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CAT
D
Vol. 26, No.26
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-FREE- www.advocatenews.net
Published Every Friday
A VALEDICTORIAN VIEW
D
TE
781-233-4446
Friday, June 28, 2024
Ash Landfi ll Closure
Committee begins work
Organizational meeting set for Monday night;
Win Waste’s participation is still uncertain
By Mark E. Vogler
oes WIN Waste Innovations
plan on attending
meetings of the town’s
newly created Ash Landfi ll Closure
Committee? Will WIN accept
the invitation of the committee
to participate in the
meetings as a nonvoting member?
Committee
members who
COMMITTEE | SEE PAGE 2
FLOWERS OF APPRECIATION
Saugus Director of Solid Waste and Recycling Scott A Brazis
(center) and SAVE Co-Presidents Ann Devlin and Stephanie
Shalkoski enjoy the bouquets of fl owers they received Wednesday
night during the group’s 51st Annual Meeting & Dinner at
Polcari’s Restaurant on Route 1 North in Saugus. (Saugus Advocate
photo by Mark E. Vogler)
SHARING HER OPINION: Sarah Dorielan, the Saugus High School Class of 2024’s top scholastically
ranked student, advocates that students have a mandatory two years of foreign
language study as part of the school curriculum. She has some more ideas on how to improve
Saugus Public Schools. Please see inside for this week’s “The Advocate Asks” and
more photos. (Saugus Advocate photo by Mark E. Vogler))
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THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FriDAy, JUnE 28, 2024
COMMITTEE | FROM PAGE 1
reached out to WIN in advance
of next Monday’s (July 1) organizational
meeting – set for
6:30 p.m. in the first floor conference
room at Saugus Town
Hall – were still waiting for answers
late this week.
“To this point, we have not
been invited to participate on
the committee, so it would be
premature to comment on specifics,”
WIN’s Sr. Director of Communications
& Community Engagement,
Mary Urban, said in
a statement to The Saugus Advocate,
declining to say whether
the company plans on attending
the committee meetings.
Rather
than engage in talks
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about closing the landfill, WIN
advocates the town signing off
on a Host Community Agreement
(HCA) that would allow
the company to continue operation
of the landfill for many
years to come instead of closing
it. “We did play an active
role in the Landfill committee
that spent more than 18
months discussing what benefits
the town would want to
receive from our continued
operation of the monofill, resulting
in a Host Community
Agreement that was approved
by the Board of Selectmen,” Urban
wrote in her statement to
the newspaper.
“Our focus remains on finalizing
the agreement that would
provide the town with tens of
millions of dollars in economic
and environmental benefits
while allowing us to continue
operating in the manner
that makes the most sense
for the town, its residents, and
the environment — by keeping
trucks off the road and continuing
to responsibly manage the
ash within our adjacent monofill,”
she said.
Meanwhile, two committee
members said they made
several efforts to reach out to
WIN this week, hoping that
the company would be there
to participate in Monday’s organizational
session and future
meetings.
“Town Meeting clearly appreciated
the fact that WIN
would be invited to participate,”
said Precinct 10 Town
Meeting Member Peter Manoogian,
who authored the article
approved by the Annual
Town Meeting to establish the
five-member committee.
“I believe it is also in the best
interest of their shareholders
to participate,” Manoogian said.
Board of Selectmen Chair
Debra Panetta, another member
of the Ash Landfill Closure
Committee, said she called
two WIN representatives on
Wednesday, including Urban.
“It’s very important to plan
for the future of the unlined
ash landfill,” Panetta told The
Saugus Advocate.
“I do hope a WIN Waste representative
is able to attend these
meetings,” she said.
Monday’s meeting agenda
Joining Panetta and Manoogian
on the committee are Selectman
Michael Serino, Precinct
10 Town Meeting Member
Carla Scuzzarella and Town
Manager Scott C. Crabtree or
his designee.
At Monday night’s meeting,
the committee plans to select
its officers, review Town Meeting
Article 25 that created the
committee, develop and approve
correspondence to WIN
that invites the company to
participate and to determine
and identify information in the
public realm that would facilitate
the work of the committee.
During Session 2 of this
year’s Annual Town Meeting,
members voted 44-0 – with
one abstention – to create a
five-member Ash Landfill Closure
Committee within two
weeks of this year’s Town Meeting
adjourning. The purpose
of the committee is to identify
time frames for final closure,
post-closure, maintenance and
COMMITTEE | SEE PAGE 8
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Page 3
~The Advocate Asks~
Saugus High School Class of 2024 Valedictorian Sarah Dorielan says the School
District needs to make two years of a foreign language mandatory for students
A: I’m hoping to become a
psychiatrist. I really fi nd the
mental health fi eld to be interesting.
I would love to get into
the intricacies of that.
Q: What kind of psychiatry
would you want to focus on?
A: I specifically want to
work with teenagers because
there’s a lack of adults that
have a healthy communicative
relationship with children.
Q: Have you always been a
smart kid, right from the fi rst
ASKS | SEE PAGE 4
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SCHOLARSHIP AND ACADEMIC AWARDS NIGHT: A screen graphic in the Saugus High
School Auditorium announced the fi nal and most important award – the Valedictorian –
to Sarah Dorielan. Saugus Advocate photo by Mark E. Vogler)
Editor’s Note: For this week’s
column, we sat down with Sarah
Dorielan, the Valedictorian
– the top ranked student – of
the Saugus High School Class of
2024. Her 4.69 grade point average
was tops among the 178
students who received diplomas
during the school’s 153rd
Commencement Exercises last
month. Sarah’s address was historic,
as she is believed to be the
first African American female
valedictorian. We off ered to interview
Sarah in a local coff ee
shop. But she preferred to refl ect
on the highlights of her High
School career in the Saugus
Public Library – one of her favorite
spots in town. She volunteered
at the library for a year as
an organizational consultant.
Sarah, 17, a voracious reader,
plans to attend Tufts University
in the fall to study Biopsychology.
She received the Excellence
in English Award selected by the
English Department. Her extracurricular
activities and societies
included the following: Peer
Mediation Advocate, Drama
Club Secretary & Stage Manager,
Young Feminist Secretary,
Acapella Soloist, volleyball. She
was also a member of Students
in Action, which focuses on racial
diversity and community
service. Her notable classes included
AP Psychology, AP English
Literature & Composition,
AP Statistics, AP English Language
& Composition and AP
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She was born in 2006 in Cambridge.
Her father – Frantz Dorielan
– and mother – Guerlande
Aristil – were both in their
early 20s when they immigrated
to the United States, and
they eventually made Saugus
their home. Sarah has a brother,
Oliver, 21, who is a 2021 Saugus
High graduate. He attends
Benjamin Franklin Institute of
Technology, where he’s studying
health technology and expects
to graduate next year.
Highlights of this week’s interview
follow.
Q: What do you want to be
when you graduate from college?
