maldden
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Vol. 32, No. 25
den
-FREEYour
Local News in 6 Languages! Subscribe to Advocate News Online!
AADD
Carey McDonald
Councillor-at-Large
Finance Committee Chair
By Steve Freker
F
or a change, there were no
changes. The Malden City
Council on Tuesday unanimously
approved a $215 million municipal
budget which, though
lean overall, did feature one of
the largest single-year increases
in funding for the Malden Public
Schools. It represents an eight
percent increase overall over last
CTE
OCAT
AT
www.advocatenews.net
Malden City Council
approves $215M municipal
budget for FY2024
For a change, no changes: Councillors’
unanimous vote came without amendments
after careful review by Finance Committee
Published Every Friday
617-387-2200
Craig
Spadafora
Councillor-at-Large
year’s budget of $198.6 million.
The striking observation of the
whole process this year was that
of the dozens of departments
and hundreds of line items, the
Councillors approved the exact
budget appropriation they received
as proposed by the Mayor’s
Offi ce. This came after careful
review by the City Council’s
BUDGET | SEE PAGE 7
By Steve Freker
S
he has witnessed plenty of
game-changing moments
in her 10 years serving as Ward
8 Councillor. Even still, there always
seems to be a fi rst in an, at
times, eclectic community like
Malden. At a recent City Council
meeting, Jadeane Sica made
it clear how she feels about the
latest news regarding one of
the two major residential living
complexes in her ward.
E
Friday, June 23, 2023
INSIDE INFORMATION:
Malden’s first-ever hotel is now on table as
part of newest Overlook Ridge expansion plan
City Council grants 1-year extension request to special permit
holder for planned Charles Street marijuana dispensary
Overlook Ridge residential development is planning an expansion on the last undeveloped lot on
its site, which now includes the construction of a hotel. (Courtesy Photo)
When the shovels fi rst hit the
dirt about 20 years ago at the
massive expanse of land now
known as Overlook Ridge, the
site was known as the largest
HOTEL | SEE PAGE 11
Community comes together at 6th Annual Malden Juneteenth Freedom Day Celebration
Special to Th e Advocate
I
t may have rained all day, but
that didn’t dampen the spirits
of hundreds of attendees at
Malden’s 6th Annual Juneteenth
Freedom Day Celebration this
past Saturday, June 17. In a quick
pivot and with the steadfast
support of Superintendent of
Schools Ligia Noriega-Murphy
and custodial staff at the Ferryway
School, the event location
was moved indoors from Lincoln
Commons to the Ferryway
School. The Freedom Day CeleCELEBRATION
| SEE PAGE 14
Members of the A.O. Step Team celebrate a successful Malden Juneteenth performance over lunch.
(Photo credit: Rachel Sorlien)
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`̰ ׉	 7cassandra://nWx_16TeOdTo6JEXl7d-7d4A49S2FNJZY0C23HhOpw4 '*͠d(r+`*]נd(r+`*c O9ׁH "http://www.eight10barandgrille.comׁׁЈנd(r+`*b 	f9ׁHhttp://www.angelosoil.comׁׁЈ׉E\Page 2
THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, June 23, 2023
City of Malden 2023 Summer Concert Series
M
ALDEN - Mayor Gary Christenson
is pleased to present
the City of Malden’s Summer
Concert Series. A total of
four concerts will be featured
this summer. Local bands will be
making the most of the summer
heat on the following Tuesdays
from 6-8 p.m. on City Hall Plaza.
July 11: The Smack Dabs.
July 25: The Reminisants.
August 8: The Brothers Walk
Band.
August 22: That’s Ben Gardner’s
Boat.
In the event of inclement weather,
concerts will be postponed –
please check in with the City of
Malden website in the event of
rain or inclement weather.
Three-alarm fire hit Newhall Street home early last Friday
Eight left homeless as a result of the blaze, which is still under investigation;
second major fi re in Malden in less than a month
By Steve Freker
A
n early morning three-alarm
fire hit a Newhall Street
home last Friday, sending heavy
fl ames soaring into the sky as
Malden Fire Department crews
and those from four other communities
battled the blaze. No
one was reported injured as a result
of the fi re, but eight people
were forced out and left homeless
as a result.
Crews with the Malden Fire
A fi re severely damaged this home on Newhall Street early Friday
morning. (Courtesy Photo)
9
Department were called to the
fi re at 96 Newhall St. just after
1:30 a.m. on Friday and arrived
to fi nd heavy fi re in the building.
Everyone was out of the
home when they arrived, according
to Assistant Fire Chief
Lenny Dunn.
Dunn called the fi re “a difficult
one to fight” and said
it took “a lot of manpower
to get it knocked down.” The
tight space that exists on NeA
Malden fi refi ghter battled a blaze on Newhall Street on Friday.
(Courtesy Photo)
whall Street was a major challenge
as fi re crews battled to
get equipment set up to fi ght
the blaze.
No cause of the fi re has yet
to be determined as the fi re remains
under investigation by
Malden Fire officials and the
State Fire Marshal’s Offi ce.
The Red Cross and Malden
Emergency Management were
on hand to assist residents in
fi nding shelter for the morning
and into the near future.
No damage cost estimate
was available, though fi re offi -
cials said the home was severely
damaged.
Malden Public Library announces new summer hours
C
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ome visit the Malden Public
Library on Saturdays
this summer. We are excited to
announce that from June 24
through September 9 the Library
will be open Monday-Thursday
from 9 a.m. to 9 p.m., Friday
from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. and Saturday
from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. We invite
all residents to take part in
the Summer Reading Challenge
and join us for our many exciting
summer events. Event calendars
are available at the Library or on
the Library’s website at www.
maldenpubliclibrary.org.
*Annual Percentage Yield (APY) is accurate as of the date posted and is subject to change without notice. APY
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be imposed for early withdrawal. Offer may be withdrawn at any time. Minimum of $500 is required to open a
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Member FDIC | Member DIF All Deposits Are Insured In Full.
Malden Public Library
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Page 3
~ Malden Musings ~
“Malden’s Best According
to Mr. Baseball”
By Peter Levine
H
ere is something Bob Rotondi
and I have been kicking
around for a short period of
time: the top fi ve hitters (note
to Jason Munroe – we’re talking
baseball players, not gangsters)
to come out of Malden in the last
75 years. We are just talking hitters
and in no particular order.
We (or I should say, Bob) came
up with Malden Police Officer
Michael Langston, the late
great Highland Cafe bartender
Pete Trabucco, Michael Jordan’s
teammate in the White Sox organization
Carmine Cappuccio,
Dave Caiazzo’s mentor Steve
Ring, and possibly the best of
them all, Johnny Salmon. This
was a tough call all around, Bob
mused, so many “batsmen’ came
to mind. I threw out the name
of Edgeworth’s Dennis Damiano
from the 1970 City Champ
Barons in the Babe Ruth League.
Bob agreed he was a vicious hitter
for his time in the BRL but
if he didn’t go into the service
(Navy), he may have been the
best of them all (my opinion).
Bob mentioned Edgeworth’s
Rob Santo, who did time in the
Orioles system, Steve Durant
and Billy Croken, who excelled
in the Red Sox organization. Mr.
Baseball suggested maybe we
could put an asterisk after his
name, but (former Bruins great)
Andy Brickley could flat out
hit and played in Malden until
he turned 13 when the family
moved to Melrose. Andy did return
a few years later to play in
the inter-city league. His older
brothers John and George could
really “rake,” too.
Bob suggested that maybe
my readers might enjoy coming
up with their own lists. It
could make for some interesting
debates, as well as some
much-needed laughs. Loyal
readers, let me know at the
email address below (please
stop laughing at my AOL account)
whom you would like to
recognize as the best batsmen
from the past 75 years. Thanks
for taking the time to reach out
to me, Bob. Readers, have at it.
I know I am a little late with
this remembrance but circumstances
beyond my control prevented
me from posting it sooner.
This time of year, I dutifully
take a moment and remember
two Malden boys (and boys they
were) who were tragically killed
one early summer day 52 years
ago. Most remember the night
as if it were yesterday. Me included.
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State Rep. (and part-time football referee) Steve Ultrino with
legendary Malden “hitter” Johnny Salmon
and Beltran Street’s John Surette
were in the ninth grade at Beebe
at the time when they were
hit by a train on the (pre-MBTA)
tracks behind Tricca’s Restaurant
(Pearl and Adams) – killed
instantly. Beebe Jr. High mourned.
We never stopped mourning.
Here’s to you, Al and John –
always in our thoughts.
• Diane Wishoski remembers
sitting in a large circle in the park
on the Malden Street side when
she heard the news.
• Billy Settemio refl ects, “Living
up against the train tracks
we had an abundance of caution.
We played on those sandy
banks, but that day was horrifi
cally sad. All of us kids were
exposed to tragedy and sadness
the day we lost those boys
from the neighborhood. God
rest their souls.”
• Steve Silva: “I was only 11 but
it is burned in all of our collecMUSINGS|
SEE PAGE 18
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9ׁHhttp://atwww.advocatenews.netׁׁЈ׉EPage 4
THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, June 23, 2023
“A major victory for hardworking families”: Clark, Raimondo,
Mass. delegation laud CHIPS & Science Act child care investments
D
emocratic Whip Katherine
Clark (5th District of Massachusetts)
hosted U.S. Secretary
of Commerce Gina Raimondo,
Governor Maura Healey, Mayor
Michelle Wu and Representatives
Ayanna Pressley and
Stephen Lynch for a tour and
roundtable at the Greater Boston
Joint Apprenticeship Training
Center. The elected leaders
met with members and apprentices
to discuss the Biden
administration’s job-creating investments
and the central role
of accessible, affordable child
care in building a robust economy.
Below are highlights from
their conversation.
Whip Clark on Democrats’
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continued progress for working
families: “We made sure that
as Democrats, we passed the
American Rescue Plan that kept
200,000 child care centers open
for business during and immediately
after the pandemic. We
passed a federal budget that
invested another $20 billion in
childcare so that we can continue
to bring down the costs for
families. And, now we are using
the leverage of the federal
government to make sure that
employers do their part. This
is really the brainchild of our
Secretary of Commerce, working
with the Biden administration
to add a child care component
to the application for
funding from the CHIPS & Science
Act to really leverage that
private investment in our workforce
and make sure that people
have access to affordable childcare
so they can get to the job
site and know that their family
is secure. So, this is a major victory
for hardworking families
here at the IBEW, throughout
the building trades, and across
our country.”
Secretary Raimondo on
commitment to helping women
re-enter the workforce with
accessible, affordable child
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Democratic Whip Katherine Clark (5th District of Massachusetts)
is shown answering questions from the media as Governor
Maura Healey and U.S. Secretary of Commerce Gina Raimondo
look on following a tour and roundtable at the Greater Boston
Joint Apprenticeship Training Center this past week. (Photo courtesy
of Katherine Clark)
care: “President Biden’s Investing
in America agenda is
truly transformative. The investments
we are making will
create millions of jobs: Union
jobs. Construction jobs. Manufacturing
jobs.
“I’m also investing CHIPS and
Science Act money. We’ll create
over 100,000 manufacturing
jobs building semiconductor
facilities all over the country.
So, the good news is for the
next 5 to 10 years, this country
will see massive job creation in
high paying jobs for Americans.
We have to make sure that we
train folks to do these jobs – and
that includes women.
“I know, as a working mother
and having been the governor,
it is so hard to do a job if you
don’t have reliable child care.
You could be the best trained
electrician in the world, but if
you can’t drop your child off
and know with confidence and
peace of mind that your child
will be cared for … then you
can’t hold your job down. And
so, one of the things that I’m doing
is making sure that child care
is provided.”
Governor Healey on Massachusetts’s
plan for CHIPS (Creating
Helpful Incentives to Produce
Semiconductors) & Science
Act child care funding: “I,
too, subscribe to this notion that
child care is economics. It is really
the backbone of our ability
to move forward as a state – or
inability to move forward. So,
what are we doing to address
that? One, we're making sure
that as we compete hard for federal
dollars … that we are taking
advantage of the very funding
opportunities and the requirements
of the program. It is
right, what Secretary Raimondo
has done, in making sure that
child care is included because
we don’t have a workforce unless
we have child care. And, we
don’t have development and
growth unless we have a workforce.”
IBEW
Local 103 apprentices
and journeywomen on the
struggle to balance work and
child care: LisaMarie Scales: “My
oldest daughter is 24 … I have a
15-year-old girl. I have a 3-yearold
little boy. And yes, I work almost
7 days a week since January
outside of holidays. I would
say it is extremely hard. You have
to sacrifice … With my baby, my
husband had to retire from the
MBTA [and] we had to make a
decision: Was I going to work
days or nights with the baby?
So obviously I took the days and
he’s working at night. I do not
get to see my husband, hardly
ever. And it has gotten to the
point where I have to turn down
the overtime because I cannot
afford child care.”
Jillian Higgins: “When I found
out I was pregnant, my biggest
fear was child care. My partner
is a Local 7 ironworker and we
both get up out the door by
5 am. I have family close but
asking them to show up at my
door at 5 am every day is not
feasible.”
Tisha Tippayporn: “I have a
four-year-old boy, so I would say
it is very important to be able to
access child care. My husband
works at night, so he needs a
lot of time to sleep in the morning.
But I work early morning
… If you don’t have child care,
it’s so hard to go to work without
worrying about what’s going
on at home.”
Suzy Depina-Corriea: “I am
actually the only one who is
not a mom of the apprentices,
but Local 103 has been equally
life changing for me. Before
the trades I was making about
16 bucks an hour and providing
full time care for a mentally
disabled mother. So, thinking
about starting a family of my
own was completely unheard
of. I’m now on the road from
making $16 an hour to $60. That
jump in income is absolutely insane
and it just means that now
looking forward and thinking
about a future is actually possible
for me.”
Local residents named to Dean’s
List at University of New England
T
he following Malden residents
have been named
to the Dean’s List for the 2023
spring semester at the University
of New England: Salma Bezzat
and Meghan Pothier. Dean’s List
students have attained a grade
point average of 3.3 or better
out of a possible 4.0 at the end
of the semester.
The University of New England
is Maine’s largest private
university, with two beautiful
coastal campuses in Maine,
a one-of-a-kind study-abroad
campus in Tangier, Morocco,
and an array of flexible online offerings.
In an uncommonly welcoming
and supportive community,
the University offers
hands-on learning, empowering
students to make a positive impact
in a world full of challenges.
The University is the state’s top
provider of health professionals
and home to Maine’s only medical
and dental colleges, a variety
of other inter-professionally
aligned health care programs,
and nationally recognized degree
paths in the marine sciences,
the natural and social sciences,
business, the humanities, and
the arts. Visit une.edu
׉	 7cassandra://a4RdLhBsvRDkvj7ftkNdq4qbPQNs91MoUgHRKw76ZPU+`̰ d&r+`*B׉ETHE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, June 23, 2023
Page 5
Malden High baseball coach selected for Mass. Amateur
Sports Foundation Bay State Games Hall of Fame
Will be honored at Fenway Park June 29; has volunteered as Metro Team
Coach for 35 summers since Baseball Showcase began in 1988
Advocate Staff Report
M
alden High School baseball
coach Steve Freker apparently
knows a good thing when
he sees it. In 1988, the fi rst year
that a Baseball Showcase was
off ered by the Mass. Amateur
Sports Foundation/Bay State
Games, he jumped on board to
volunteer coach the Metro Team
at Boston College.
Some 35 years later, he never
left, and this year will once again
be volunteering his services at
the statewide round-robin tournament
that has become one of
the Bay State Games’ most popular
sports of the 37 now offered.
For his lengthy and valuable
years of service, Coach Freker
has been selected for inenjoyed
every minute of it,”
Coach Freker said of his many
years of service. “The Bay State
Games is one of the most valuable
and rewarding programs
with which athletes of all ages
can be involved.”
Bay State Summer Games
duction into the 2023 Bay State
Games Hall of Fame.
On Thursday, June 29, Coach
Freker, along with fellow inductee
and Bay State Games founder
and Boston Marathon Race
Director Dave McGillivray, will
be honored, fi ttingly, at Fenway
Park, on the fi eld before the Red
Sox-Miami Marlins game.
“It is a great honor and I have
Advertise in
theADVOCATE
Call now! 617-387-2200
advertise on the web atwww.advocatenews.net
P
Coach Freker, a lifelong Malden
resident, is in his 41st year of
coaching high school sports and
38th year of coaching Division 1
high school baseball. In the past
he has been inducted into the
Malden High Golden Tornado
Hall of Fame (2007), Massachusetts
State Baseball Hall of Fame
(2016), Intercity League Baseball
Hall of Fame (2011) and, just this
year, the Malden Catholic Bro.
Dan Cremin Lancer Athletics
Hall of Fame (2023).
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THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, June 23, 2023
Senator Lewis votes for tax relief bill
to help working families and seniors
B
OSTON — State Senator Jason
Lewis joined his colleagues
in the Massachusetts
Senate on June 15 in unanimously
passing a $590 million tax relief
bill that will help make living in
Massachusetts more aff ordable
for working families and seniors
and bolster our state’s economic
competitiveness. Senator Lewis
has been a leader in the eff ort
to ensure that tax relief is focused
on low- and middle-income residents,
and does not include unnecessary
giveaways to wealthy
households and large, profi table
corporations.
“I was very pleased to join my
Senate colleagues in support of
this bipartisan legislation that
will provide some badly-needed
assistance for Massachusetts
households with high housing
costs, high child care costs, and
other living expenses,” said Senator
Lewis. “I’m proud that the
Senate bill is fi scally responsible
and does not include wasteful
and unnecessary tax cuts being
championed by some business
groups that would only further
exacerbate income and wealth
inequality in our state and do
nothing to foster greater economic
growth and opportunity.”
Some of the key provisions included
in this bill are:
• Increases the Earned Income
Tax Credit (EITC), one of the most
eff ective anti-poverty programs,
from 30% to 40% of the federal
credit
• Increases the Child and Dependent
Tax Credit from $180 to
$310 per child/dependent and
eliminates the current cap that
limits the credit to a maximum
of two children/dependents
ing the Low-Income Housing
Tax Credit (LIHTC) from $40 million
to $60 million annually
During the fl oor debate, the
State Senator Jason Lewis is shown addressing his colleagues
recently.
• Increases the cap on the
rental deduction from $3,000
to $4,000
• Doubles the maximum senior
circuit breaker tax credit,
which helps elderly residents
who struggle with high housing
costs, from $1,200 to $2,400
• Reforms the estate tax by lifting
the exempt threshold from
$1 million to $2 million and eliminating
the current cliff eff ect
• Encourages housing development
by increasing the statewide
cap for the Housing Development
Incentive Program
(HDIP) from $10 million to $30
million annually, and by increasSenate
also adopted an amendment
off ered by Senator Lewis
that will help prevent tax avoidance
by very wealthy households
that are subject to the
new Fair Share Amendment approved
by Massachusetts voters
last November. The amendment
requires that a married couple
who fi les their tax return jointly
at the federal level must also
fi le their state tax return jointly.
A six-member Conference
Committee will now be appointed
to reconcile the differences
between the tax relief bills
passed by the Senate and the
House of Representatives, before
the fi nal bill is sent to Governor
Maura Healey for her signature.
Mary Anne Gray memorial Scholarship awarded to Peyton Lightbody
M
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ALDEN - On Tuesday, May
30th, the Malden High
School Class of 1981, through
the MHS Alumni Association,
awarded $1000 to Senior Peyton
Lightbody. Kevin Larson and
Mary Ellen O’Meara represented
the Class in memory of Classmate
Mary Anne Gray.
“Mary Anne Gray embodied
the spirit of MHS and kept the
class together all these years,
organizing the reunions. Her
fi nal act of kindness and cohesion
was the coordination of
the 40+1 class reunion event
in September 2022. Sadly, she
passed away after a long-time
illness on November 18th, not
even two months after the reunion,”
explained O’Meara in
her award speech. “Her friends
and classmates celebrated
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Pictured from left, Mary Ellen O’Meara, Peyton Lightbody,
scholarship recipient, and Kevin Larson in the Jenkins Auditorium
at MHS.
her life with a Comedy Night
Fundraiser at Prince Pizza in
April 2023 and an additional
Go-Fund-Me campaign for all
those who were unable to attend,”
Larson added.
The Class of ‘81 will keep Mary
Anne’s memory alive by awarding
a scholarship in years to
comew to a deserving MHS senior.
Cheryl LaRosa, another
class leader, emphasized, “The
account is open with the Alumni
Association and checks can be
sent at any time for those who
missed this opportunity.” LaRosa
coordinated the scholarship
fund in Mary Anne’s honor with
the MHSAA offi ce.
The recipient, Peyton Lightbody,
was chosen for being an
example of citizenship, kindness,
helping others and MHS
spirit. “In today’s society, gifted
people with these social skills
make a diff erence in the world,
just like Mary Anne did,” noted
O’Meara.
Like us on Facebook
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Facebook.com/
Advocate.news.ma
׉	 7cassandra://zuC6yMikCP9fI8gNjWJty9an0QqNUmRYK0LZ9RRuNyM,)`̰ d&r+`*D׉ETHE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, June 23, 2023
Page 7
Middlesex Sheriff’s Office celebrates
the graduation of 22 new correction officers
B
EDFORD, Mass. – The Middlesex
Sheriff’s Office celebrated
the graduation of 22
new correction officers in a ceremony
held Tuesday, June 20,
2023 at Middlesex Community
College.
Tuesday’s ceremony featured
a keynote address by Massachusetts
Supreme Judicial Court Associate
Justice Frank M. Gaziano
and remarks by Middlesex Sheriff
Peter J. Koutoujian. Class PresBUDGET
| FROM PAGE 1
Finance Committee, which was
chaired by first-term Councillor-at-Large
Carey McDonald.
“Not one dollar was changed
in the budget that came down
from the Mayor’s Office,” Councillor-at-Large
Craig Spadafora,
the longest-serving Councillor
in continuous terms, now spanning
parts of three decades, said
at Tuesday’s regular City Council
meeting.
“There’s never been a budget
where this has occurred, to my
recollection,” Councillor Spadafora
added. “In all my years on
the Council, this is the only time
I recall where we have voted
in a budget with no proposed
amendments and no changes.
Spadafora and Finance Committee
Chairperson McDonald
both had praise for the city’s finance
team, which included
Chief Strategy Officer Ron Hogan,
Mayoral Chief of Staff Maria
Luise, City Controller Chuck
Ranaghan and City Treasurer
Dan Grover, along with members
of their respective staffs. “It
was a team effort,” said Councillor
McDonald, who chaired
close to a dozen Finance Committee
meetings regarding the
FY24 budget. “It is essentially a
steady as she goes budget, no
major changes in personnel or
expenditures with one big exception
– the Malden Public
Schools.”
McDonald noted the single-year
increase of nearly $12
million which resulted in a budget
of approximately $91 million,
by far the biggest line item
in the overall number. While
there was exactly one new position
created on the city side
of the budget, the addition of
a full-time Recovery Coach as
an assistant to Recovery Coordinator
Paul Hammersley, that
was the only personnel change
of the 461 total employees in
city government. McDonald
pointed out that on the schools’
side a total of 43 new positions
were added as a result of the increased
funding, which came
ident Bradford Charlesworth,
Middlesex Community College
Vice President Patrick Cook and
Bedford Police Chief John Fisher
also addressed the new officers
and their loved ones.
For the new officers, graduation
marked the culmination
of 12 weeks of classroom and
practical training that focused
on a wide array of policies, procedures
and skills. Included in
the training were focuses on imfrom
both an increase in the
Student Opportunity Act (SOA)
funds and an increase in Chapter
70 aid from the Commonwealth
of Massachusetts.
The school personnel additions
include moving all previously
Elementary and Secondary
School Emergency Relief
Fund (ESSR) grant positions
from the previous two budgets
into fully funded positions. A
number of new teacher positions
were added to address
needs as well as the addition of
administrative posts, such as assistant
principals at all of the K-8
schools. Two new Dean of Students
positions are being added
to Malden High School’s administrative
team, to deal directly
with student discipline
and school culture, McDonald
also noted, as well a number
of behavioral specialists, plus
more school adjustment counselors
to address students’ mental
health and social-emotional
well-being.
McDonald also praised the
addition of new media specialists
at all of the schools as well
as funding to fully staff out-ofschool
programs, before and after
school. Also, he said, “Our library
will meet state standards
as well as exploring additional
hours for increased access, our
DPW is fully staffed with our staff
upping its game as to field maintenance
in the parks.
“We have also added funding
to help maintain our cybersecurity
for the IT Department in
light of this past year’s cyberattack
on our information systems
as well as the addition of two
new engines for our Fire Department,”
McDonald said.
“We did not have any edits
or any proposed changes,” McDonald
said. “[Strategy Officer]
Ron Hogan is like a dog with a
bone in this whole process on
every detail, and it was a real
group effort.”
One recurring theme in the
budget process is the fact that
an issue with the state educational
funding source formula
does not match up with the
plicit bias, de-escalation, Cognitive
Behavioral Theory, Mental
Health First Aid and defensive
tactics. In addition, all 22 recruits
worked alongside veteran
members of the staff in on-thejob
training at the Middlesex Jail
& House of Correction.
“These officers join the Middlesex
Sheriff’s Office having
completed some of the
most comprehensive corrections
training in the Commoncity’s
demographic and financial
status, a problem down the
road that would have to be addressed.
Also, some one-time
funding to create the balanced
budget was used.
“We are using $3 million in
free cash and also some ARPA
[federal American Rescue Act]
funds. This is not sustainable
in the long term,” said Ward 4
Councillor Ryan O’Malley, “but
we are thankful to be adding
funding for our school department
and supporting our students.”
wealth,”
said Sheriff Koutoujian.
“I have no doubt this new crop
of officers will help us reach
new heights as we continue to
reimagine modern corrections
and strive to improve outcomes
for those in our custody, their
families and our communities.”
This week’s graduation
marked the second this calendar
year for the Middlesex SherGerry
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Office, with 21 recruits having
graduated at the end of February.
The
Middlesex Sheriff’s Office
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exams for individuals interested
in beginning a career as a
correction officer. Those interested
in taking the exam may
submit their information at middlesexsheriff.org/recruitment.
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THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, June 23, 2023
~ Letter to the Editor ~
Why You Will Pay for Wakefield’s Hockey Rink
lthough the Wakefi eld Conservation
Commission has
denied the permit to build
a new Vocational school on
the hilltop forest, the Northeast
Metro Tech (NEMT) School
A
Building Committee continues
to spend public funds to pursue
this plan. This forest was
once part of Breakheart Reservation
and many thought it
was protected. It is designated
as core forest habitat, an ecosystem
with pools, streams, endangered
species and species of
greatest conservation need or
concern. It is bordered by Wakefi
eld’s article 97 public land.
Why does NEMT plan to deTanning
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stroy a mature forest ecosystem
to build a new school, costing
over $320 million, when they
have 30 acres of already developed
land that could better accommodate
the new school
building, parking and athletic
fi elds? Maybe the question is –
who benefi ts?
This is a tale of two parcels
– one too risky and expensive
for private developers to bid
on, covered in forest and ledge,
and another cleared and nearly
ready to build.
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with NEMT to get a hockey rink
and road in the forested hilltop
since 2014. RFPs (request
for proposals) were requested
by the Town Administrator, Stephen
Maio, and approved by the
Town Selectmen over the years.
The developer was to pay Wakefi
eld and NEMT fees as the lessors.
“The (owners) are interested
in developing the site to include
two sheets of ice … and
a second means of egress onto
Farm Street is required”. There
were no bids. Why? What could
it be except the expense and
diffi culty of a project requiring
clear cutting, blasting and the
possibility of consequences to
abutters?
In February 2016, a pre-feasibility
study for a new school rejected
the forested hilltop location
as too diffi cult, expensive
and with poor access. In August
2016, Mr. Maio received approval
from the selectmen to issue
a Request for Qualifi cations to
“determine if an ice hockey rink
would be feasible in the proposed
location”.
When NEMT was invited to the
feasibility stage for a new school
the school committee members
formed the School Building
Committee (SBC). Mr. Maio attended
the SBC meeting in Jan
2019 and was a member by May
2019. The SBC hired PMA Consultants
as project manager and
DRA Associates as architects.
The SBC were told that the
MSBA (MA School Building Authority)
would not reimburse
for a hockey rink, aquatic center
or other facilities but the future
hockey rink continued to
be discussed in SBC meetings
and shown in presentations.
Early preferred options for the
school were on the practice fi eld
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behind the school (a site called
“C.1”) and the current football
fi eld (“C.2”). By 2020, presentations
to the SBC show the school
on the site option called C.3.
That plan puts the school on the
forested hilltop and the rink on
the current football fi eld. With
this plan the sites for the rink (in
the forest) and the school (on
current campus) were fl ipped.
The highest site cost and the
new road cost now belong to
the public.
The C.3 plan requires clearing
acres of trees and blasting down
30-35 feet of ledge for a building
platform that will result in a
650 ft cliff along one side of the
school. The new road requires
blasting by Farm St for a road
that will rise to 15-20 ft. The road
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׉	 7cassandra://06DX0hKeGGP--j1EuqtDWC6AJ18fwHH8OYso5q9YUq0+`̰ d&r+`*F׉ETHE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, June 23, 2023
Page 9
from the school to Hemlock Rd
will be too steep for a sidewalk.
Those who park in the student
lot will need to climb 1100 ft of
ramps and stairs to get to the to
the school daily.
The cost to destroy the forested
hilltop is approximately
$40M. According to the signed
budget agreement, MSBA will
only reimburse up to $8.3 M
for site work. Why would the
SBC want the district taxpayers
(Chelsea, Malden, Melrose,
North Reading, Reading, Revere,
Saugus, Stoneham, Wakefi
eld, Winchester, Winthrop, and
Woburn) to pay so much for site
costs, not educational costs,
when there is no need to do it?
This will be a punishing cost for
some towns, especially Chelsea,
Revere, Malden and Saugus.