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THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FriDAy, JUnE 28, 2024
~ The Old Sachem ~
The General
Slocum Disaster
By Bill Stewart
T
he PS General Slocum
was a sidewheeler built
in 1891 that became a
disaster on June 15, 1904. The
ship carried 1,358 passengers
plus crew. The ship was chartered
by the St. Mark’s Evangelical
Lutheran Church for
$350, and the passengers
came mostly from the German-American
community
of the Lower East Side of New
York. The passengers were
mostly women and children
for a fun-filled day outside
the city.
The enjoyment of an East
River ride up the river allowed
the passengers the fun of
watching the shoreline out
of the North Shore of Long Island.
But the enjoyment quickly
turned to a disaster. The ship
left the dock at 9 a.m. and
about an hour later a fire started.
This led to panic among
the passengers as they faced
the prospects of either drowning
or being burned alive.
Most of the passengers were
wearing clothing that prohibited
them from swimming
and most probably could not
swim against the river. Bodies
would wash ashore for days afterward,
and only 321 passengers
survived. A total of 1,037
passengers were lost to the
fire or drowning.
The captain, William Hen50
Gerry
D’Ambrosio
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about the insurance of bringing
the ship to shore. Instead,
he directed the burning ship,
General Slocum, to North
Brother Island because he
feared that gas tanks and a
lumber yard would be dangerous
at the landing of 130th
Street close to the Bronx.
Testimony following the disaster
pointed to few safeguards
on the ship. Survival
vests were rotten; life boats
ASKS| FROM PAGE 3
grade on?
A: I think I was a very perfectionist
child. I was a very
nerdy child.
Q: So you spent a lot of time
in the Saugus Public Library
and loved reading?
A: Yes. I would always leave
with a stack of books taller
also were unusable as they,
too, were rotten. Fire drills
were never used on the ship
and the crew was untrained to
assist the passengers to safety.
The Knickerbocker Steamboat
Company and captain
Van Schaick came under investigation.
The president of
the company, Frank A. Barnaby,
defended the actions of
the captain and crew.
A jury was formed of the
United States Circuit Court
and on January 27, 1906, the
captain was found guilty of
criminal negligence in that he
failed to maintain fire drills required
by law. The presiding
judge Thomas sentenced Van
Schaick to 10 years of hard labor.
He only served part of the
sentence at Sing Sing prison;
he received a pardon from
President William Howard Taft
in 1911 under the urging of
the captain’s wife. Frank Barnaby
and the Knickerbocker
Steamship Company escaped
justice.
The loss of so many people
aboard the ship devastated
families; suicides and depression
resulted from the losses.
Jewish and Italian families
were impacted because
of their family members on
the ship.
In Tompkins Square Park
there is a Tennessee marble
than me. I still have my first library
card with me. I keep renewing
it.
Q: Have you done volunteer
work at the library?
A: I volunteered here the
summer after my sophomore
year. I would put books on the
shelves.
Q: As you look back on your
12 years in Saugus Public
“The Old Sachem,” Bill Stewart.
(Courtesy photo to The Saugus
Advocate by Joanie Allbee)
obelisk dedicated to the victims
of the General Slocum disaster.
A fountain was erected
in remembrance of the victims
in 1906 by the Sympathy Society
of German Ladies, and a
saying is included which states
“They were earth’s purest children,
young and fair”.
This became the worst manmade
disaster in the New York
City area until the Sept. 11 terrorist
attacks in 2001.
(Editor’s Note: Bill Stewart,
who is better known to Saugus
Advocate readers as “The
Old Sachem,” writes a weekly
column – sometimes about
sports. He also opines on current
or historical events or famous
people.)
Schools, is there any one area
where you think the education
system could improve?
A: I feel we don’t foster a
sense of caring about culture
enough. I feel like introducing
different languages into the
curriculum would help.
Q: What’s the best thing you
can say about Saugus Public
Schools?
A: I personally really liked
my English teachers this year.
I felt like there were things
about Saugus they could illuminate
in their teaching. David
Jones is one of the teachers
that has a passion for what
they’re doing. Every year, I feel
like I have a teacher that has a
passion for teaching the kids.
The fact is the kids can really
tell which teachers are interested
in what they’re doing to
build a relationship with them.
Q: What was your favorite
subject?
A: I think my favorite subject
was English because I was naturally
good at it. I also like calculus
because of the teacher.
And I loved my biology and
anatomy class because of the
teacher and I also liked the
subject matter.
Q: Were you a straight-A
student all the way through
school?
ASKS | SEE PAGE 9
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Page 5
Representative Wong supports bill to punish the unauthorized
distribution of sexually explicit images and videos
Legislation also expands abuse defi nition to include coercive control
B
OSTON – State Representative
Donald
Wong (R-Saugus) recently
supported legislation
to close a loophole in Massachusetts
law and address the
unauthorized distribution of
sexually explicit images or videos
via text messaging and
online postings.
House Bill 4744, An Act to
prevent abuse and exploitation,
criminalizes so-called
“revenge porn” by establishing
penalties for disseminating
explicit visual material of
another person without their
consent. The bill also expands
the defi nition of abuse to include
coercive control and assists
survivors by extending
the statute of limitations for
certain domestic violence offenses,
including assault and
battery on a family or household
member or for individuals
with an active restraining
order, from six years to 15
years.
House Bill 4744 was enacted
by the House on a vote of 1510
on June 13 and by the Senate
the same day on a voice
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WONG | SEE PAGE 11
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THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FriDAy, JUnE 28, 2024
WOU Internship Success Story: Brooke Harris
A
(Editor’s Note: Work Opportunities
Unlimited submitted the
following article about Brooke
Harris, a 2020 Saugus High
School graduate who recently
completed an internship with
WOU. Brooke recently received
her Bachelor of Arts degree in
Social Work from the University
of New Hampshire in Durham.
Currently, she is pursuing a master’s
degree in Clinical/Medical
Social Work at the University of
New Hampshire.)
By Mary Leddy
s a senior majoring in social
work at the University
of New Hampshire in
Durham, Brooke Harris was required
to complete a full-year
internship. Her fi rst placement
got off to a rocky start, but then
Brooke joined Work Opportunities
Unlimited (WOU). She
gained valuable industry skills,
helped change the world of work
for people with barriers to employment
and is closer to realizNeed
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Brooke had been placed as an
intern at another organization
during the summer of 2023, but
she quickly grasped that it wasn’t
right for her. The work didn’t
include client-based services,
which was what she preferred
to do, and the long commute
would complicate her school
schedule. Brooke hopped online
and searched for “social work internships”.
WOU’s website was in
the results, so she clicked the link
and was intrigued. She recalls, “I
started watching all of the videos
and I thought, this is just so
fun and positive. I applied on my
own and asked my program if it
was okay to change over to Work
Opportunities, and they said yes.”
In July of 2023, Brooke started
her internship in WOU’s Seacoast
market as a Career Resource Specialist
(CRS), dedicating her days
to breaking down the barriers to
employment for people with disabilities.
Brooke was understandably
nervous at fi rst – after all, as
she says, “I had never done an internship
before, and I had never
worked with people on my own,”
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Chris 2024
Brooke Harris, a 2020 Saugus High School graduate, celebrates
getting her Bachelor of Arts degree in Social Work
at the University of New Hampshire in Durham. She seeks a
career in social work. (Courtesy photo to The Saugus Advocate)
sponsibilities from her previous
part-time jobs in restaurants.