Project documentation submitted
to the MSBA show there
are 2 viable alternatives that
meet the same educational requirements
on the lower campus,
site C.1 on the current practice
fi eld behind the school and
C.2 on the current football fi eld.
New fi elds will be built upon the
footprint of the current school
once it’s demolished. No one will
say how they intend to use the
current football fi eld. SBC and
project documentation show
multiple references to a “Future
Hockey Rink” presented and
discussed in the months leading
up to the SBC’s vote to approve
the Hilltop Building Site
(C.3) in December 2020. The future
rink was clearly a factor in
the site selection, as evidenced
by the Final Evaluation of Alternatives
prepared by PMA and
submitted to the MSBA. It stated
“The district gains additional
athletic fi elds with this option
[C.3] and maintains the potential
of reserving the current football
fi eld/ track for future development
as a hockey rink.” Again,
when MSBA reviewers asked
for justifi cation for the high site
costs related to the hilltop location,
the project team responded
“The new football fi eld and
track is replacing the existing
fi eld and track that is … being
reserved for future recreational
development (outside of this
Project)”
By locating the school on the
forested hilltop, 12 towns will
pay to address the ledge and
build a road. Stephen Maio,
town administrator and David
DiBarri, NEMT superintendent,
can now get the rink and road
they have wanted for years using
new school funding. Developers
can aff ordably build whatever
“facility” they want on the
current football fi eld.
The SBC members have not
acknowledged that there are
better, safer site options for the
new school. Residents have spoken
of concerns about the safety
and access to the new school,
the 1100 ft system of stairs and
ramps. The SBC responded that
there will be liability insurance.
Citizens requested an environmental
review by the state. Since
the SBC denies there are future
plans to build a rink, the building
plan does not trigger an environmental
review. A new energy
park is planned for the article
97 land abutting the school
site that will leverage solar power
generated from the school
rooftop to benefit Wakefield
customers. The Energy Park is
described as part of the school
project when the Wakefi eld Municipal
Gas and Light Department
wants voters to approve
the use of the public land. It
is described as not part of the
school when they’re trying to
avoid environmental review,
which they have done.
There is no scrutiny or oversight.
The SBC reports back to
themselves while determining
what is allowed to exist and
spending hundreds of millions
of public funds.
There is a confl ict of interest
law, requiring all municipal employees
to act in the public interest.
The NEMT SBC has a responsibility
for all 12 towns, yes? I do
not see stewardship, responsibility,
or ethics. The school site
had been decided without a
word about the location on the
ballot to fund the school in January
2022, see the Reading Post
article “Why-didnt-the-publicknow-about-the-plan-to-buildthe-new-voke”.
There
is something called a
Right to Honest Services. It is
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about transparency, deception
and a breach of a fi duciary duty.
Why is new school funding being
used for this long desired
rink and road?
The NEMT project team claims
that the school property is private
land. It is public land which
is why the public will pay all
costs. The loss of this forest will
be ours too. There has been
extensive outreach to Massachusetts’s
state-level legislative
leaders. Many representatives
that claim to prioritize the
environment support blasting
away this core forest and wetland
habitat.
The safety issues posed by the
ramp design and lack of sidewalks
within the campus cannot
be remedied. Students will lose
access to the baseball, football
and practice fi elds while the hill
is blasted and dewatered and
rock is crushed for months behind
the existing school. Voters
were told this site option was
the least disruptive. Wakefi eld’s
beautiful native forest will turn
into a rock quarry with a parking
lot. Maintenance for this
school site will always cost more.
That cost will not be for a better
school. It will be for a facility and
road that Wakefi eld and NEMT
have sought for years.
There are better, safer, less expensive
and less destructive site
options.
Please share this information
and contact your town.
New school site plan pics: tinyurl.com/NEMTSchoolSitePics
All
citations for this letter: tinyurl.com/WakefieldRinkCitations
This
letter can be shared: tinyurl.com/WakefieldRinkLetterV2
If
you agree or disagree, have
questions or advice please write
to whyshouldwepay01880@
gmail.com
No taxpayer dollars were
spent bringing you this information.
Like
us on Facebook advocate newspaper
Facebook.com/Advocate.news.ma
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THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, June 23, 2023
MelroseWakefield Hospital’s
Mobile Food Market celebrates 10th year
O
n a recent Saturday afternoon,
a volunteer placed
a shopping bag filled with 30
pounds of fresh produce, pasta
and canned and dry goods
onto a pallet, along with hundreds
of other similarly filled
bags. For the past few hours 60
volunteers, including hospital
workers, high school and college
students and other community
members, had filled the
bags, in an assembly line as part
of MelroseWakefield Hospital’s
North Suburban Women, Infant
and Children (WIC) Mobile Food
Market. The process – made up
of equal parts efficiency, effectiveness,
hard work and caring –
has been repeated each month
for the past 10 years.
Since 2012 the award-winning
Mobile Food Market based
in Malden has served thousands
of families in local communities,
providing high-quality, nutritious
produce and staple pantry
items for free to community
members in need, in partnership
with the Cities of Malthem
on 10 years of commitment
to our city!”
During the COVID-19 pandemic,
the market shifted to a
delivery service to ensure food
was available and that families,
staff and volunteers remained
safe. Each month community
partners work with the hospital
to ensure deliveries of hard
produce and shelf stable panty
items to the most at-risk individuals
and families. Additionally,
COVID-19 test kits, warm socks
and health information in multiple
languages were shared in
the deliveries.
In addition to providing food
Pictured from left to right: Standing: Patricia Sereno, MD,
Community Benefits and Operations Manager Barbara Kaufman,
Community Services Director Eileen Dern, Tufts Medicine
Executive VP/MelroseWakefield Healthcare President Kelly Corbi,
VP of Patient Care Services/Chief Nursing Officer Barbara Viens,
DNP, RN, Vice President for Human Resources Tracey Meek; in
front: WIC senior nutritionist Kristen Giuliani and WIC Program
Director Saratha Sivasithamparam.
den and Medford, The Greater
Boston Food Bank and a local
chapter of Zonta International.
“The Mobile Market is an
Malden Mayor Gary Christenson greets former MelroseWakefield
Healthcare President/CEO Alan Macdonald at the recent 10th
anniversary celebration of the Mobile Food Market.
example of our commitment
to addressing a local need by
partnering with the Greater
Boston Food Bank to bring
healthy food to those experiencing
food insecurity,” said
MelroseWakefield Hospital
Community Services Director
Eileen Dern. “Food is one of the
most important components
of health. Anytime we can put
healthy food on a family’s table
we are improving their chances
to live a healthier life.”
Food insecurity in eastern
Massachusetts is a significant
issue, affecting one of every 13
adults and one of every 11 children.
To address these high food
insecurity rates, the farmers’
market–style distribution offers
healthy grocery options, which
are provided by The Greater Boston
Food Bank to approximately
650 diverse, low-income families
(nearly 3,000 individuals)
each month.
“MelroseWakefield and Lawrence
Memorial Hospitals have
a long history of partnering
with the communities we serve
to demonstrate that healthcare
extends beyond our hospital
walls,” said Tufts Medicine Executive
VP/MelroseWakefield
Healthcare President Kelly Corbi.
“The Mobile Food Market is
a shining example of that commitment.”
“I
am grateful to the MelroseWakefield
Mobile Food
Market for their leadership in
this groundbreaking initiative of
creating access to much needed
food and resources to every
corner of our community,” said
Malden Mayor Gary Christenson,
a frequent volunteer at the
Mobile Market. “I congratulate
to those in need, hospital staff
and partner agencies offer additional
health services like
blood pressure and blood sugar
screenings, flu vaccinations, and
information about enrollment in
SNAP benefits, health insurance
and WIC services, to name a few.
More than 60 MelroseWakefield
Hospital and community volunteers
regularly support the program.
The
Mobile Food Market has
been used as a model for the development
of more than eight
other food markets in Massachusetts
and is a catalyst to address
the community-wide issue
of food insecure, vulnerable
populations, including families,
elders, immigrants and individuals
affected by chronic health
issues, unemployment or other
adverse situations, such as
housing or family situations. Eileen
Dern serves as a member of
The Greater Boston Food Bank’s
Health and Research Council,
which advises the food bank’s
community-based research,
programming and policy work.
In 2016 the Mobile Food Market
received the prestigious
Hospital Charitable Services
Award, a national program
sponsored by Atlanta-based
Jackson Healthcare presented
to hospital-sponsored community
health programs for their
innovative approaches to impacting
the lives in local communities
around the nation. For
more information or to learn
how to volunteer for the Mobile
Food Market, please call 781338-7576.
Also visit www.melrosewakefield.org
Like
us on Facebook
advocate newspaper
Facebook.com/Advocate.news.ma
׉	 7cassandra://0BknGyg35smHpvxRPPSQ-YmNNlr7DwDrQBW8GOCf5s4+`̰ d&r+`*H׉ETHE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, June 23, 2023
Page 11
HOTEL | FROM PAGE 1
remaining plot of undeveloped
property in the city. Since then,
a whole new mini-community
has arisen at the Malden-Revere
city line adjacent to the northwestern
end of Lynn Street, with
dozens of buildings containing
over 2,400 apartments. Add a
planned “fi rst” in Malden history
to the story of Overlook Ridge
– the city’s fi rst hotel.
A representative of the developer
of the fi nal phase of Overlook
Ridge, Winn Development,
explained in the Public Comment
section of the June 6 City
Council meeting that plans call
for not only the construction of
Malden’s fi rst hotel at the site,
but some creative affordable
housing construction. Included
in fi nal plans is a hotel at the
edge of the residential complex.
“There will be affordable
housing in the new construction,
along with a portion of it
dedicated to residents aged 55plus,”
Councillor Sica said, “and
the fi rst hotel in Malden. I’m excited
about that.”
The longtime Ward 8 Councillor,
who was fi rst elected in
2013, has seen Overlook Ridge
emerge as one of the top residential
locations in the Greater
Boston/North Shore area. “It’s
the final phase of a development
that began 20 years ago,”
Councillor Sica added.
Drew Cormier, a Winn Development
representative, gave
a brief synopsis of the plan at
the June 6 meeting during the
planned public comment section,
noting that he and other
Winn reps have had extensive
meetings with a joint planning
board group from Malden
and Revere on the development
plans. Cormier said his company
would need a zoning change for
the land parcel before construction
could begin, since the land
is now zoned for commercial
use. Aside from the hotel, the
chief use of the land will be for
residential living. “We plan on attracting
lots of interest with our
55-plus housing and other amenities,”
Cormier added.
***
City Council grants 1-year
extension to special
permit holder planning
marijuana dispensary
on Charles Street
Trinity Naturals, which has
opened a new marijuana dispensary
in Chelsea, was granted
a 12-month extension of its
special permit by a unanimous,
10-0 vote of the Malden City
Council on June 6. In the course
of doing so, both parties in the
situation, Councillors and Malden-based
Attorney Robert DiMarco,
publicly confi rmed that
no Malden city offi cials –including
the City Council – had any
role in the delays behind the
months.
The main observation Ritchie
Ward 8 Councillor Jadeane Sica
is pleased that Malden appears
to be getting its fi rst-ever hotel.
(Courtesy/City of Malden)
opening of Malden’s third marijuana
dispensary.
Ward 8 Councillor Jadeane
Sica made that clear during a
discussion regarding the request
by the company’s owners,
DMS Trinity Naturals. “There’s
some misinformation out there
that the City Council has delayed
this project,” Councillor
Sica said at the June 6 meeting.
“There’s been talk [in social
media and elsewhere} that you
went to Chelsea because Malden
was taking too long.
“We just want it to be made
clear that none of us here on the
Council has hindered this project
– the Malden Cannabis Licensing
and Enforcement Commission
(CLEC), Planning Board
or City Council,” Sica added.
Attorney DiMarco concurred
at the meeting. “Nothing was
done by this city to delay this
process,” DiMarco told the Councillors
from the City Council
Chambers podium at the livestreamed
meeting. “We are a
small business and there is a different
timeline than these big
conglomerates who are opening
businesses in this line in other
communities.”
DiMarco pointed out that
DMS Trinity Naturals, who plan
to open at 36 Charles St., the former
home of a busy autobody
repair business, has sunk over
$400,000 into its bid, on planning
and preliminary construction
work on the project.
The City Council, acting on favorable
recommendations from
Malden CLEC and the Malden
Planning Board, fi rst approved
the special permitting in 2019.
Since then, DiMarco said, “The
world has changed.”
The COVID-19 pandemic shut
down the world, basically, in
March 2020, including any progress
for the Charles Street dispensary.
“COVID happened and
construction costs are up 14%
since the permit was fi rst granted.
It is more diffi cult for small
businesses to deal with under
those circumstances,” DiMarco
said.
“These are good people, good
owners and they want to be
good partners for this city,” the
Malden attorney added, noting
that DMS Trinity Naturals is planning
on actively working toward
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Trinity Naturals was granted a 12-month extension to its special
permit to open a marijuana dispensary in Malden. (Courtesy Photo)
an opening here in the late fall,
optimistically,
***
City Council unanimously
votes to deny Second
Hand Dealer’s license after
unfavorable police reports
Reports of apparent unsavory
business practices – including
alleged possible unloading of
stolen merchandise – appear
to have infl uenced the Malden
City Council’s unanimous vote
to deny the renewal of a Second
Hand Dealer’s license. The
license was connected to Cash
King, operating a pawn shop at
41 Lebanon St. Ward 1 Councillor
Peg Crowe explained at
a June 6 City Council meeting
that Malden Police had appeared
at a recent City Council
License Committee meeting.
There, several Malden offi -
cers, including Sgt. (Ret.) David
Ritchie, told how they had observed
a pattern of suspicious
activity at Cash King in recent
reported at the City Council
meeting was a substantial
pawning of new tools, still in
boxes. Ritchie said surveillance
of the establishment revealed
a steady stream of those pawning
off these new tools and tool
sets. He said MPD got together
with loss prevention personnel
from Target and Home Depot,
and their combined eff orts
identifi ed men and women who
allegedly made a beeline from
the two Everett shopping mall
locations, right to Cash King,
where they allegedly dumped
their goods.
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THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, June 23, 2023
Malden reports reduction of overdoses in the opioid crisis
I
n the face of a nationwide opioid
crisis, the City of Malden is grateful
to announce that through the
implementation of a range of innovative
strategies that target
prevention, intervention, treatment
and recovery support, opioid
overdoses have been reduced.
Malden Board of Health Addiction
Recovery Resource Specialist Paul
Hammersley – working with various
stakeholders, including local
government, law enforcement
agencies, healthcare providers,
community organizations and
concerned citizens – has developed
a coordinated response that
has resulted in Malden’s overdoses
dropping by roughly 20 percent
compared to 2022. In addition,
the number of individuals
seeking treatment and entering
recovery has increased.
One program that has had a tremendous
impact citywide is Malden
Cares, a program developed
by Hammersley and the Malden
Board of Health in conjunction
with nonprofit organization
Malden Overcoming Addiction
(MOA), of which Hammersley is
the Board of Directors President.
Malden Cares, which Hammersley
helps oversee, according to
the MOA website, provides Recovery
Coaches who are on the street
daily in targeted areas and directly
engage with residents while providing
recovery resources as well
as assistance with food insecurity
and homelessness.
Mayor Gary Christenson has
established an Opioid Task Force
that meets monthly; members include
the Police Chief, Fire Chief,
Malden’s Board of Health Director,
Recovery Coaches and MOA
members. The monthly meetings
serve to analyze overdose patterns
and deaths during the previous
month, discuss outreach and
determine where to focus efforts
for the next month. The Malden
Cares team then diverts to areas
of the city where overdoses are
more prevalent to work with residents
and individuals to offer assistance
and provide resources.
The Opioid Task Force is currently
working with MelroseWakeMalden
Board of Health Addiction Recovery Resource Specialist
Paul Hammersley and members of Malden Cares (Photo courtesy of the
City of Malden)
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field Hospital with the goal of establishing
recovery coaches in its
emergency rooms to meet with
patients who are transported by
ambulance for overdoses.
In addition to raising awareness
and educating the community
about the risks associated
with opioid misuse, the city
has developed public education
campaigns and “stop the stigma”
events targeting the K-8 schools
– emphasizing the danger of addiction
that can result from any
amount of drug use. Educating
our youngsters before they enter
high school is key to the effort,
and the City of Malden currently
partners with Cambridge Health
Alliance to bring recovery coaches
to the Teen Health Center at Malden
High School.
Law enforcement agencies in
Malden have adopted a compassionate
and proactive approach,
recognizing that individuals struggling
with addiction need support
rather than punishment. The City
of Malden employs an officer who
is diverted to calls to assist individuals
who are drug impaired and
works to encourage them to accept
treatment rather than facing
criminal charges. This approach
not only has reduced the burden
on the criminal justice system but
helps individuals access the help
they need.
Another way Malden is working
to assist individuals in recovery is
to understand the importance
of long-term support for individuals
in recovery. The Bridge Recovery
Center, which is located at
239 Commercial St., is a peer-topeer
recovery support program
where individuals with lived experience
provide guidance, encouragement
and practical assistance
to those in recovery. The
City of Malden is also working
through Career Services Coordinator
Kashawna Harling, who engages
area businesses to facilitate
employment opportunities, and
trains individuals to assist in reducing
barriers for people seeking
to rebuild their lives.
Malden is committed to doing
the hard work needed in the
struggle against the opioid crisis.
Through collaborative efforts, innovative
strategies and a commitment
to prevention, intervention,
treatment and recovery, Malden
hopes to continue its goal of reducing
opioid abuse, saving lives,
and fostering a resilient and supportive
community. For more information
on Malden Cares or recovery
services available through
the City of Malden, please contact
Paul Hammersley at 781838-2203.
׉	 7cassandra://5xNIpQNc6S1_RNeXE_qVS0YLwYBN9naiJ2fyTOvDEd8+`̰ d&r+`*J׉ETHE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, June 23, 2023
~ Political Announcement ~
Page 13
Discover the Inspiration Behind
My Campaign to Lead Malden
M
ALDEN, MA — I am running
for Mayor of Malden, and
my dad’s phenomenal story is
the reason I can. His story is the
working class American dream
most of us have seen in movies
and know from our own families.
Born into a very large (and
poor) family in Guatemala, my
father, Victor Alvarado left home
at 18 with a suitcase and dreams
to meet his brother who was already
married and settled in Chicago.
Dad met and married my
Puerto Rican mom, had my sister
and myself, moved to a 2nd
fl oor apartment in a town called
Cicero, IL, and worked in the local
Western Electric Factory.
Cicero has a colorful past (to
say the least), but its level of diversity
and mix of people have
always been equal to Malden.
Cicero grew around the Western
Electric factory with Irish,
Italians, Czechs, Slovaks, and
Polish families all drawn to the
town for its jobs. Later the town
shifted demographics towards
predominantly Mexican-American,
Italian, Polish and Czech
residents.
My dad learned English at
night, had my mom and us
translate as needed, earned
his real estate license when we
were kids, and became an American
citizen in the 1980s. He sold
homes to the growing Latino
community in Cicero (and nearby
Berwyn). His name became
known as a trusted ally and resource
in the area, and he eventually
opened his own offi ce -
Home Sweet Home Real Estate.
My dad loved our family, but
he LOVED that business! It was
the physical embodiment of all
of his hard work, plus it continued
to take care of our family.
Both of my parents worked our
entire lives. He would gauge
how many houses he would
need to sell in order to pay for
the semester’s college tuition,
Victor Alvarado, 18 years old,
passport photo from when he
came to the United States in
1964
healed, he was up and about
living his life to the fullest again.
Cruising, working, and spending
time with my mom and grandkids
were his favorite pastimes.
He truly lived a full life. My dad
passed away in December 2019
right before COVID began.
Victor Alvarado worked, lived,
and embodied working class
America and the American
dream. He came here, rocked
this life, and left us all better off
for having been a part of his. He
made sure my sister and I could
go to college, have good jobs
plus happy families of our own,
and follow our dreams.
Dad, your story is the reason
Victor Alvarado, 2017
Victor Alvarado who is currently
running for Mayor of Malden,
and his daughter, Lissette.
or to buy a new used car, and
eventually a new home in a new
town. He managed money like a
boss and made sure we could all
go on vacations when we were
kids. We were not born with silver
spoons in our mouths. We
were born with a work ethic that
said: you get what you give, and
give nothing less than110%.
In 2005, my dad was diagnosed
with a lung disease called
Idiopathic Pulmonary Fibrosis
(IPF) and had a single lung
transplant that same year. IPF
is just like COVID but can take
years to develop. Once he was
why I was able to go to college,
work for Barack Obama in the
U.S Senate and White House,
and reach my dreams. I’m running
for Mayor of Malden now,
and I know that you would be
so proud. Your hard work and
perseverance made sure that
I had the training and government
experience necessary to
take this next step. The American
Dream continues. Thank
you, Dad.
CONNIE GUERRIERO, ESQUIRE
Law offices of Howard M. Kahalas
6 Beacon Street, Suite 1020
Boston, MA 02108
Cell: (781) 405-5053
Office: (617) 523-1155
Email: cguerriero@kahalaslaw.com
Our firm Specializes in Personal Injury,
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We have over 80 years of Combined Experience
Victor Alvarado (far right) with his sibling In Guatemala City,
Guatemala in the 1950s
(Photos courtesy of Lissette Alvarado)
Motor Vehicle Accidents
Slip and Falls
Premises Liability
Dog Bites
Injured on the Job
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THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, June 23, 2023
CELEBRATION| FROM PAGE 1
bration began in the Ferryway
lobby, where former U.S. Marine
Eric Henry raised the Juneteenth
flag as Lydia “Lovely Singer” Harrell
sang the Black National Anthem,
“Lift Every Voice and Sing.”
A crowd filled the atrium and
waved miniature Juneteenth
flags as Mayor Gary Christenson
gave his annual Juneteenth
Proclamation and Malden Juneteenth
committee member Erga
Pierrette gave a stirring statement
about the need for continued
activism toward becoming
an anti-racist community.
Following the flag raising, the
gym became the epicenter of
the Malden Juneteenth event.
Crowds gathered to watch artist
performances, browse Blackowned
vendors and engage
with a variety of community organizations,
including Malden
Reads, Malden Girl Scouts, Bread
of Life, Malden Cares, Cambridge
Health Alliance, Malden Language
Ambassador Program,
Mystic River Watershed Association,
American Association for
Arab Women, Friends of Roosevelt
Park, Mystic Valley Progressives.
Youth activities occurred simultaneously
in various spaces –
games in the lobby, henna and
face painting in the hallway, arts
& crafts in the gym and even a
story walk in the stairwell.
Emcee Bridget Mutebi introduced
a joyful and reflective
program by Black artists, beginning
with Reba Danastorg,
who immediately engaged the
crowd with her soulful performance
of “Lean on Me.” Malden
High School graduate Christelle
Jean wrote a Juneteenth poem,
which Erga Pierrette shared with
the crowd. NAACP Mystic Valley
Branch President Jillian Harvey
delivered a keynote that lifted
up the need for national reparations
for Black Americans and
continued racial healing at the
community level. An annual favorite,
Malden High’s AO Step
Team gave an amazing performance,
followed by another
beautiful number by Lydia Harrell,
a rendition of Bob Marley’s
“Three Little Birds.” The program
culminated with the amazing
musical group Zili Misik, which
is led by Kera Washington. The
band performed several songs
and engaged the audience in
drum circles and dances. The
artist program ended with a joyful
dance line winding through
the gym to Zili Misik’s final song.
Malden-based DJ Tyrone Henry
of LiVn on Beats managed
sound throughout the event.
All artist programming was supported
in part by a grant from
the Malden Cultural Council, a
local agency which is supported
by the Mass Cultural Council,
a state agency.
The City of Malden sponsored
Malden Juneteenth’s free
community lunch in the Ferryway
cafeteria, which was joyfully
decorated for Juneteenth.
The menu was provided by local
Black-owned caterers Soulful
Cuisine, The Island, and Neighborhood
Kitchen and included
curry goat, macaroni gratinee
and deliciously spiced fried
chicken. Lunch service was efficient
and the food plentiful,
thanks to an enthusiastic group
of community volunteers, including
youth members of the
following groups: Mystic Valley
YMCA Leaders, Malden High
Key Club and Malden Youth Civics
Council. A youth member of
one of these groups was the jubilant
winner of the vendor raffle
after lunch – she won a basket
containing items donated
by all vendors: a small painting,
hair accessories, jewelry, a handbag
and more.
Malden’s Juneteenth Freedom
Day Celebration is truly a community
effort. The Malden Juneteenth
Committee consists of 13
diverse members: Erga Pierrette,
Rachel Sorlien, Marcia Manong,
Karen Colón Hayes, Melissa Castillo,
Jessica Vasquez, Tyrone
Henry, Zayda Ortiz, Reba Danastorg,
Bridget Mutebi, Muriel
Williams, Linda Clyne, and Dawn
Macklin. Over 50 additional community
volunteers assisted on
the day of the event. In addition
to funding the community
lunch, the Malden Mayor’s Office
provided significant support
with event logistics and coordinated
flag raisings at municipal
buildings across the city. City
Soulful Cuisine staff and
Malden Juneteenth volunteers
serve up food to eager diners.
(Photo credit: Maya Colón Hayes)
Chef Phil Thompson of Soulful Cuisine serves up some of his goat
stew to eager diners. (Photo credit: Maya Colón Hayes)
Reba Danastorg sings a soulful
rendition of “Lean on Me” as
Emcee Bridget Mutebi and
Malden Juneteenth Committee
leader Erga Pierrette look on.
(Photo credit: SuSi Ecker)
Councillors Karen Colón Hayes,
Carey McDonald, Chris Simonelli,
Amanda Linehan, Barbara
Murphy, Peg Crowe and Craig
Spadafora provided financial
support. Malden Public School
administrators coordinated flag
raisings at each Malden Public
School building and shared
Juneteenth resources with educators
and students. Eastern
Bank Foundation and NAACP
Mystic Valley Branch awarded essential
funding to Malden Juneteenth
for artist programming
and event decorations, equipment
and supplies. Nearly 100
individuals donated to Malden
Juneteenth through their participation
in the group’s first annual
fundraiser in May.
This 6th Annual Malden Juneteenth
Freedom Celebration
brought the community together
once again, and the Malden
Juneteenth Committee is
thrilled to carry this collaboration
forward to 2024’s event!
Kids enjoy the craft table hosted by the Malden Juneteenth
Committee and Malden Girl Scouts. (Photo credit: Maya Colón Hayes)
Community partners lined the gym with informational tables.
Pictured here are the Mystic River Watershed Association, Malden
Girl Scouts, and Chinese Culture Connection. (Photo credit: Maya Colón Hayes)
Soulful Cuisine staff and Malden Juneteenth volunteers serve up
food to eager diners. (Photo credit: Rachel Sorlien)
Musical group Zili Misik, which is led by founder and percussionist Kera Washington, performs
during the Malden Juneteenth Freedom Celebration artist program. (Photo credit: Maya Colón Hayes)
Members of Malden High’s AO Step Team strike a pose on their
way into lunch. (Photo credit: Maya Colón Hayes)
׉	 7cassandra://AoDDl4XNjPr-Y8JjaPk8Et8fqzjYDOWE9l-6EvEyr54-A`̰ d&r+`*L׉E#qTHE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, June 23, 2023
Page 15
Outdoor Family Movie
Night in the Park at
River’s Edge
J
oin us for a “Movie Night in
the Park at River’s Edge” on
Thursday, June 29. The movie
will be at the Park at Rivers Edge
Great Lawn adjacent to 200 River’s
Edge Dr. in Medford. The
Great Lawn section of the Park
will be transformed into an outdoor
movie theatre where residents
and visitors of all ages are
welcome to gather and enjoy a
free movie night featuring “The
Super Mario Bros. Movie.”
The event is free and open to
the public – sponsored by Preotle,
Lane & Associates and the
Malden Public Library. Attendees
should bring their own blankets
and chairs for use. There will
be free snacks and water provided.
Wellington Station is just
0.4 miles from River’s Edge. Free
parking is available at the River’s
Edge Garage.
Beacon Hill
Roll Call
By Bob Katzen
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constantcontactpages.com/su/
aPTLucK
THE HOUSE AND SENATE: Beacon
Hill Roll Call records local senators’
votes on roll calls from the week
of June 12-16. There were no roll calls
in the House last week.
SENATE APPROVES $590 MILLION
TAX REDUCTION PACKAGE
(S 2397)
Senate 39-0, approved a package
Movie Night Flyer
Origami Night at the Library
L
earn the art of Origami when the Malden Public Library hosts an
Origami Night at the Library on Tuesday, June 27, from 6:30-8:30
p.m. The program is limited to 15, so call 781-324-0218 to register.
All supplies will be provided but please bring along your own ruler.
that provides $590 million in tax relief.
The House has already approved
its own tax reduction package and
a House-Senate conference committee
will hammer out a compromise
version.
Key provisions of the Senate package
include raising the Earned Income
Tax Credit from 30 percent
of the federal credit to 40 percent
of the federal credit; raising the cap
on the rental deduction from $3,000
to $4,000;increasing from $1 million
to $2 million the value of a person’s
estate that is exempt from the
the state’s estate/death tax that a
person is required to pay following
their death before distribution
to any beneficiary; increasing from
$1,200 to $2,400 the maximum senior
circuit breaker credit; increasing
the statewide cap for the Dairy
Tax credit from $6 million to $8 million;
and doubling the credit for lead
paint abatement to $3,000 for full
abatement and $1,000 for partial
abatement.
The package also provides that
student loan payment assistance offered
by employers will not be treated
as a taxable salary and gives cities
and towns the option to adopt
a local property tax exemption for
real estate that is rented to a person
below a certain area-dependent income
level.
“As I have said from the outset,
Origami Night with Carol at the Library
tax relief should go to the workers,
families and elderly residents of the
commonwealth who need it most,”
said Senate President Karen Spilka
(D-Ashland). “Massachusetts doesn’t
need just any tax relief, we need permanent,
progressive, smart and sustainable
tax relief. Too many families
have been caught between the rising
costs of healthcare, housing, education
and basic goods.”