But after Brooke began initial
training, shadowed several other
CRSs in the fi eld and received
her fi rst caseload, she was excited
to dive into the role. “Once I
started doing actual work with
the clients, I thought wow, this is
really cool and really fun!”
Brooke began working with
clients on her own. First, she supported
three clients who bagged
groceries at the same local grocery
store. Then she moved on
to support two clients working
at a retail establishment, and she
also regularly brought a third individual
out into the community.
During these experiences,
Brooke says, “I learned that every
individual has such diff erent
needs.” She kept on top of client
notes each day.
She also had the opportunity
to join a retention plan meeting,
where a WOU client and their
employer meet to discuss the client’s
progress. “Being able to see
how meetings are run in a professional
setting, that was something
new for me,” says Brooke. “It
was very educational.”
Balancing 16 hours each week
at her internship and full-time
college coursework has been
easier for Brooke than she expected.
She has attributed a lot
of learning and growth to her experience
at WOU, noting in particular
time management and
interpersonal skills. “I’ve learned
how to schedule out my day so I
know I can get services in with all
my clients and have enough time
with each of them. Also, especially
with the one-on-one work for
individuals, I’ve learned how to
communicate with people better.
This internship has helped
me in so many ways and I have
learned so much.”
WOU’s President & CEO, David
Dwyer, who supervised Brooke’s
internship, says, “Brooke has
shown tremendous professional
growth over the past year. She
started her paid internship with
our Seacoast team having never
worked in this fi eld, to now
a school year later being a seasoned
professional who can
work with any individual we
serve.
“Brooke has a great way of
connecting to each person she
works with as individuals, and
she adapts her style to that individual.
I have greatly enjoyed
being part of her team, seeing
her confi dence grow, and her
skills fl ourish.
“She has been an asset to
the individuals she has worked
with, and to WOU in general.”
Upon graduating with her
Bachelor’s in Social Work in
May of 2024, Brooke will pursue
her master’s degree in the
same discipline through her
college’s online program. She
hopes to continue working as
a CRS as well, likely in a diff erent
WOU market, once she settles
into a new home after graduation.
Says Brooke, “I have loved
working at WOU. The scheduling
is so fl exible, everyone is so nice,
and I really like working out in
the community.”
After successfully completing
her internship at WOU, Brooke
is ready for whatever the future
brings!
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THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FriDAy, JUnE 28, 2024
Page 7
Another Community Day!
Historic new England welcomes visitors to the Boardman House on July 14 for free tours and talks
(Editor’s Note: Historic New
England issued the following
press release this week.)
J
oin Historic New England
on July 14 for the 2nd Annual
Boardman House
Community Day! With lightning
talks from Historic New
England staff, dive into the
history, preservation, and climate
awareness that it takes
to keep preserving this 1692
gem. Learn more about historic
and environmental resources
in the area from Saugus
Action Volunteers for the
Environment (SAVE) and the
Saugus Historical Society. At
this free event, you can enjoy
house tours, explore at your
own pace, and try your hand
at some family-friendly lawn
games!
At Boardman House (17
Howard Street), take a step
back in time. One of the earliest
houses acquired by Historic
New England, Boardman
House has original 17th
and 18th Century architecturfor
the Society for Preservation
of New England Antiquities
(SPNEA), now known as
Historic New England.
This free event is from noon
to 3:00 p.m.
For more information on
Historic New England, visit
HistoricNewEngland.org or
call 978-377-7459.
About Historic New England
Historic
New England is the
THE BOARDMAN HOUSE: The public will get a chance to
see some Saugus history close-up on July 14, from noon to
3 p.m. at 17 Howard St. during the Second Annual Boardman
House Community Day. This house was built in 1692
for William Boardman III and his family. (Courtesy photo of
Laura Eisener)
al features and off ers a story
of unbroken family history for
over 300 years.
This house was built in 1692
for William Boardman III and
his family. The household also
included an enslaved person
named Mark. While William
Boardman himself only lived
a few more years after moving
here, his descendants lived in
the home until 1911. In 1914
the preservationist William
Sumner Appleton acquired it
oldest, largest, and most comprehensive
regional heritage
organization in the nation.
We bring history to life while
preserving the past for everyone
interested in exploring
the authentic New England
experience from the seventeenth
century to today. Historic
New England owns and
operates thirty-six historic
homes and landscapes spanning
five states. The organization
shares the region’s
history through vast collections,
publications, public
programs, museum properties,
archives, and family stories
that document more than
400 years of life in New England.
For more information
visit www.HistoricNewEngland.org
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THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FriDAy, JUnE 28, 2024
Read, Renew, Repeat!
Saugus Public Library launches its Kids 2024 Summer reading Program
(Editor’s Note: The Saugus Public
Library recently issued the following
press release.)
H
ey Saugus parents of
school-aged children!
If you’re looking for fun,
educational activities, and summer
programming to support
your kids’ learning, stop by the
Saugus Public Library. This summer,
the Library presents “Read,
Renew, Repeat!” the 2024 Summer
Reading program. Activities
include literacy support,
storytimes, discounted museum
passes, Massachusetts park
passes, and take & make crafts.
Families are encouraged to
register their kids for the conservation-themed
program using
the Beanstack app. It’s easy
- just download the Beanstack
app, register under the Saugus
Public Library, and you’re
on your way. For more information,
or to register in person,
stop by the Children’s Room at
the library or visit the Kid’s Summer
Reading page on our website.
The Saugus Public Schools
recommend that students read
at least 20 minutes a day this
summer.
The program is open to young
people, preschool through 6th
grade. We’ll have their favorite
titles, plus free ebooks, audio
books, comics, magazines
& music you can download using
the hoopla and libby digital
collections.
COMMITTEE | FROM PAGE 2
monitoring, post-closure economic
reuse possibilities and
other related issues that may
be identified, according to the
article that was approved.
“I was pleased with the fact
that not a single Town Meeting
Member voted against this article,”
Manoogian said after the
Annual Town Meeting passed
his article.
“The formation of this committee
for the stated purpose
of closure of the ash landfill
sends a strong message that
Saugus wants to see closure
of the landfill and explore other
uses that will neither burden
the public health or the environment,”
Manoogian said.
“The work of this committee
will be serious and non-adversarial.
It is therefore my hope
that WIN will have a company
representative with authority
participate in the meetings,
someone that is not a PR person,
a hired political consultant,
or a local fixer. Town MeetSummer
Reading Program graphic
Did we mention prizes? We’ve
once again partnered with local
businesses to reward summer
reading. Many thanks to those
businesses who have generously
donated!
We’ll have a full prize cart plus
free books to give away. In addition,
we’ll run drawings for
ice cream, donuts, cookies, pizza,
roller skating, bowling, mini
golf, sports merch, and grand
prize drawings for tickets to Canobie
Lake Park and the North
ing has offered them a seat at
the table. Let’s hope they will
fill that seat responsibly.”
Precinct 6 Town Meeting
Member William S. Brown was
the lone member who declined
to support the measure
– by abstaining from the vote.