“Consistent with the views of the
Senate membership, our Senate
tax package is forward-looking, fiscally
sustainable, comprehensive
and progressive,” said Sen. Mike Rodrigues
(D-Westport), chair of the
Senate Ways and Means Committee.
“It puts money back into the
pockets of our residents, providing
permanent tax cuts for low-income
workers, families, renters, seniors
and persons with disabilities,
while focusing on the largest issue
that is undercutting our commonwealth’s
overall competitiveness –
which is the affordability and availability
of housing.”
"Working families aren’t leaving
the commonwealth because of taxes
on day-traders," said Sen. Susan
Moran (D-Falmouth), Senate chair
of the Committee on Revenue. "They
are leaving because they can’t find
housing they can afford. This package
aimed at growing housing will
also grow our workforce and the
commonwealth’s competitiveness."
(A “Yes” vote is for the $590 million tax reduction
package.)
Sen. Jason Lewis Yes
25 PERCENT MUST BE AFFORDABLE
HOUSING (S 2397)
Senate 9-30, rejected an amendment
to a section of the bill that
funds the Housing Development Incentive
Program (HDIP). The amendment
would require that HDIP projects
must make 25 percent of their
units affordable.
HDIP, according to its state website,
"provides Gateway Cities with a
tool to develop market rate housing
while increasing residential growth,
expanding diversity of housing
stock, supporting economic development
and promoting neighborhood
stabilization in designated
areas."
“This amendment ensures that
HDIP leads to construction of units
for everyone,” said amendment
sponsor Sen. Jamie Eldridge (D-Acton).
“It ensures that HDIP is not exclusively
used for high-rent luxury
apartments. And this is not a theoretical
concern. An excellent report
from the Massachusetts Law Reform
Institute explains that [while] HDIP is
titled a market rate credit, the rents
usually exceed prevailing rents and
prices, some by 50 percent to 70 percent
with no limit on future increases.
Rents in many HDIP subsidized
developments are excessively high
cost as described in current apartment
advertisements.”
“The HDIP program is the primary
tool for Gateway Cities to expand
housing stock, revitalize downtowns
and attract and retain a middle
class in cities where low rents do
not support new housing development
projects,” said Sen. John Cronin
(D-Fitchburg) who opposed the
amendment. “While affordability requirements
may work in some communities,
forcing a one-size-fits-all
requirement on others will diminish
the program’s utility by disincentivizing
development—completely
contrary to the objective of the program.
The Senate got this vote right.”
(A “Yes” vote is for the amendment requiring
that 25 percent of the units be affordable.
A “No” vote is against the amendment.)
Sen.
Jason Lewis No
FILE TAXES JOINTLY (S 2387)
Senate 33-5, approved an amendment
that would require Massachusetts
couples who file income tax returns
jointly at the federal level do
the same at the state level.
Supporters said this amendment
will close a loophole that allows
some married couples to file
individually – an action that could
be used to minimize or avoid the
person’s state tax obligations under
the newly approved 4 percent surtax
which is in addition to the current
flat 5 percent one, on taxpayers’
earnings of more than $1 million
annually.
Opponents said if filers are forced
to file jointly at the state level, the 4
percent surtax will apply to many
more filers which is not what the
voters approved on the November
2022 ballot question imposing the
4 percent surtax.
(A “Yes” vote is for the amendment requiring
joint filing. A “No” vote is against
the amendment.)
Sen. Jason Lewis Yes
REDUCE SHORT TERM CAPITAL
GAINS TAX (S 2397)
Senate 5-32, rejected an amendment
that would reduce the shortterm
capital gains tax from 12 percent
to 5 percent.
Amendment supporters said that
there are 26 states that currently tax
short-term capital gains at a rate of 5
percent or lower, including all of our
surrounding states. They noted that
both the House and the governor favor
the reduction. They asked why
the capital gains tax or any tax imposed
should be charged at a higher
rate than earned income.
Sen. Bruce Tarr (R-Gloucester), the
sponsor of the amendment, did not
respond to repeated requests by
Beacon Hill Roll Call asking him to
comment on his amendment.
Amendment opponents said the
state cannot afford the $117 million
loss in revenue that this tax cut
would cost this year. They argued the
cut would do nothing to help the
costs of housing and living.
Senate Ways and Means Chair
Sen. Mike Rodrigues (D-Westport)
did not respond to repeated requests
by Beacon Hill Roll Call asking
him to comment on his opposition
to the amendment.
(A “Yes” vote is for the reduction to 5 percent.
A “No” vote is against the reduction.)
Sen. Jason Lewis No
INCREASE ESTATE/DEATH TAX
EXEMPTION (S 2397)
Senate 5-33, rejected an amendBHRC
| SEE PAGE 17
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THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, June 23, 2023
Malden NFLer hosts camp for local kids at Salemwood School
M
alden native Larnel Coleman,
who went from St.
Clement’s school all the way to
the National Football League
(NFL) – now with the Carolina
Panthers – hosted a free instructional
camp for Malden kids with
over 100 in attendance on Saturday.
Coleman attended UMass-Amherst.
Coleman
hosted the camp in
partnership with the Malden
Public Schools Athletic Department
and Malden Recreation.
The entire MHS Golden Tornado
Football coaching staff, including
Head Coach Witche Exilhomme,
were on hand to assist
as well as over 20 Malden High
student-athletes.
SIGN OF THE TIMES: Carolina
Panther and Malden native
Larnel Coleman signs
autographs for some starstruck
fans. (Advocate Photos)
TORNADOS TAKE PART: Malden High players, shown from right:
Karl Lange, Aidan Brett and Gabriel Cardoso took part in the camp.
LARNELL NUMBER ONE: The younger campers are shown after the first session – nearly 70 in all.
PRO TIME: Some younger guys
got to meet Larnel Coleman.
SHOWING THE WAY: Larnel
Coleman talke with campers
on Saturday.
׉	 7cassandra://1ysuROvLvLASBoXzEKupHNE3IMTVacrb2m5e0r5iu4k-`̰ d&r+`*N׉E#THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, June 23, 2023
Page 17
~ Malden Softball Week 7 Game Recaps ~
Monday, June 19, 2023
St. Peter’s Angels grabs lead
in fifth inning to defeat Criollos
St.
Peter’s Angels stole the
lead late and defeated Criollos,
11-6, on Monday. St. Peter’s
Angels trailed, 6-4, in the bottom
of the fifth inning when
Erik Scola homered on a 1-0
count, scoring three runs. Scola
led the Angels to victory by
driving in four runs. Scola went
3-for-3 at the plate. Joe Schaaf
was on the rubber for the Angels.
The hurler allowed nine
hits and four runs over four
innings, striking out one and
walking none. Ron Rivera was
in the pitcher’s circle for Criollos.
The pitcher lasted five innings,
allowing 13 hits and seven
runs while striking out one
and walking none.
Dean’s walk-off seals the
deal in Sachems’ victory over
Dirtbags
Sachems took Monday’s game
in dramatic fashion, with a 7-6,
walk-off victory over Dirtbags.
The game was tied at six with
Sachems batting in the bottom
of the eighth when Mike Dean
singled on a 0-1 count, scoring
one run. Sachems put up three
runs in the seventh inning. The
big inning was thanks to a single
by Casey Flynn and a double
by Tim Sliwinski. Matt Fraser
got the start for Sachems. The
righty surrendered six runs on
12 hits over eight innings, striking
out one and walking none.
Al Tamagna started for the Dirtbags.
The righty allowed 13 hits
and seven runs over seven and
a third innings, striking out none
BHRC | FROM PAGE 15
ment that would increase from $1
million to $5 million the amount of
money that is exempt from the value
of a person’s estate from the state’s
estate/death tax that a person is required
to pay following their death
before distribution to any beneficiary.
The increase to $5 million would
be implemented over ten years.
Most Republicans are against
any such tax and coined the name
“death tax” to imply that the government
taxes you even after you
die. Most Democrats support the tax
and call it an “estate tax” to imply that
this tax is only paid by the wealthy.
“You work hard and earn money,
it’s taxed,” said amendment sponsor
Sen. Ryan Fattman (R-Sutton).
“You save and invest your money,
it’s taxed. You spend your money,
it’s taxed. You own property, it's
taxed. Only in Massachusetts and
Oregon, after working your whole
life, do you get taxed at the highest
Anthony Guliano
and walking none.
Jose Ortiz
Tuesday, June 20, 2023
Patrick’s clinch lead in seventh
inning for victory over
White Sox
Patrick’s stole the lead late in
the game in a 14-10 victory over
the White Sox on Wednesday.
Patrick’s trailed 10-9 in the top of
the seventh inning when Jovan
Alexander tripled on a 1-0 count,
scoring two runs. Alexander led
Patrick’s to victory by driving in
four runs. He went two for four
at the plate. Anthony Giuliano
opened up the scoring for Patrick’s
in the second inning with a
solo home run. Giuliano got the
start for Patrick’s. Giuliano went
seven innings, allowing 10 runs
on eight hits. Sigfredo Velez was
in the circle for the White Sox.
The pitcher went seven innings,
allowing 14 runs on 19 hits and
striking out six.
Jamma drives in four to seal
P-Cals Pals’ victory over St. Peter’s
Angels
rate in the country after your death.
My amendment sought to shed the
‘Taxachusetts’ mentality … Our residents
should want to spend their
golden years in Massachusetts, but
our tax policy makes it unaffordable
to die in Massachusetts. Middle and
upper-middle-class families should
not have to worry about the government
taking what they have worked
so hard for future generations of
their family.”
Amendment opponents said the
proposed bill already raises the exemption
from $1 million to $2 million
and noted that will cost $185
million. They said a hike to $5 million
is excessive and unaffordable
and will cost hundreds of millions of
dollars more. They noted that lowering
the estate tax is not the only way
to help seniors and their families and
noted there are many other initiatives
that help seniors.
Senate Ways and Means Chair
Sen. Mike Rodrigues (D-Westport)
did not respond to repeated reFour
runs batted in from Mike
Jamma helped lead P-Cals Pals
past St. Peter’s Angels, 19-4, on
Tuesday. Jamma drove in four
runs on a home run in the second
inning and a triple in the
fourth. P-Cals put up five runs
in the fourth inning. The offensive
onslaught by P-Cals was led
by Derek Coderre, Mike Jamma
and Brett Carriker, all knocking
in runs in the inning. Mike
Garland was on the rubber for
P-Cals Pals. Garland went five
innings, allowing four runs on
eight hits, striking out four and
walking one. P-Cals launched
four home runs on the day: Gerald
Contaldi put one out in the
fifth inning; Marc Coppola in
the third inning; Mike Jamma
had a four-bagger in the second;
and Danny Trentsch in the
first inning.
Sachems take high scoring
game from Patrick’s
Both pitching staffs had
their hands full on Tuesday in
a high-scoring affair where Saquests
by Beacon Hill Roll Call asking
him to comment on his opposition
to the amendment.
(A “Yes” vote is for increasing the exemption
to $5 million. A “No” vote is against raising
it.)
Sen. Jason Lewis No
ALSO UP ON BEACON HILL
DON'T MISS THIS "MEET THE MEDIA"
EVENT -Join MASSterList and
the State House News Service for a
discussion with leading local journalists
about the Massachusetts political
and policy landscape at 8:30
a.m. Thursday, June 29 at Massachusetts
Continuing Legal Education
(MCLE) at 10 Winter Place (Downtown
Crossing) in Boston. Topics will
include competitive pressures, transparency
in state and local government
and developing relationships
with government sources and communications
professionals. Tickets/
more info: https://massterlist.com/
meet-the-media/
The All-Star Panel includes:
chems bested Patrick’s, 15-11.
Patrick’s took an early lead in the
first inning. Cameron Whitman
drove in one run with a triple.
Sachems took the lead for good
with eight runs in the fourth inning.
Steve Almquist led things
off in the pitcher’s circle for Sachems.
Almquist allowed 13 hits
and 11 runs over seven innings.
Brett Batting toed the rubber
for Patrick’s. The righty allowed
18 hits and 15 runs over seven
innings, striking out one. Sachems
hit four home runs on
the day. Webster had a homerun
in the first and fifth innings.
Dante went deep in the fourth
inning. Mike Dean had a homer
in the seventh inning. Chum led
Patrick’s with three hits in four
at bats.
Malden Bombers jump out
to early lead in victory over
Dirtbags
Malden Bombers grabbed
an early lead on their way to a
19-2 victory over the Dirtbags
on Tuesday. Bombers secured
Matt Stout, Reporter, the Boston
Globe
Azita Ghahramani, Senior Editor
for Politics, WGBH News
James “Jimmy” Hills, host, Java
With Jimmy
Jennifer Smith, Staff Reporter,
Commonwealth Magazine
Steph Solis, Reporter, Axios Boston
Colin
Young, Reporter, State
House News Service
Moderator: Adam Reilly, Reporter,
WGBH News
SALES TAX HOLIDAY ON AUGUST
12 AND 13 - The House and
Senate set Saturday, August 12 and
Sunday, August 13 as this year’s Sales
Tax Holiday. This will allow consumers
to buy most products that cost
under $2,500 on those two days
without paying the state's 6.25 percent
sales tax. This annual sales-taxfree
weekend was made permanent
in 2018 and gives the Legislature the
authority to set the dates by June 15
each year.
the victory thanks to 10 runs in
the fourth inning. Kevin O’Hara,
Sam McDonald, Mike Campbell,
Jonathan Zewiey, Joie Fitzgerald
and Nick Williamson all moved
runners across the plate with
RBIs in the inning. Dana Zewiey
Jr. led things off in the pitcher’s
circle for Malden Bombers. The
righty lasted five innings, allowing
six hits and two runs while
striking out three and walking
none. Joe Carlson led the Dirtbags
with two hits in two at bats.
Anyone who is interested in
checking out a game or joining
our league, please visit us at maldensoftball.com.
Standings
P-Cals
Pals
St. Peter’s Angels
Malden Bombers
Sachems
Criollos
White Sox
Patrick’s
Dirtbags
8-1
7-2
5-3
6-4
3-4
3-6
1-7
1-7
Supporters of the holiday say it
has been in effect for many years,
would boost retail sales and noted
that consumers would save millions
of dollars. They argue that the state's
sales tax revenue loss would be offset
by increased revenue from the
meals and gas tax revenue generated
by shoppers on those two days.
Opponents of the bill say the
state cannot afford the up to $30
million estimated revenue loss and
argued the holiday actually generates
little additional revenue for
stores because consumers typically
buy the products even without the
tax-free days. They say that the Legislature
should be looking at broader,
deeper tax relief for individuals
and businesses and not a tiny taxfree
holiday.
PROHIBIT REQUIRING PROOF
OF COVID-19 VACCINATION (H
734) – The Emergency Preparedness
and Management Committee
BHRC | SEE PAGE 19
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For Advertising with Results,
call The Advocate Newspapers
at 617-387-2200 or Info@advocatenews.net
TAX BENEFITS OF IRREVOCABLE TRUSTS
taxes on.
f you place your principal
residence into an irrevocable
trust to protect the equity for
your children, you can sell your
home and still take advantage
of the $250,000 capital gains
tax exclusion ($500,000 for a
married couple) upon sale. For
example, if you are single and
you lived in your home for at
least two of the five years prior
to the date of sale of your
home, and you sold your
home for $750,000, with a purchase
price of $500,000, the
$250,000 capital gain would
not be taxable. In order to determine
your actual cost basis,
you would be adding to the
purchase price all capital improvements
since acquisition
such as a new roof, new windows,
new heating system,
kitchen renovation, bathroom
renovation, asphalt driveway,
etc., plus any and all closing
costs on the sale of the house
such as broker’s commission,
tax stamps, legal fees and recording
fees.
Upon your death, the fair
I
market value of the home
would become the new cost
basis in the hands of the beneficiaries
of the Trust, such as
your children. If they were to
sell the home shortly after
your death, in all probability,
there would then be no
capital gains tax to pay. Only
if the property appreciated
significantly since the date
of your death would there
then be a capital gain to pay
Keep in mind that once
the five-year look-back period
has passed, the house
would not be a countable asset
for MassHealth purposes
and being held in the irrevocable
Trust would avoid probate
as well as estate recovery
for MassHealth benefits
paid. If the house were to be
sold during your lifetime, the
net sales proceeds would be
placed into the irrevocable
Trust to either purchase a new
home to be held by the Trust
or to invest the monies to
generate income to be paid
to you as an income beneficiary
of the Trust. This would
be the case if you decided
to rent and not purchase a
replacement property. The
sale of the home and the purchase
of a replacement home
does not restart the five-year
look-back period.
Since the irrevocable Trust
is drafted as a grantor-type
Trust, even if you place a brokerage
account into such a
Trust, the interest, dividend
and capital gain distribution
income would be reported
on a Trust tax return but the
Trust would generate a Grantor
Letter to be issued to the
Grantor of the Trust (Settlor
or Trustor) in order for the
Grantor to be able to report
this income on his or her individual
income tax return at
the much lower tax rates than
those of Trusts.
Not all types of assets are
suitable to be placed into an
irrevocable Trust as part of a
Medicaid plan. For example,
retirement accounts and IRA’s
are assets that you would not
place into such a Trust as to
do so would create an immediate
taxable event.
Joseph D. Cataldo is an estate planning/elder law attorney, Certified
Public Accountant, Certified Financial Planner, AICPA Personal
Financial Specialist and holds a master’s degree in taxation.
THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, June 23, 2023
MUSINGS | FROM PAGE 3
tive memories I am sure – terrible
day!”
• David Dortona said John
was the “big brother he never
had” and that he “missed him
every day.”
• Joani Fucci: “I remember Ross
Schifano was actually walking
under that bridge when it happened.
He was a mess when he
reached his home on Whitman
St. I’m sure it’s etched in his mind
forever; it was such a sad day in
Edgeworth.”
• Vinny Della Gatta recalls he
saw Rossie running towards
his house on Adams Street “crying
like crazy.” He then went up
the hill towards the tracks and
saw what a mess the scene was.
Then Ptl. Butchie Gennetti came
up to him and told him to leave
the area. It was the year Jimmy
graduated, but the memory
of that day has never left him.
He lived behind Tricca’s on Adams
close to the scene of the
accident; he was in the shower
when the train whistle loudly
blew. He heard a thud and
knew there was some sort of accident;
that is when he ran outside
and his life “changed forever.”
He continued: “right next to
Tricca’s Restaurant on the corner
of Adams and Pearl after that
happened is when they started
to work on the track for the
new transportation and made
it so no one can just walk up
there like the early 1950’s into
the early 1970’s, I walked those
same tracks to the Strand Theater
and Al’s Pool Room all the
time. Everybody remembers
Al’s Pool Room; we all did our
‘homework’ there.”
• Scotty Mallett: “My father
was working on an addition to
the Spadafora’s Florist Shop on
Pearl St. against the tracks and
real close to Tricca’s when all
the commotion drew his attention,
he and his crew ran up the
hill to the tracks behind them.
I remember my father coming
home white as a ghost telling
us what had happened. So sad,
so young.”
• Cheryl Rowe: “My dad was
one of the police officers at the
scene, he was the police photographer
at the time. I had
never seen my dad so devastated
about anything he had ever
seen on the job before or after
that day. Cannot imagine what
the families went through.”
• Claire Lester: “My dad was
a firefighter at Pearl Street Station,
one of the first at the scene.
I never saw my dad so upset
when he got home.”
• June Garrity Fagan: “I remember
the loss of these two classmates
very well, and it affected
me deeply. Somehow at that
age we think of ourselves as invincible.
Death of a contemporary
is so surreal. I will never forget
the loss I felt for these two,
nor the sense of loss it imposed
on our class as we progressed
through Malden High.”
• Michele Jesi Magner: “It was
horrific. For many of us at Beebe,
it was our first experience attending
any type of services. Still
remember it to this day.”
• Kathy Thing-Lewis: “I remember
this so well. We lived in Oak
Grove. John would come over
and hang out with us. We had a
wooden fence out in front of our
house, we used to sit on the rails
of it and some of us carved our
initials on the top of the posts
that held the rails. John’s initials
were there for years until the
old fence came down. I remember
riding in a car with someone
from the Community Center in
the Grove right after we heard
about it and the radio was playing
Cat Stevens’ ‘Moon Shadow.’
So very sad.”
It is said in “Malden Musings”...
• The beautifully painted crosswalks
on Salem Street – somebody
forgot to let those driving
through them that the paint was
still wet. Insert smiley face!
• Here’s hoping that Bravo Pizza
reinvents itself into something
Malden Square can be
proud of.
• Best breakfast in Malden,
as we all know, is at Cornucopia
Foods in Malden Square.
Homemade muffins, pies and
other delights await you as well.
But what caught my eye recently
was a poster in the window
informing Maldonians that
they now serve hot dogs! Who
doesn’t love a good hot dog?
Neil, I’ll be in soon for a couple of
dogs “all around,” as we used to
say whenever we’d order a dog
or two at Joe & Nemo’s!
• I ventured out of Edgeworth
on my walk last week. Newland
Street and environs were my
destination. Glad I did. I discovered
what a lovely, quiet neighborhood
that area is. Joe and
I thought of you, Cathy Mac,
as we walked past Miller Park.
Thank you to all that have implored
me to leave Edgeworth
every once in a while. Insert smiley
face.
• If you are ever on Appleton
Street, stop for a moment and
marvel at the tree that lives at 32
Appleton – an incredible sight
to behold.
• See retired MATV big cheese
Ronny Cox lately?! He looks relaxed,
tanned and years younger!
Add that cool, hipster-style
half-modified “van dyke” beard,
and Ronny is ready for his closeup!
Love ya dude – stay young,
my friend!
As Peter Falk’s iconic TV character
Columbo would say, “Just
one more thing, sir” – a couple
of weeks back I wrote about Officer
Neville, who patrolled the
streets of Malden at the turn of
the last century. Then there is
this...an always welcome comment
from the “Pride of Maplewood,”
Neil Kinnon: “Another
great column Peter. Always
enjoyable. Was on my morning
walk through Holy Cross Cemetery
today and walked past MPD
Officer Neville’s grave (Abraham
Neville 1860-1921). Often wonder
about the people in those
graves’ lives, particularly the
ones with ties to Malden. You
ensure with your keyboard/pen
he is not forgotten and for a few
days brought back to life.”
Postscript: In the “book of life is
brief” department, let’s remember
Ermelinda “Mimi” Callahan,
Gloria J. (Iaobacci) Pasciuto and
Mary G. (Cocco) Smeglin one
last time. “What we have once
enjoyed we can never lose. All
that we love deeply becomes a
part of us.”—Helen Keller
Peter is a longtime Malden
resident and a regular contributor
to the Malden Advocate.
He can be reached at PeteL39@
aol.com for comments, compliments
or criticisms.
Like us on Facebook advocate newspaper
Facebook.com/Advocate.news.ma
REAL ESTATE TRANSACTIONS
BUYER1
MARTIN, DONNA K
ZHENG, WEN Z
BUYER2
HUMPHREYS, KIMBERLY J
ZHENG, ROSE
SELLER1
SULLIVAN, PRISCILLA K
BRACKENBURY REALTY LLC
SELLER2
Copyrighted material previously published in Banker & Tradesman/The Commercial
Record, a weekly trade newspaper. It is reprinted with permission from the publisher,
The Warren Group. For a searchable database of real estate transactions and property
information visit: www.thewarrengroup.com.
ADDRESS
52 FRANCIS ST
50-52 BRACKENBURY ST
CITY
MALDEN
MALDEN
DATE
06.01.23
05.31.23
PRICE
950000
850000
׉	 7cassandra://8CMELfdXTG3faujgtG7TR8fNlIeWI9dHujvDzRe7UEo)`̰ d&r+`*P׉E'THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, June 23, 2023
Page 19
Maplewood Baptist Church
and First Baptist Church
of Malden Give it All Away
Join us for our unique take on a traditional yard sale
M
aplewood Baptist Church
and the First Baptist
Church of Malden invite the
Malden community to its
fi rst-ever joint, FREE Yard Sale,
on Saturday, June 24, from
11:00 a.m. to 3:00 p.m., at 493
Main St., corner of Main and
Salem Streets. There will be
tons of great stuff to choose
from, from clothing to household
items, and everything in
between. Every item off ered
BHRC | FROM PAGE 17
held a hearing on legislation that
would prohibit the state, cities and
towns from requiring proof of vaccination
against COVID-19 as a condition
of entry to any public buildings
including state and local government
buildings, all public and
private schools and colleges and private
businesses.
“We put the bill forward to prevent
public entities from requiring
vaccination for entry into public
buildings,” said Sponsor Rep. Peter
Durant (R-Spencer). “This includes
schools of any types.We have heard
from a number of concerned parents
that their children were not being
allowed to attend college or other
schools unless they were vaccinated.This
created a devastating situation
in which students and parents
had to make a choice between getting
something they may not have
wanted and getting an education
that they need.We believe that this
creates a problem within the 14th
amendment Privileges and Immunity
Clause, as well as the Commerce
Clause of the US Constitution.
ALLOW ALCOHOL SALES ON
THANKSGIVING (H 353) – The Consumer
Protection and Professional
Licensure Committee held a hearing
on a proposal that would allow for
the sale of alcohol on Thanksgiving.
“Currently, 33 states already allow
Thanksgiving alcohol sales
including Maine, Vermont, New
Hampshire, New York and New Jersey,”
said sponsor Rep. David Linsky
(D-Natick).“Prohibiting the sale of alat
this yard sale will be given
away, entirely for FREE. We
want to show our neighbors
and community the unconditional
love of Jesus, with no
strings attached.
When asked, “Why are we having
a FREE Yard Sale?” Pastor
Gary McClenthen responded,
“As a dad, I have often encouraged
my children to DO ‘thank
you,’ rather than simply just say
it. In many ways, our free yard
cohol on Thanksgiving likely dates
back to colonial times when drinking
alcohol on holidays was considered
‘unholy.” [The bill] would not
require that a liquor store be open
on Thanksgiving, but rather would
give them that option. Notably, a
majority of liquor stores that are
open in states which do allow sales
on Thanksgiving are closed by midday.
This gives last minute shoppers
the opportunity to purchase alcohol
as they would any other item at
the grocery store, while still allowing
employees to celebrate Thanksgiving.”
FINANCIAL
SCAMS AGAINST
SENIORS AND PEOPLE WITH DISABILITIES
(H 613) – The Elder Affairs
Committee held a hearing on a
measure that would impose an additional
$2,500 fi ne on anyone who
is convicted of perpetrating a fi nancial
or other fraud against a person if
the person is a senior or disabled individual.
The bill would also create a
special account to distribute educational
materials to seniors and people
with disabilities on how to be
on the lookout for frauds or scams
and would fund seminars people to
better inform them of their rights as
a consumer.
“I fi led this bill after hearing from
many constituents over the years
who were concerned with deceptive
actions being perpetrated
against seniors or people with disabilities,”
said sponsor Rep. Bruce
Ayers (D-Quincy). “Those who perpetrate
fraud against seniors and
disabled individuals are constantly
changing their methods to try and
sale will be a tangible thank you
to God for his gifts of joy, peace,
purpose, good friends, and a
promised home with Him forever.”
For
more information about
Maplewood Baptist Church, visit
www.MBMalden.net. For more
information about First Baptist
Church of Malden, visit www.
fbcmalden.org. Pastor Gary McClenthen
can be reached at 781322-2636.
fi
nd new ways of committing fraud.
We need to adjust our eff orts for prevention
to be proactive in protecting
our vulnerable residents from scams
and fi nancial abuse.”
LOAN REPAYMENT ASSISTANCE
FOR HUMAN SERVICE WORKERS
(H 214) – The Children, Families and
Persons with Disabilities Committee
held a hearing on legislation that
would provide fi nancial assistance
to some human service workers to
repay their student loans. Under the
program, human service workers
who work 12 consecutive months
for a minimum of 35 hours per week
and who have an individual income
of no more than $50,000 can qualify
for loan repayment of up to $150 per
month for up to 48 months.
“Human service workers perform
an extremely diffi cult job for woefully
low wages,” said Rep. Jeff Roy
(D-Franklin). “Assisting with repayment
of student loans could help
alleviate some of the fi nancial burdens
that new graduates face when
choosing to work in their fi eld of
study. Given the cost of living in
Massachusetts and the value added
by ensuring that those who are in
need receive the best care the commonwealth
can give them, [this bill]
seems a small step to show our human
service workers that we value
their important contributions.”
SHOOTING AT A HOUSE OR
APARTMENT (H 1681) – The Judiciary
Committee held a hearing on
a proposal that would impose up
to a fi ve-year prison sentence and/
BHRC | SEE PAGE 20
aavvyvy S
avy
Dear Hard,
The new FDA approved over-the-counter (OTC) hearing aids that
hit the market last October have become a very attractive alternative
to millions of older Americans with hearing impairment.
These new hearing aids can be purchased at pharmacies, consumer
electronics stores or online without a hearing exam, prescription,
or appointment with an audiologist. And the savings are signifi
cant. The average cost of an OTC hearing aid is about $1,600 per
pair, which is about $3,000 less than the average price of a prescription
hearing aid.
But sorting through all the diff erent options and styles can be confusing.
Here are some tips along with a reliable resource that can help
you choose the right aid for you.
Check Your Hearing
Your fi rst step to getting a hearing aid is to get your hearing tested.
Be aware that OTC hearing aids are designed only for people with
mild to moderate hearing loss (signs include trouble hearing speech
in noisy places, in groups, and during phone calls).
The best place to get your hearing tested is through a hearing
care provider like an audiologist. These in-person tests are usually
covered by private medical insurance, and as of this year, Medicare
will pay for general hearing evaluations without a doctor’s referral.
You can also assess your hearing at home with a good app-based
hearing test like Mimi (mimi.health) or SonicCloud (soniccloud.com).
If you fi nd through your test that you have severe hearing loss
(signs include being unable to hear spoken words even in a quiet
room or trouble hearing loud music or power tools) then OTC aids
aren’t the right solution for you. You’ll probably need a prescription
hearing aid, which you must get through an audiologist or hearing
instrument specialist.