Brown, who previously told The
Saugus Advocate that he supported
an extension of the ash
landfill as part of an HCA, said
he could not support the creation
of a closure committee.
“It’s not town property,” Brown
said of the landfill.
“How do we make plans for
other people’s property? It’s
not ours to make plans for. I
can’t support this. That’s why
I abstained from the vote,” he
said.
What it will take for WIN to
prevail
WIN’s chief spokesperson Urban
and other company representatives
have advocated
tenaciously in support of expanding
the ash landfill near
the trash-to-energy incinerator
Shore Music Theater’s production
of Beauty and the Beast -
and more!
In addition, there will be special
visits by WildLife Encounters,
Vinny the Bubble Guy, the
Saugus Fire & Police Departments,
Star Wars characters,
Toe Jam Puppet Band, plus bubble,
magic, and puppet shows.
Check out the Library’s online
event calendar for up-to-date
information.
The library is here to help famon
Route 107. But under current
state environmental regulations,
expansion of the ash
landfill in Saugus would not be
allowed.
The HCA, which selectmen
supported a year ago on a 3-2
vote as a precautionary measure
in case the state weakens
environmental regulations, has
no legal basis. Furthermore,
any HCA would have to be negotiated
by the town manager
and wouldn’t take effect unless
the state allowed the company
to expand its ash landfill.
The last two state Department
of Environmental Protection
Commissioners have said
that no expansion of the ash
landfill would be allowed under
the current state environmental
regulations.
If the state loosened the
regulations at the ash landfill,
the Board of Health would
have authority to conduct site
modification hearings to ultimately
decide whether and
how expansion of the ash
landfill would proceed. Then
ilies create a summer reading
routine that is fun for kids and
their families. Turn off the media
before bedtime, sit with a child,
share a book, or read alongside
them. Ask them questions, but
above all, make it fun!
Research shows that children
who read during the summer
months maintain literacy skills
that they’ve worked hard to
build during the school year.
According to Reading Rockets.org,
research with 116 first,
the town manager would
have authority to negotiate
an agreement with WIN
Waste; Saugus would receive
$20 million over the next 20
years while WIN Waste could
continue use of the ash landfill,
according to the nonbinding
HCA supported by
a majority of the selectmen.
It would be up to Crabtree
to dictate the terms of any
agreement.
Several months ago, WIN
Waste began trucking ash
to a company disposal site
in Shrewsbury in an effort
to prolong the life of the ash
landfill. The company announced
that six trucks a
day were leaving the plant,
traveling from Route 107
South to Route 60 East to
Route 1A South to Route 90
West. WIN Waste officials told
the Board of Health that the
trucks would transport about
4,500 tons of ash offsite per
month, adding life to a landfill
that one company official
said last year was expected to
second, and third graders in a
school in a middle class neighborhood
found the decoding
skills of nearly 45% of the participants
and the fluency of
25% declined between May and
September.
So, stay smart!
Have fun!
Stop by the library to register
for summer reading, or to find a
just-right book for your child. It’s
all free, all summer at the Saugus
Public Library!
reach its capacity by the end
of 2025.
Selectman Michael Serino
told Town Meeting members
“Saugus, you can do better”
than expanding the landfill
for another two decades.
“Continued dumping of toxic
ash is not in the best interests
of our public or environmental
health,” Serino said.
He noted that instead of accepting
$20 million from WIN
as part of an HCA, the town
could receive a potential $1.2
million a year from a solar
farm being located at the ash
landfill site. An industrial park
was another possible option.
Serino and Panetta both opposed
the HCA supported by
a majority of the selectmen
last year. Now they will play
key roles in advocating the
timetable and terms for closing
the ash landfill.
Meanwhile, WIN could
continue trucking its ash to
a properly lined landfill in
Shrewsbury “with zero impact
on Saugus,” Manoogian said.
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Page 9
Summer Eats Feeds
Kids and Teens During
the Summer Months
Summer Eats Awareness Week is June 24-28
B
OSTON – Summer Eats
– the Massachusetts
Summer Food Service
Program – is kicking off
across the Commonwealth,
providing free meals to all
kids and teens, ages 18 and
under. In July 2023, over 2.1
million meals were served
across over 1,400 sites statewide
through the Summer
Eats program.
Throughout the school
year, children in Massachusetts
rely on free school
meals to meet most of their
daily nutrition needs. Summer
Eats closes the gap when
the school year ends, helping
to ensure children and teens
continue to grow, learn and
thrive over school vacation.
Participating meal providers
operate and staff meal sites,
often in conjunction with activities
and educational programming
at schools, libraries,
local park and recreation areas,
and more. This year, summer
meal sites are operating
a communal model of feeding
kids onsite. Grab & Go
meals are available in select
rural communities. All are
welcome. No registration or
ID is required. Summer Eats
can be accessed in conjunction
with Summer EBT, additional
funding for groceries
while kids are out of school.
For more than 20 years,
the Massachusetts Department
of Elementary and Secondary
Education (DESE)
and statewide food security
nonprofit Project Bread have
partnered to support meal
providers in offering Summer
Eats meals to children
ASKS| FROM PAGE 4
A: Yes. I’ve been a grade-A
student all along, except for
physics. I got a B one time:
Mr. Fox gave me a B for one
semester. I wound up getting
an A for the class.
Q: What’s the best book
you’ve ever read?
A: That’s a difficult question.
I read at least 50 books
a year. I definitely read more
when I was younger. In AP
Literature, I read eight books
a year. I always loved reading.
I loved fiction when I was
younger. I really like psychological
thrillers right now. I
have a lot of favorite books.
I love “Ace of Spades,” a soin
Massachusetts. Throughout
the school year, the nonprofit
and DESE also partner
to expand access to and
participation in school meal
programs. This year, Project
Bread has granted a total
of $226,000 to 51 Summer
Eats sponsors for their program
outreach and capacity-building.
During Summer
Eats Awareness Week,
Project Bread is encouraging
community members to
help spread the news about
this free program statewide.
“Last week a mom of two
called Project Bread worried
about how she’d feed her
kids when school lets out,”
says Erin McAleer, Project
Bread CEO. “She’s not alone.
In the summer, many families
are forced to stretch exhausted
grocery budgets
even further. Summer Eats is
such an important program
because it helps close that
gap. Summer Eats meal providers
bring the community
together and take some of
the pressure off of families’
budgets. These local providers
go above and beyond to
make healthy meals accessible
for all kids and teens.
Children should spend their
summer playing, growing,
and enjoying time with family
and friends, not worrying
about their next meal.”
For more information
about Summer Eats, including
meal site locations, visit
www.projectbread.org/
summer-eats, text FOOD or
COMIDA to 304-304, or call
1-800-645-8333 for help in
any language.
cial thriller about two students
who go to a boarding
school. And I really like “All
About Love,” By Bell Hooks, a
psychological self-help book.
Q: What does it feel like to
be the top student in your
graduating class, particularly
to become what is believed
to be the first African American
Valedictorian in the history
of Saugus High School?