Choosing an OTC Aid
If you decide that an OTC hearing aid may work for you, here are
a couple pointers to help you choose.
First, you need to know that OTC hearing aids come in two types:
self-fi tting and preset. Self-fi tting aids typically use a smartphone app
to setup and adjust the device to suit your specifi c hearing needs,
which makes them better suited for seniors who are technologically
inclined. While preset hearing aids are much simpler devices that
come with a number of set programs for diff erent levels of hearing
loss, and the controls are directly on the hearing aid.
Also, because OTC hearing aids have a learning curve, it’s very important
to know the level of customer support you’ll have access to.
So, before you buy, fi nd out how long the company provides support
after your purchase, and what sorts of experts will be providing
the support.
You also need to fi nd out about the company’s return policy. It
can take weeks to get accustomed to wearing hearing aids and fi gure
out whether they’re really working for you or not. So, make sure
to choose a brand that off ers a minimum 30-day free trial period, or
money back return policy.
Best OTC Hearing Aids
To help you cut through all the diff erent options the National Council
on Aging (NCOA), which is a national nonprofi t organization that
advocates for older Americans, recently assembled a review team
who collectively spent more than 5,000 hours researching, testing
and interviewing customers about OTC hearing aids.
They came up with a list of nine winners based on such criteria
as aff ordability, style and fi t. Their best OTC hearing aids for 2023 in
their nine categories include:
• Best for Seniors: Jabra Enhance (jabraenhance.com)
• Best Invisible Fit: Eargo (eargo.com)
• Most User-Friendly: Lexie (lexiehearing.com)
• Most Aff ordable: Audien (audienhearing.com)
• Most Financing Options: Audicus (audicus.com)
• Best Remote Customer Service: MDHearing (mdhearingaid.com)
• Best Rechargeable for the Money: Go Hearing (gohearing.com)
• Best Variety: Lucid (lucidhearing.com)
• Best Earbud-Style: Sony (electronics.sony.com)
To learn more, see NCOA.org/adviser/hearing-aids/best-otchearing-aids.
Send
your senior questions to: Savvy Senior, P.O. Box 5443, Norman,
OK 73070, or visit SavvySenior.org. Jim Miller is a contributor to
the NBC Today show and author of “The Savvy Senior” book.
avvy S oiorenniioor
nior
by Jim Miller
Best Over-the-Counter
Hearing Aids for Older Adults
Dear Savvy Senior,
Can you recommend some good over-the-counter hearing aids for
seniors on a budget? I’m not sure what to get or where to buy them.
Hard of Hearing
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THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, June 23, 2023
OBITUARIES
Frank E. Grover Sr.
Of Ma lden
passed away
June 13th 2023.
Frank was born
in Malden November
11th
1951 the son of
John and Mary
(Whitely) Grover.
Frank grew
up in Malden attending
Malden high school although
he left early to join the
military, he managed to still
get his diploma while serving
4 years in the United States Marine
Corps where he served and
earned the rank of Sergeant
in the Vietnam War. Frank was
the loving father of three sons
Frank Jr., Chris, and Johnathan
Grover. During his free time, he
loved going to the Boston Back
Bay V.F.W, playing B.I.N.G.O, and
when he was younger, he wrote
many articles for the Causeway
Chronicle. Frank also loved
spending time with his family.
Frank is survived by his sons
Frank Grover Jr. of Texas, Chris
Grover of Texas and Johnathan
Grover of Peabody, his siblings
Donna Grover of Wakefi eld, Anna
Mann of Stoneham and John Grover
of New Hampshire, his grandchildren
Lucas and Gracie Grover
as well as many nieces, nephews,
family members and friends.
Frank was predeceased by his
parents John and Mary (Whitely)
Grover and his brother Barry
Grover.
Visiting hours were held at the
Weir Funeral Home, Malden on
Wednesday June 21st. Funeral
services were held from the funeral
home on Thursday June
22nd. Interment followed at Forest
Dale Cemetery in Malden.
James Michael O'Connor
Of Malden.
Passed peacefully
away on June
8, 2023 at Massachusetts
General
Hospital. Beloved
son of the
late Brigid (McBrien) and Michael
O'Connor. Loving brother of Paul
V. O'Connor and the late Terrence
F. O'Connor, Kevin J. O'Connor &
John B. O'Connor. Cherished uncle
of Camren O'Connor, Hunter
O'Connor, Devin O'Connor,
Aidan O'Connor, Gavin O'Connor,
Ryan O'Connor, Colleen O'Connor
& Jessica Crusco.
Funeral and prayer service
were held from the Salvatore
Rocco & Son's Funeral Home,
Everett, on Friday June 16th. Interment
was held in Woodlawn
Cemetery in Everett.
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Nancy A. (Nutter)
Edwardsen
A lifelong resident of Malden,
passed away peacefully
in her home on
Thursday, June
15. Nancy was
born in Boston in
1939, the daughter
of Warren and
Mary Nutter. She
was raised and educated in Malden,
and graduated from Malden
High School with the Class
of 1957. She went on to study
at Boston University at the Sargent
College where she earned
her Bachelor’s Degree in Education.
In 1961, Nancy married Arnold
Edwardsen, her sweetheart
since 7th grade. The two settled
down in Malden together
to raise their family. They shared
nearly 58 years of marriage until
Arnie’s passing in 2019.
BHRC | FROM PAGE 19
or $10,000 fi ne on anyone who discharges
an assault weapon, fi rearm,
large capacity weapon, machine
gun, rifle, sawed-off shotgun or
shotgun into a dwelling. Under current
law this crime is a misdemeanor
punishable by up to a 30-day jail
sentence and/or $100 fi ne.
Supporters also said that under
current law the punishment is disproportionate
to the severity of this
type of incident. They noted this
crime, primarily committed by gang
members, is often used as an intimidation
tactic without regard for the
innocent people in the home.
"Random and intentional gun
shots into homes can cause grave
physical and mental consequences
to homeowners and their families,”
said the bill's sponsor Rep. Rady
Mom (D-Lowell). “It also creates an
Nancy started her teaching career
at Chelmsford High School.
She taught Physical Education
and also coached many of the
sports teams, including volleyball,
softball and basketball. She
later taught at Open Bible Academy
where she retired.
In years past Nancy enjoyed
playing tennis at Amerige Park
in Malden with her friend Rose.
She was an avid gardener and
loved tending to her flowers.
As a dedicated Red Sox fan, she
never missed a game. She really
enjoyed being outside, and
spending time at the family
cabin in Bartlett, NH. She treasured
the time she got to spend
with her 6 grandchildren. Nancy
loved sports and immersed herself
in her children's and grandchildren's
games. In 1999, she
was named to the Malden High
Hall of Fame.
unsafe environment and heightens
public distrust in the neighborhood
where it occurs.This bill will give law
enforcement offi cers the necessary
tools to keep our cities safe."
QUOTABLE QUOTES
“Recently, multiple news articles,
op-eds, and think tank reports have
asserted that Massachusetts is suffering
an exodus of households, particularly
high-income households,
fl eeing to states with lower taxes.
A closely related claim is that outmigrants
are taking billions of dollars
out of the Massachusetts economy
when they leave. These claims
about income migration are both
overblown and based on a fundamental
misunderstanding of the
available data.”
--- From a report by the Massachusetts
Budget and Policy
Center.
~ LEGAL NOTICE ~
NOTICE OF FUNDING AVAILABILITY
HOME-ARP FUNDS AVAILABLE FOR AFFORDABLE
HOUSING DEVELOPMENT PROJECTS
Contact us for all of your home
improvement projects and necessities
Telephone: 617-699-1782
Toll Free: 1-888-744-1756
Email: info@americanexteriorandwindow.com
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All estimates, consultations or inspections
completed by MA licensed supervisors.
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The North Suburban Consortium (NSC), which includes the communities of Arlington,
Chelsea, Everett, Malden, Medford, Melrose, Revere, and Winthrop, has allocated
$4,000,000 for the acquisition, construction, and/or rehabilitation of affordable rental housing
for HOME-American Rescue Plan (HOME-ARP) Qualifying Populations pursuant to
Section 3205 of the American Rescue Plan Act of 2021 and 42 U.S.C. 12701 et seq.
The NSC is seeking proposals from non-profit housing developers, for-profit housing
developers, and public housing authorities to develop rental housing under HOME-ARP.
Eligible projects for HOME-ARP funding include the acquisition, rehabilitation, or new
construction of rental housing.
HOME-ARP funding must follow the requirements set forth on Notice CPD-21-10,
https://www.hud.gov/sites/dfiles/OCHCO/documents/2021-10cpdn.pdf, and applicants for
rental development funding should be familiar with pages 3-9, and 20-37 of the Notice. In
addition to the specific new requirements for HOME-ARP set forth in the Notice, many of
the operational and administrative requirements are the same as under the HOME program.
The full Notice of Funding Availability will be available at https://www.cityofmalden.org/
bids.aspx beginning on Thursday, June 8th, 2023. Applications will be accepted on a rolling
basis. Please direct any questions to Kristina Tseng, HOME Director, at ktseng@cityofmalden.org.
June 09, 16, 23, 30, 2023
She is survived by her children,
Heidi A. Prezioso of Everett, Kari
L. Miller of Wakefi eld, Eric E. Edwardsen
of Malden, and Kurt W.
Edwardsen of Boston, her sister
Marilyn Connolly of Pelham, NH,
as well as her 6 grandchildren,
Ricky, Giavanna, Christopher,
Nicolas, Michael, and Ariana.
Nancy was preceded in death
by her husband Arnold Edwardsen.
Funeral
services will be held
graveside at Puritan Lawn Cemetery,
185 Lake St, Peabody,
on Friday, July 14th, at 10 AM.
Visitation will be held at the
Weir-MacCuish Golden Rule Funeral
Home, 144 Salem St, Malden
on Thursday, July 13th, from
4 – 8 PM. In lieu of fl owers, kindly
consider making a donation
to the Dana Farber Cancer Institute,
10 Brookline Place, W 6th
fl oor, Brookline, MA 02445
“The MassTrails Grant program
enables the Healey … Administration
and our partners to grow our
trails system and, ultimately, reduce
transportation emissions. We
know our residents want to get outside
and enjoy their commute and
their communities, but don’t always
have an accessible, safe way to get
around. MassTrails makes that possible
through collaboration and connection.”
---
Secretary of Energy and Environmental
Aff airs, Secretary Rebecca
Tepper announcing $11.6 million
in funding through the MassTrails
Grant Program to support 68 trail
improvement projects across the
Bay State.
“Residents throughout our districts
are struggling with substance
use disorders and the data shows
BHRC | SEE PAGE 22
׉	 7cassandra://A749eWqyvqiytZgBhiNd1wXBjUCnl6qQDzN08d-ObOw(`̰ d&r+`*R׉EYTHE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, June 23, 2023
Page 21
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PבCט   (u׉׉	 7cassandra://eI8Xr_xhGtb-FXJ-49REadGP1oiBWjzXHelQuzogq3E {`)׉	 7cassandra://i2z2F7DU1qI84J-TKmra2xLhlN2r2WYP371c8OaU0Do͍`J׉	 7cassandra://oic1-9Ra-0LhrbuvFxYR5THYNEbZmJyF9gV9TTabN_o(`̰ ׉	 7cassandra://yKDLp00Mb1qjiGnoSUCtUZ5ZgJymrSVVD79dUpaMY9I f͠d2r+`*ט ( (u׉׉	 7cassandra://4tAzEXTBUrlfnTlikeZtn7DfmOJADfnSvIqUtC99UUU r`)׉	 7cassandra://4R11j7U3P0345qDJTkE-kxSMPScwBGv5zjnLKzB5-lQ͜`J׉	 7cassandra://1TfvhoukTh-4tC_DLSkLw4FzvXbuGH-EH4p43JrYXmk-`̰ ׉	 7cassandra://ewwHx0QmYyBUFLjHjKmxkOLIUnCaDYYS58CBf3X9-uk k~V͠d2r+`*נd2r+`* xX9ׁHhttp://mangorealtyteam.comׁׁЈנd2r+`* s&9ׁHmailto:Info@advocatenews.netׁׁЈ׉EPage 22
THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, June 23, 2023
BHRC | FROM PAGE 20
1. On June 23, 1845, what state was annexed that is nicknamed
the Lone Star State and includes the “Big Thicket” and the
Panhandle?
2. How many sides does a nonagon have?
3. What is the meaning of the “19” in COVID-19?
4. Reportedly, what sport has been called diamond ball,
indoor baseball, kitten baseball, mush ball and pumpkin
ball?
5. What fl at picture can also be pictured in three dimensions?
6. On June 24, 1675, what war began in Swansea, Mass.?
7. In what city would you fi nd Carnaby Street (once famous
for fashion)?
8. On June 25, 1924, what female who worked in the World
War II war industry was born?
9. What does PIN stand for?
10. Reportedly, what game became popular at the same time
as the invention of the cylinder lawn mower?
11. On June 26, 1870, what fi rst boardwalk in the United States
opened?
12. What attracts June bugs?
13. On what continent was the fi rst swimming championship
(a 400-meter race): Australia, Europe or North America?
14. On June 27, 2001, what actor (born in Boston) who appeared
in “Grumpy Old Men” and “The Odd Couple” died?
15. In what Rodgers & Hammerstein musical is the song “June
is Bustin’ Out All Over”?
16. In June Guinness World Records reported that in Boston,
Mass., Chef Nick DiGiovanni with help created the largest
ever of what English meat dish – weighing 56.79 lbs.?
17. On June 28, 2007, what bird was removed from the list of
endangered and threatened species?
18. How are Brian, Dennis and Carl Wilson, Mike Love and Al
Jardine similar?
19. In 1970 what TV show fi lmed “Salem Saga” episodes in
Salem, Mass.?
20. On June 29, 1973, the Federal Energy Offi ce was created in
response to what?
ANSWERS
Sandy Juliano
Broker/President
that this crisis is only continuing
to grow. It is on us –as a commonwealth–
to do whatever we can to
increase treatment services in our
communities, and these reimbursement
rates for substance use providers
play a critical role in that.”
---Sen. John Velis (D-Westfi eld)
calling for the state to increase
the MassHealth reimbursement
rates for substance-related and
addictive disorders program.
"Action on reducing plastics is overdue.
The pollution and litter are everywhere,
the public --by dint of the 156
cities and towns who have passed local
bans---is in support, and passing
these bills will result in a cleaner and
more sustainable commonwealth.”
---Janet Domenitz, Director
of MASSPIRG on her support for
several bills limiting the use of a
variety of single use plastics.
“The proposed bag regulations
override the majority of local rules
to ban reusable, recyclable American-made
plastic bags in favor of higher-cost,
imported alternatives that are
still made from plastic, cannot be recycled,
and have larger environmental
impacts. We urge lawmakers to reject
these unsustainable proposals that
would increase costs on Massachusetts
families and look forward to collaborating
with all stakeholders on more
sustainable, alternative approaches as
these discussions continue.”
--- Zachary Taylor, director of the
American Recyclable Plastic Bag Alliance
criticizing many of the bills.
HOW LONG WAS LAST WEEK’S
SESSION? Beacon Hill Roll Call tracks
the length of time that the House
and Senate were in session each
week. Many legislators say that legislative
sessions are only one aspect
of the Legislature’s job and that a lot
of important work is done outside
of the House and Senate chambers.
They note that their jobs also involve
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Call Sandy with
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List Your Home or Apartment With Us!
Open Daily From 10:00 A.M. - 5:00 P.M.
433 Broadway, Suite B, Everett, MA 02149
www.jrs-properties.com
Joe DiNuzzo
617-680-7610
Norma Capuano Parziale
617-590-9143
committee work, research, constituent
work and other matters that are
important to their districts. Critics say
that the Legislature does not meet
regularly or long enough to debate
and vote in public view on the thousands
of pieces of legislation that
have been fi led. They note that the
infrequency and brief length of sessions
are misguided and lead to irresponsible
late-night sessions and
a mad rush to act on dozens of bills
in the days immediately preceding
the end of an annual session.
During the week of June 12-16,
the House met for a total of 35 minutes
while the Senate met for a total
of 09 hours and 51 minutes.
Mon. June 12
House 11:00 a.m. to 11:17 a.m.
Senate11:09 a.m. to 11:20 a.m.
Tues.June 13
No House session
No Senate session
Wed. June 14
No House session
No Senate session
Thurs. June 15
House 11:00 a.m. to 11:18 a.m.
Senate11:26 a.m. to9:06 p.m.
Fri. June 16
No House session
No Senate session
Bob Katzen welcomes feedback
at bob@beaconhillrollcall.com
Bob founded Beacon Hill Roll
Call in 1975 and was inducted
into the New England Newspaper
and Press Association
(NENPA) Hall of Fame in 2019.
COMMERCIAL & RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY SALES & RENTALS
Rosemarie Ciampi
617-957-9222
Denise Matarazzo
617-953-3023
617-294-1041
1. Texas
2. Nine
3. It was identifi ed in 2019.
4. Softball
5. Hologram
6. King Philip’s War
7. London
8. Rosalind Walter (Rosie the Riveter)
9. Personal Identifi cation Number
10. Croquet
11. The Atlantic City Boardwalk
12. Lights
13. Australia
14. Jack Lemmon
15. “Carousel”
16. Beef Wellington
17. Bald Eagle
18. They were “The Beach Boys”
19. “Bewitched”
20. The Arab Oil Embargo
׉	 7cassandra://oic1-9Ra-0LhrbuvFxYR5THYNEbZmJyF9gV9TTabN_o(`̰ d&r+`*T׉ETHE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, June 23, 2023
Page 23
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REVERE ADVOCATE
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Sat., June 24, 2023 1:00 PM to 3:00 PM
Sun., June 25, 2023 12:00 PM to 2:00 PM
Condo for Sale
LYNN
For Advertising with Results,
call The Advocate Newspapers
at 617-387-2200 or Info@advocatenews.net
mangorealtyteam.com
38 Main St. Saugus
(781) 558-1091
20 Railroad Ave, Rockport
(978)-999-5408
14 Norwood St, Everett
(781)-558-1091
Location! This incredible home is nestled on a dead end street. The first floor
welcomes an open concept with a center island, Stainless steel appliances,
granite counter tops that lead to the welcoming Dining and Living Room for
entertaining your family and friends. Adjacent is a 1/2 bath to the kitchen.
The second floor offers 3 generous bedrooms with 2 full baths and an
additional storage in the walk up attic. Still more room in the heated lower
level and has an additional 1/2 bath. A 2-car garage, central air, fenced in
yard, and more! Come take a look..$779,000. Call/Text Sue at 617-877-4553
RENTAL - PEABODY
5 Room 2 Bedroom, along with balcony. You will be stunned the very moment you enter the double
doors…this spacious unit is "like new" having been tastefully renovated w/in the past 6 years &
impeccably maintained since. From the gleaming laminate hardwood floors to the natural light that
filters through the slider doors, pride of homeownership truly shines throughout. The open-concept
floor plan is perfect for entertaining featuring an eat-in kitchen w/upgraded Bosch appliances,
dining/living room area, an oversized private balcony and a master suite with a full bath, double vanity
& walk-in closet! Additional storage unit, in-unit laundry, assigned garage space and ample visitor
parking are just a few more perks to mention. Easy, low maintenance living – this is truly value &
convenience at its best! This fantastic W. Peabody location is ideal for commuters- boasting easy
access to Rte 1 & I-95- is just minutes away from the Northshore Mall, Brooksby Farm & Salem Country
Club! Vacant & easy to show...schedule today! $2900. Call/Text Sue at 617-877-4553
SAUGUS
SAUGUS
Studio Condo, 1 Bed/bath. Currently vacant. Condo
must sell as owner occupied, per condo rules. FHA
approved. This condo is a professionally managed
unit, with a pool, dog park, gazebo, and parking. H/P
accessible via elevator. Restaurants and bus route
nearby within walking distance..... $235,000.
Call /text Carl at 781-690-1307
Apartment Rental - EVERETT
Welcome to Saugus, where this cozy home awaits your
creative touch! Nestled on a peaceful dead-end street where
you can offer serene space for your ideas and settings.
Leave it as is or upgrade the kitchens and baths. This level
yard boasts a 1 car garage, fenced in yard and parking for 4-6
cars. The location is excellent with easy access to major
routes, market street in Lynnfield, Boston, Transportation
and Logan Airport. $419,000. Call/Text Sue at 617-877-4553
SAUGUS
Spacious and sunny with generous sized rooms
best describes this 2nd floor apartment
conveniently located just off of Broadway in
Everett. Beautiful hardwood floors throughout,
especially in the open concept living room and
dining room that are both sun drenched from
two 5 pane picture windows. Included in the rent
will be a huge walk-up attic for storage. If that is
not desired the landlord will reduce the monthly
rent to 2500.00 but where could you get that
much storage space for 100.00 per month? One
off street parking space and it must be used by
the primary tenant(s) only. No pets. Driveways
and parking will be maintained by landlord.
Tenant responsible for snow removal on steps
and walkway. First and last month rent, no
security fee, and landlord will pay 50% of broker
feel and tenant will be responsible for the other
50%. Full credit and background check with
references. $2,600.
Call/text Peter at 781-820-5690
Saugus
$25,000 to buyer towards concession. This charming tri-level is located in the highly desirable
Indian Rock Farms development. The open concept kitchen offers S.S. appliances and a center
island that adjoins a double sliding door that leads to the screened in porch. Open and inviting
the first floor can flow like a breeze into the dining room which offers a cozy spot for family meals
that leads into the living room. Stepping down into the Family Room welcomes an inviting
fireplace where family and friends can hang out for casual entertaining. Move to the 3 large
bdrms that offer gleaming hardwood floors along with a spacious closet for the main bedroom. A
1 car garage attached to this lovely home and bonus rooms in the basement. A 5-7 car detached
garage awaits the ideal buyer that has loads of untapped potential above the garage that is
heated. Minutes from major routes....$975,000. Call/text Peter at 781-820-5690
This lovely 3 bedroom
home move
right in home hosts a
nice large eat in
kitchen. This
3 B.R. Ranch with large fenced in yard. Excellent Fellsway
location. Property being SOLD AS IS with contents (mostly
clothes) to be sold/disposed of by buyer. Perfect for a
handyman, flipper, rehabber or do it yourself person. This
does not appear to be too far from move in condition,
Hardwood floors throughout. Generous garage. Basement
appears to have been finished and used as living space at one
time... $599,000. Call/text Rosa at 781-820-0096
welcoming floor plan,
open concept
of living and dining room offers nice hardwood floors where
you could enjoy casual or formal gathering where you could
enjoy casual or formal gathering. The easy access for washer
and dryer hook up on first floor along with a 1/2 bath is a great
benefit Updated roof. $599,000
UNDER
AGREEMENT
UNDER
AGREEMENT
UNDER
AGREEMENT
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v͠d2r+`*נd2r+`* [9ׁHhttp://CarpenitoRealEstate.comׁׁЈ׉E1Page 24
THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, June 23, 2023
.............
#
1
Listing & Selling
Office in Saugus
“Experience and knowledge
Provide the Best Service”
Free Market Evaluations CRE
CarpenitoRealEstate.com
View our website from
your mobile phone!
335 Central St., Saugus, MA
781-233-7300
SAUGUS - Desirable one-floor living in this 2 bedroom ranch,
eat-in kitchen with slider to deck overlooking an amazing, 24,000
sq. ft. yard, circular, cement driveway, located in sought-after
Iron Works neighborhood…$499,900.
SAUGUS - 8 rooms, 3-4 bedroom multi-level home offers 3 full baths,
granite kit, 1st floor laundry, fireplace lvrm, desirable 1st floor main
bedrm, additional living space in lower level, deck, updated roof & vinyl
siding, side street, located just outside of Saugus Center…$649,900.
Summer is here
and school is out!
Children on bikes
and lots of walkers!
Please be safe on
the roads.
REVERE - 7 room Split Entry Ranch offers 2 full baths, eat-in
kitchen, dnrm, lvrm, hardwood flooring, finished LL offers
family room with fireplace, and wet bar, central air, garage,
plenty of storage…$575,000.
Double check all
the crosswalks and
all the bike trails.
STAY SAFE &
ENJOY THE
SUMMER!
SAUGUS - Custom, Sprawling Ranch features 8+ rms,
4+ bedrms, 4 full baths, granite kitchen, finished LL
provides great space for the extended family, central air,
security system, updated roof, large, level, corner lot
w/inground pool, 1 car attached gar, circular driveway,
located in Forest Highlands....$1,200,000.
EVERETT - 1st Ad - 3 Bedroom Colonial, spacious kitchen, formal
diningroom, livingroom with sliders to heated sunroom porch, 3
bedrooms on second floor plus small room for office/nursery. Great
fenced in yard with detached garage. Great Location located across
from Florence St. Park…$529,000.
SAUGUS - 7 room, 3 bedroom Garrison Colonial offers 2 full
baths, sunroom, kit w/center island, finished lower level offers
family rm and second kitchen updated roof, easy access to all
major Routes & shopping…$575,000
COMING
SOON
COMING SOON - 3 BED, 2 BATH
SPLIT LOCATED IN DESIRABLE
INDIAN ROCK. 2 FIREPLACES,
LARGE ROOMS, LARGE YARD,
BUILT-IN POOL. GREAT HOME.
BRING YOUR DECORATING IDEAS.
NEEDS UPDATES. SAUGUS
LOOKING TO
BUY OR SELL ?
CALL
JUSTIN
KLOACK
CALL DEBBIE FOR DETAILS
617-678-9710
UNDER
CONTRACT
FOR SALE - RARE FIND! BRAND NEW
HOME FEATURING 3 BEDS, 3 BATHS,
QUALITY CONSTRUCTION THROUGHOUT.
FLEXIBLE FLOOR PLAN. OPEN CONCEPT,
CATHEDRAL CEILINGS, SS APPLIANCES,
LARGE ISLAND, SLIDER TO DECK. MAIN
BED HAS 2 CUSTOM CLOSETS AND EN
SUITE. FINISHED WALK OUT LL OPEN FOR
FUTURE EXPANSION.
SAUGUS $859,900
CALL DEBBIE: 617-678-9710
UNDER
CONTRACT
FOR SALE- 3 BED, 1.5 BATH
RANCH. VINYL SIDING, GAS
HEAT, CENTRAL AC,GARAGE,
HARDWOOD, LARGE BASEMENT,
ALARM SYSTEM, NEWER ROOF.
SAUGUS $599,000
CALL KEITH 781-389-0791
INVESTMENT OPPORTUNITY
978-815-2610
LOOKING FOR EXPERIENCED
AGENTS WHO WANT A NO
HASSLE, NO NONSENSE OFFICE.
WE ARE LOOKING FOR AGENTS WHO WANT TO
MAKE A DECENT PAY WITHOUT PAYING HIGH
FEES. ARE YOU A GO GETTER? PERHAPS
BI-LINGUAL? WILLING TO GO ABOVE AND
BEYOND? CALL US TODAY!!
MOBILE HOMES
FOR SALE- 5 ROOM, 2 BED, 1 BATH LIVING ROOM ADDITION, LAUNDRY
ROOM COULD BE 3RD BEDROOM PEABODY $119,900
FOR SALE-5 ROOMS, 3 BED, 1 BATH, UPDATED WITH HARDWOOD
FLOORS, NEW APPLIANCES, PITCHED ROOF, AND CENTRAL AIR
PEABODY $179,900
CALL ERIC 781-223-0289
NEW PRICE
FOR SALE -4 FAM LOCATED NEAR
PEABODY SQUARE. FULLY RENTED
WITH LONG TERM TENANTS. EACH
UNIT HAS PRIVATE ENTRANCE. 2
DRIVEWAYS, 8 CAR PARKING + 2 CAR
GARAGE. CORNER LOT. 2 NEWER GAS
HEATING SYSTEMS, SEPARATE
ELECTRIC, CLOSE TO PUBLIC
TRANSPORTATION.
PEABODY $975,500
CALL RHONDA 781-706-0842
FOR SALE
FOR SALE
UNDER
FOR SALE
FOR SALE - 3 BED, 2.5 BATH
COLONIAL. FIREPLACE LIVING
ROOM. 3 SEASON PORCH.
HUGE FENCED YARD. GREAT
GARAGE FOR WORK SHOP OR
CAR COLLECTOR.
TEWKSBURY $659,900
CALL DEBBIE 617-678-9710
CONTRACT
FOR SALE - FREE STANDING CONDO IN 55+
COMMUNITY FEATURING 2 BEDS, 3.5 BATHS WITH
PRIVACY AND SCENIC VIEWS. LARGE ROOMS AND
CATHEDRAL CEILINGS. SPA LIKE BATH. THEATRE
ROOM, GYM, AND GAME ROOM.
MIDDLETON $1,199,999
CALL JUSTIN FOR DETAILS 978-815-2610
MOBILE HOME FOR SALE-LARGE ROOMS 2
FULL BATHS, STAINLESS APPLIANCES,
10X10 DECK. RECESSED LIGHTING. NICE
YARD PITCHED ROOF 2 CAR PARKING JUST
GORGEOUS PARK RENT ONLY 227 A MONTH
INCLUDES RE TAXES, SEWER AND WATER.
SNOW PLOWING, AND RUBBISH
REMOVAL....2023 CHAMPION 14 X 66
PEABODY $249,900
CALL ERIC 781-223-0289
FOR SALE- CUSTOM BUILT 5 BED,
3 FULL, 2 HALF BATH HOME BUILT
IN 2020. THIS OPEN CONCEPT
HOME IS STUNNING. 11’ ISLAND
WITH WATERFALL EDGES,
THERMADOR HIGH END
APPLIANCES, CUSTOM TILED
BATHS. NO DETAIL LEFT UNDONE!
SAUGUS $999,900
CALL KEITH 781-389-0791
THINKING OF BUYING OR SELLING SOON? CONFUSED ABOUT THE CURRENT MARKET AND WHAT IS
GOING ON WITH INTEREST RATES AND INVENTORY? WE ARE HERE TO HELP! GIVE US A CALL TODAY!
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