A: Surreal! It feels good to
know that there’s somebody
out there in the future that
has the sense of representation
from looking at my
accomplishment and seeing
that they can achieve it,
ASKS | SEE PAGE 10
Ginnie keeps winning
Taekwondo Champion Virginia rooney, 82,from Saugus,
takes home the Gold!
(Editor’s Note: The following
article and photos were submitted
by Ivy Muldoon, Media Outreach,
Sun Taekwondo Academy
of Danvers.)
T
he Masters at Danvers
Sun Taekwondo
Academy would
like to congratulate their
students for their exemplary
participation in the
2nd GTA-US Taekwondo
Competition held on June
9th at Stoughton High
School. STK student Virginia
Rooney of Saugus
took home the gold for
her breaking routine. Ginnie,
as she is affectionately
known, is 82 years young,
and continues to inspire everyone
around her.
Our very own 8th degree
Black Belt, Grand Master
Soon Woo Hong, who has
the distinction of being
both domestically and internationally
licensed as a
2nd Class Poom Dan Promotion
Examiner through
World Taekwondo headquarters,
served as the
Tournament Director. A total
of 11 international referees
were in attendance.
Mr. Lauralouis presented
an Official Citation issued
by Massachusetts Governor
Maura Healy recognizing
GTA-US, and State Senator
Walter F. Timilty presented
a Massachusetts Senate
Citation. There were over
1500 people in attendance.
Virginia Rooney continues to win championships in taekwondo
two years after earning her Black Belt at age 80 when she
made history as the most senior student to receive a Black Belt
at Sun Taekwondo Academy in Danvers. (Courtesy photo to The
Saugus Advocate)
Competitors ranged from
ages 4 to 82 years. Danvers
Sun Taekwondo students
brought home 10 gold, 13
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THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FriDAy, JUnE 28, 2024
TOP STUDENT: Sarah Dorielan, this year’s Valedictorian of
Saugus High School, advocates making two years of a foreign
language a mandatory part of the school’s curriculum.
(Saugus Advocate photo by Mark E. Vogler)
ASKS| FROM PAGE 9
too. I think it’s another generation
of students who will appreciate
it.
Q: You mentioned in your
Valedictorian Address that
you are one of the first if not
the first black female Valedictorian.
How did you find out?
A: I emailed my guidance
counselor and talked to some
teachers. There’s no record of
that, so I mentioned I’m one of
the first if not the first black female
Valedictorians at Saugus
High School.
Q: It’s certainly an accomplishment
to be proud of.
And certainly, you are an inspiration
for students of color
in the Saugus Public Schools.
Well, you have gone through
12 years of the town’s public
school system. I know
some folks aren’t comfortable
talking about it, but do you
think things have improved a
lot for students of color in the
school system?
A: I can’t speak for every student
of color, but I think things
have gotten better. I can remember
being the only black
student in the class in elementary
school. There have been
incidents that happen where
you don’t feel comfortable,
but compared to when I was
younger, things have definitely
improved. There’s always a
way to improve culture and
diversity. But I believe positive
strides are being taken by the
school system. We can always
make some improvements.
Q: And as far as the students?
A:
I think there’s an Asian
American Pacific Island Club
in school. And there are students
trying to form a black
and brown student union. And
there should be.
Saugus High’s top four students stand with Superintendent of Schools Michael Hashem
after the Scholarship and Academic/Service Awards night. Left to right: Class President
Jessica Marianne Bremberg, fourth; Sarah Dorielan, the Valedictorian, first; Kathryn Coelho
DeSouza, class marshal, third; Gabriella Lucia Huber, the Salutatorian, second. (Saugus
Advocate photo by Mark E. Vogler)
I think we’re all trying to
make a change. It’s hard to get
people to change. But I think
the student body is definitely
okay with addressing the
challenges. I think it’s up to
the adults in the community
to address situations that are
not okay or make them feel
uncomfortable. I think there
should be more conversation
about the changes we make
in the community.
Q: From your perspective, as
the top academically ranked
student in this year’s graduating
class, what are the changes
that need to be made to make
Saugus Public Schools a better
school system?
A: I think there needs to
be more open conversation
about what the students need.
I think the faculty could be
more attentive to what each
child really needs.
I also think that the people
in the education system are
underappreciated and overworked.
They’ve given me
what I’ve had for the past 12
years. All of the teachers have
helped to make me the student
I am.
Q: What would be your major
criticism of the school system
in Saugus?
A: That’s a very difficult
question to answer, but I feel
like making foreign languages
an optional part of the curriculum
needs to change. I believe
that at least two years of
studying a foreign language
should be mandatory – not
optional. I feel like making it
optional is a disservice to the
students.
Q: Saugus High doesn’t provide
many options for students
to study a foreign language.
A:
Right now, it’s just Spanish
and Latin. It’s difficult to
have a plethora of options because
of a shortage of schoolteachers.
But I feel that adding
more foreign languages
would increase the level of interest
among students.
Q: All things considered,
what’s the best thing that Saugus
Public Schools has done
for you?
A: Saugus Public Schools
has definitely brought me
people that made me better as
a student and as a person. It’s
put me in touch with students
who have made my character
better and teachers that have
cared for me and my interests.
I have a few teachers each year
that I love. Saugus High challenges
and living in the community
have made me who
I am. I can’t regret the time I
spent here.
Q: Anything else that you
would like to share about
yourself or about Saugus Public
Schools?
A: I’m very grateful for the
opportunities that Saugus
High School has given me and
I’m very excited about the opportunities
ahead.
DIPLOMA PRESENTATION: Saugus High School Principal
Brendon Sullivan congratulates Sarah Dorielan after presenting
her with a Saugus High School diploma. (Saugus Advocate
photo by Mark E. Vogler)
PROUD PARENTS: Sarah Dorielan (center) celebrates her Valedictorian night with her parents,
Frantz Dorielan and Guerlande Aristil. (Saugus Advocate photo by Mark E. Vogler)
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Page 11
~ Guest Commentary ~
Drug Education and Prevention Programs Save Lives in Local Communities
By Judy Boulay
I
t seems as if every community,
big or small, has been
impacted by the problems
associated with substance
use and drug overdose. Within
these communities, these
problems extend into the family
unit, with people becoming
addicted and dying because
of drugs.
However, community drug
education and prevention programs
can be a fi rst line of defense.
There is hope for the
younger generations as they
have more access to prevention
and education resources
to help them make informed
decisions. In addition, more information
is available for parents
[https://www.addicted.
org/supe/teens/teens-and-alcohol/]
to equip them with
the tools to help their kids understand
the dangers and risks
associated with drugs and alcohol.
Drug
education and prevention
campaigns operate across
Massachusetts through government
programs, community
coalitions, and other entities.
The state’s Department
of Public Health has the Bureau
of Substance Addiction
Services, which offers free
evidence-based substance
use prevention training for
schools.
Additionally, there is iDECIDE,
an organization that developed
a drug education curriculum
for state middle and
high school students. Anyone
can become a facilitator. The
Center for Strategic Prevention
Support off ers resources
to Massachusetts communities
seeking to prevent and reduce
alcohol and drug abuse. Finally,
Project Here provides free
resources to educators across
the state to teach prevention
to middle school students.
Prevention and education
information is valuable as it
contributes, for example, to
preventing underage alcohol
abuse and recreational drug
use. This can be especially vital
during Fourth of July celebrations.
Binge drinking, for
instance, around Independence
Day is typical, and it is
known as one of the heaviest
drinking holidays of the year. In
social settings, it becomes easy
to consume too much alcohol.
According to drug abuse statistics,
Massachusetts has one
of the nation’s lowest rates of
underage-related drinking
deaths. Roughly 21% of adults
over 18 in the state binge drink
at least once per month. Annually,
there is an average of 2,760
deaths in the state attributable
to excessive alcohol use.
Parents play an essential role
when providing drug education.
They can take the initiative
to create an inclusive and
supportive environment with
their children. This can equip
them with the tools they need
to make knowledgeable decisions
surrounding alcohol and
drug use.
Teens and adults all use
drugs and alcohol for diff erent
reasons. Much of their use is
linked to peer pressure, whether
from peers, in a social setting,
or in the case of someone
they look up to who they see
drinking or using drugs.
Stress is also a common factor,
and alcohol or drugs seem
like an easy escape from the
problems of life.
Additionally, environment
and family history are contributing
factors. Children, for example,
who grow up in households
with heavy drinking
and recreational drug use are
more likely to experiment with
drugs.
Any parents wondering what
to do should consider starting
the conversation about alcohol
and drug use early. It is also essential
to be calm, loving, and
supportive. Seek out specialized
resources, such as those
off ered by county or nonprofit
organizations providing prevention
and education.
Additionally, parents want
to focus on making it safe for
their children to tell them anything
and never end the conody
Boulay is a mother of
two with a passion for helping
others. She currently
works as a Community Outreach
Coordinator for DRS,
which stands for Drug Rehab
Services, to help spread
awareness of the dangers of
drugs and alcohol. (Courtesy
photo)
versation, keeping it going regardless
of age.
Local drug education resources
are here to help assist
people of all ages in making
knowledgeable decisions
about drugs and alcohol.
BBB Scam Alert: “Free solar panels” can cost you big time!
How to spot a phony offer and fi nd a trustworthy business
I
f you want solar panels, be
very careful when evaluating
installation off ers. Con
artists use misleading sales tactics
and lies to trick homeowners
out of money and personal
information. If you’ve received
an off er for “free solar panels,”
it could be a scam. Always look
for businesses you can trust –
like Accredited Businesses using
the Better Business Bureau
(BBB) Seal.
How the scam works: Someone
contacts you through email,
phone, social media or even in
person pretending to be a solar
company salesperson. The “repWONG
| FROM PAGE 5
had previously passed the
House and Senate. Representative
Alyson Sullivan-Almeida
(R-Abington), who is herself
a survivor of domestic
abuse and an advocate for
raising awareness of the problem
and assisting other survivors,
served on the Conference
Committee and helped
negotiate the fi nal language.
Representative Wong noted
that under the compromise
bill, several measures will be
implemented to prevent the
sharing of explicit visual material
without the consent of
resentative” has a special off er:
They can install solar panels on
your home for a very low cost –
or even free. This amazing deal is
only available for a limited time,
so you must act now!
From here, the scam can take
several turns. In some versions,
the scammer is after your personal
information. They ask you
to fi ll out forms with your banking
details “to see if you qualify.”
Other times, the “solar representative”
claims you need to pay
upfront costs, which they promise
will be reimbursed by a (nonexistent)
government program.
In other instances, the scammer
the individual being photographed
or recorded. In addition
to making “revenge
porn” punishable by up to 2
½ years in prison or a $10,000
fi ne, the bill increases the fi ne
for criminal harassment from
$1,000 to $5,000. Additionally,
House Bill 4744 prevents
the use of computer-generated
artifi cial intelligence (AI)
for the creation of deepfake
revenge porn.
House Bill 4744 also amends
the defi nition of “abuse” to include
coercive control, which
is defi ned as regulating and
controlling communication,
movements, daily behavior,
might begin the installation of
the solar panels on your home
but then never return to fi nish
the job; or they might install the
panels but do a poor job, resulting
in panels that don’t work. If
you reach out to the scammer
to fi nish the job or fi x the panels,
they will become unreachable
and disappear with your money.
BBB Scam Tracker has seen
numerous reports of this kind
of scam. One homeowner was
approached by a door-to-door
salesperson “claiming he could
get me a new roof plus solar
equipment, with a government
rebate for 26% off cost, essenand
fi nances. This abuse often
involves the isolation of
victims from family or support
systems, as well as threats, intimidation,
and various forms
of emotional abuse. Expanding
this defi nition will allow
victims of abuse to qualify for
an abuse prevention order.
In addition, House Bill 4744
provides for an educational
diversion program for minors
who engage in sexting,
which would be developed
by the Attorney General’s offi
ce and would allow district
attorneys, law enforcement,
and clerk magistrates to retially
paying for the new roof.”
After doing their research, the
homeowner found that while a
government rebate program existed,
the salesperson misrepresented
it to make a sale.
In another case, a homeowner
shared, “[Company name
redacted] is a solar company
promising one free year and
other incentives upon signing
but they never followed
through on anything in their
contract. After the instillation of
solar, they stopped answering
their phones and went silent on
customers. We fi nanced a 70k
solar project for our house and
fer a child, when appropriate,
to the program. According to
Representative Wong, the purpose
of this diversion program
is to provide an alternative
punishment for minors who
could otherwise be charged
with felony possession of child
pornography and give them
a better understanding of
the consequences of their actions.
The bill also encourages
school districts to incorporate
aspects of this program into
their curriculum as a learning
tool for students and requires
an annual review of the program
and curriculum by the
Offi ce of the Child Advocate.
are still waiting on them to fi nish
instillation a year later. They
promised to provide a lifetime
upkeep and maintenance on
the panels but are not doing so.
They took the money and ran.”
How to avoid solar panel
scams:
• Do your research. Genuine
incentive programs and reputable
solar energy contractors
do exist. Before you accept an
unsolicited off er, do some research
on solar companies in
your area. Investigate each company’s
reputation and business
SCAM | SEE PAGE 18
Massachusetts is currently
one of only two states
that do not have specific
laws against revenge porn,
the other being South Carolina.
Representative Wong
noted that former Governor
Charlie Baker filed legislation
to close this loophole
and protect victims in 2017,
2019 and again in 2021, but
none of those bills reached
his desk, despite the House
approving a bill in 2022 that
died in the Senate.
Governor Healey has until
June 23 to sign the bill
into law.
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THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FriDAy, JUnE 28, 2024
The Sounds of Saugus
Good morning, Saugus
Last week, I was fortunate
enough to receive a guided
tour of the ChaRM Center,
courtesy of the town’s Director
of Solid Waste & Recycling,
Scott A. Brazis. In case you
missed it, Scott was the subject
of last week’s interview
for “The Advocate Asks” feature
of The Saugus Advocate.
And if you don’t know what
the acronym “CHaRM” stands
for, it means Center for Hard
to Replace Materials.
And if you haven’t visited
the CHaRM Center yet, it’s a
worth a trip to the back of
the Department of Public
Works Building at 515 Main
St. The former Saugus selectman
has a lot to be proud of
when you consider the transformation
that the center has
undergone since he took over
the Solid Waste/Recycling Department
20 months ago. But
when it comes to accepting
credit for the many aesthetic
and functional improvements,
Scott’s standard line
is “Any of the improvements
made at the CHaRM Center
was a team effort.”
Scott gave me the nickel
tour last week, showing me
the various trash receptacles,
sheds and bins that store various
recyclables. He replicated
the guided tour he gave me
with a photo and PowerPoint
presentation that he gave this
past Wednesday at the 51st
Annual Dinner and Meeting
of Saugus Action Volunteers
for the Environment (SAVE).
As this year’s guest speaker,
Scott noted that close to 1,500
people a year use the CHaRM
Center.
“It’s a place where people
can bring their clothes and
shoes,” he said.
When it comes to getting
rid of trash – like old TVs –
there are some bargains to be
had. For instance, town residents
can pick up three stickers
for free so they can drop
off a maximum of three teleswapped
doesn’t get ruined
by inclement weather. Stay
tuned.
Gearing up for July 4
With the Fourth of July
winding up on a Thursday this
year – our normal production
day in Everett – The Saugus
Advocate and the three sister
papers of Advocate News
will have an early deadline for
next week’s paper. Any announcements
or news items
must be submitted by Monday
morning to get into next
week’s paper.
A Holiday trash delay
The Town of Saugus announces
that trash and recycling
collection will run on
a one-day delay for the July
4th Holiday. Trash and recycling
will not be collected on
Thursday, July 4, due to the
holiday. Collection will resume
on a one-day delay on
Friday, July 5.
Residents are kindly asked
to leave trash and recycling
curbside by 7 a.m. the day after
their normally scheduled
collection day. The Town of
Saugus would like to thank everyone
for their cooperation.
Please contact Solid Waste/
Recycling Coordinator Scott
A. Brazis at 781-231-4036 with
any questions.
Summer Concerts “In The
THAT FOURTH OF JULY FEELING: Some folks really know how to decorate for the July 4
holiday – like this home on Lynn Fells Parkway that features the Statue of Liberty in a yard
decked out with bunting. (Courtesy Photo of Laura Eisener)
vision sets. Compost stickers
cost $25.
Scott conceded that the
town could be making a lot
more money than $3 apiece
for the tires that are dropped
off. “Better to have them at the
CHaRM Center than on the
side of the road or in the river,”
he said.
One of the storage receptacles
is collecting mattresses
that were illegally dumped
throughout town. People
need to remember that the
town stopped picking up mattresses
on Nov. 1, 2022, when
a state law went into effect
that bans mattresses from disposal
in the trash. Really, the
best way to get rid of an old
mattress these days is to pay
the extra $25 to discard the
old mattress when you buy a
new one.
It’s safe to say that there’s
a lot more stuff getting recycled
at the CHaRM Center
these days.
SAVE Co-President Ann
Devlin asked Scott if it were
possible to find room for a
Swap Shop at the CHaRM
Center. Scott said it’s doable
if he can find a suitable area
or space where stuff being
Park”
Here’s some good summer
music to your ears. Once
again, the Saugus Public Library
and the Saugus Iron
Works National Historic Site
will be teaming up to bring
free outdoor concerts “In The
Park” at the Saugus Iron Works
National Historic Site. The
Squeezebox Stompers, a Boston
area Americana Roots
band, will kick off the summer
series on July 10.
“They’ve performed Americana,
Cajun, zydeco, blues,
THE SOUNDS | SEE PAGE 13
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Page 13
THE SOUNDS| FROM
PAGE 12
folk, and originals all over New
England for the past 15 years,”
according to promotional information
provided by the
Iron Works.
“Members of the band have
received Boston Music Awards
and Songwriting Awards. They
are noted for their step-lively
up-beat music inspiring audiences
to get up and dance.
Their instrumentation includes
accordion, keyboards,
fiddle, saxophone, harmonica,
penny whistle, guitar, bass,
and drums. The Squeezebox
Stompers guarantee a rockin’
good time.”
These free weekly concerts
are open to the public and begin
at 6 p.m. on Wednesdays
beginning July 10 through
August 28. Here’s the 2024
lineup:
July 10: Squeezebox Stompers
(Cajun & Zydeco).
July 17: Memorylaners (50s
& 60s).
July 24: Mamadou (World
Music, West African Rhythms).
July 31: Sweet Soul Sounds
(Motown, Funk, Hip Hop).
August 7: Atwater & Donnelly
(Trad. American & Celtic
Folk & Dance).
August 14: Ditto (Folk &
Rock: 60s and 70s).
August 21: Headlands (Folk,
Country, Americana Pop).
August 28: Jumpstreet
(Rock, R&B, Blues, & Jazz).
Bring chairs or a blanket and
a picnic! Enjoy a summer evening
at the historic Saugus
Iron Works with great music
and friends!
This year’s summer concert
series is partially funded
through a generous grant
from the Mass Cultural Council.
Keeping
the weight off
Wayne
It’s been going on for close
to four years when my older
brother Wayne got on the
scale at the office of his longtime
primary care physician
Mark A. Ringiewicz and hit
his heaviest weight of 377
pounds. Oct. 5, 2020. That
was not a great day. And at
that point, I requested that
Dr. Ringiewicz make a referral
to a doctor who specializes in
diet and weight loss. It was
four days later that Dr. Jessica
Inwood took Wayne on as
a new patient.
Fast forward to last Friday,
June 21. I wasn’t happy that
Wayne had gained about five
pounds since a previous visit
with Dr. Inwood about four
months earlier. But Dr. Inwood
urged me to look at the complete
story of Wayne’s weight
loss. The fact is that since Oct.
5, 2020, Wayne has managed
to maintain a cumulative
weight loss of 117 pounds –
roughly a third of his original
body weight.
“Don’t rest on your laurels,”
Dr. Inwood told Wayne.
“But be proud of what you’ve
done. Keep up the good habits,”
she said.
In Wayne’s case, the good
habits are regular exercise
and making smart choices
about food – which has been
an ongoing challenge. Over
the past four years, I’ve maintained
a tough approach with
my brother – oftentimes,
getting in his face when he
gained weight or didn’t lose
anything.
“So, of all the patients you
have, how does Wayne size
up?” I asked Dr. Inwood.
“You’re a SuperStar,” the
doctor told Wayne, noting
that none of her patients have
maintained the weight loss to
the extent that Wayne has.
Of course, at 5-foot-10, he
could stand to lose 30 to 40
more pounds. But Dr. Inwood
wanted to reinforce in Wayne’s
mind that what he’s done to
this point is remarkable. He’s
much closer to 200 pounds
than the 400 pounds he came
close to at one point.
Wayne still looks upon me
as his younger brother and
sometimes complains to both
doctors that I’m too demanding
about his weight. But
I keep reminding him that
somebody has to play the
heavy and continue to motivate
him if he wants to keep
the weight off – because he
could easily gain it all back
and wipe out all that progress.
Stay tuned.
What’s happening at the
Saugus Public Library
For schoolchildren looking
for interesting projects and
programs to participate in this
fall, there’s plenty to do at the
Saugus Public Library. There
are some very good programs
offered for grownups, too.
Upcycled Feather Wall Hanging:
by Pop Up Art School,
ages 10-18, Friday, July 12,
11:30-12:30 in the Community
Room. Please sign up using
the online Events Calendar
starting on June 28. Get
ready to turn upcycled materials
into an amazing wall
hanging for your room! You’ll
use strips of leftover fabric to
create a backdrop for feathers
made from fringed pages
of old books. If you want, you
can give the feathers a splash
of color with watercolor paint.
This project is sustainable and
perfect for adding a personal
touch to your space! sauguspubliclibrary.org
– 781231-4168.
Saugus
Police and Cruiser
Visit: Come along to enjoy a
special story time, Wednesday,
July 10 at 10 a.m. at the
Saugus Iron Works National
Historic Site. Recommended
for ages three and up. Rain
date is July 17. Please check
the event calendar the day of
the program for updates.
Community Garden volunteers
welcomed
If you love gardening and
would love to volunteer a few
hours for a good cause this
summer, offer your services at
the Community Garden at St.
John’s Episcopal Church. Volunteers
are welcome to come
any Friday or Saturday morning
for the rest of the summer
to help weed and nurture the
crops. If these times are difficult,
arrangements can be
made for other days. For details,
contact The Rev. John
Beach at St. John’s Episcopal
Church (revjbeach@gmail.
com).
Food Pantry notes
The Saugus United Parish
Food Pantry is open today
(Friday, June 21) from 9:30-11
a.m. at 50 Essex St. in the basement
of Cliftondale Congregational
Church.
Legion Breakfasts over for
summer
American Legion Post 210
would like to thank all those
who made the 2023-24 breakfast
season such a success,
and wish them a wonderful
summer. We will resume serving
breakfast on Friday, September
6, 2024.
A “Shout Out” for volunteers
We
didn’t receive any “shout
outs” this week from readers
who wanted to publicly recognize
somebody for doing
a good deed or a project that
contributes to the betterment
of Saugus. This week, we’d like
to recognize all of the summertime
volunteers who work
in the library, the town parks,
on the athletic playing fields,
in the food pantry, at the Saugus
Senior Center, in the nursing
homes and all over town.
Want to “Shout Out” a fellow
Saugonian?
This is an opportunity for
our paper’s readers to single
out – in a brief mention –
remarkable acts or achievements
by Saugus residents or
an act of kindness or a nice
gesture. Just send an email
(mvoge@comcast.net) with a
mention in the subject line of
“An Extra Shout Out.” No more
than a paragraph; anything
longer might lend itself to a
story and/or a photo.
Theatre Company of Saugus
sets audition dates
This came in from the Theatre
Company of Saugus,
which will present “Evil Dead
the Musical” in October 2024.
Auditions are scheduled for
July 8, 9 and 11; with callbacks
on July 13.
The Story: Five college students
go to an abandoned
cabin in the woods and accidentally
unleash an evil force
that turns them into demons.
It’s all up to Ash (a housewares
employee turned demon-killing
hero) and his trusty chainsaw
to save the day. Blood
flies. Limbs are dismembered.
Demons tell bad jokes … and
all to music. The songs in the
show are completely off the
wall, with titles like “All the
Men in My Life Keep Getting
Killed by Candarian Demons”
and “What the F**k
was That?” and have had the
audience rolling in their seats
and screaming for more and
more blood.
You don’t need to be a fan
of Evil Dead to love this show.
You don’t need to be a fan of
horror to love this show. You
don’t even need to be a fan
of musicals to love this show.
This is a pure comedy start to
finish. It has fun with the horror
genre, and in doing so appeals
to a wider audience than
you could ever imagine.
The director is Jason HairWynn,
who directed previous
Theatre Company of Saugus
productions of “Little Shop
of Horrors” and “Nevermore.”
The music director is Shane
Stetcher, with choreography
by Jason Hair-Wynn and Jill
Tokac and fight choreography
by Amanda O’Donnell. The
stage manager is Ally Lewis.
Performances of “Evil Dead
the Musical” are on October
11-12-13 and 18-19-20, 2024.
Rehearsals are planned for
Sunday afternoons and on
Monday and Wednesday evenings,
with the possibility of
adding more based on actor
availability.
For the audition, please prepare
a song from the show for
a character you are most interested
in, or sing a song in the
style of the show. All songs,
sheet music, and sides are
linked on the theatre’s website.
Sign up for an audition
slot on one of these dates:
· Monday, July 8 – 7-10 p.m.
· Tuesday, July 9 – 7-10 p.m.
· Thursday, July 11 – 7-10
p.m.
To sign up for an audition
slot, to see the role descriptions
and to view the audition
sides, music and other information,
please visit the Auditions
page on the Theatre
Company of Saugus website:
TCSaugus.org/auditions/
Callbacks will be on Saturday,
July 13, starting at 1:00
p.m. (Plan for a long afternoon.)
Callbacks will consist
of singing, acting, movement
and possible stage combat.
You will be learning a short
combination from the show.
This dance is not very complicated,
and you do not have
to be a strong dancer to be in
this show. The main focus is
that you can commit to this
hilarious choreography and
show the character as a “deadite,”
as well as retain choreography
quickly.
Performances, auditions
and rehearsals of “Evil Dead
the Musical” will be at the
Theatre Company of Saugus
home at the American Legion
Post 210 at 44 Taylor St. in Saugus,
Mass. The upstairs performance
space is not wheelchair
accessible.
June events at Kowloon
JUNE 28: CONCERT SERIES:
DAVE MACKLIN BAND – 7:00
p.m. – Free General Admission
or $10 Reserved Seating.
JUNE 29: Concert Series: XS
BAND – 7:00 p.m. – Free General
Admission or $10 Reserved
Seating.
For all tickets, call the Kowloon
Restaurant at 781-2330077
or visit online at www.
kowloonrestaurant.com
What ’s breaking at
Breakheart
On Thursdays now through
August, the Visitor Center will
host a Wild Breakheart Series
from 10–11 a.m. There will be
no program on July 4. Join
us for this rotating nature series
as we explore different
aspects of Breakheart! Meet
outside the Visitor Center; rain
cancels. This month will feature
the Breakheart Birding
Club – come see what birds
call Breakheart their home as
we explore the park! During
July, it will be Tree ID – explore
the park and discover what
trees are in the park and how
to identify them. In August,
park visitors can participate
in Animal Exploration – enjoy
discovering what animals call
Breakheart home!
On Saturdays now through
August, there will be an Easy,
Breezy, Beautiful Hike from
1:30–3:30 p.m. (There will be
no program on July 13.) Join
the Park Interpreter for this
weekly guided hike! Each
trip will highlight natural and
historic features that make
Breakheart unique. Hikes will
be moderately paced and
range from two to three miles
over sometimes uneven and
THE SOUNDS | SEE PAGE 15
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THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FriDAy, JUnE 28, 2024
Saugus Gardens in the Summer
Here’s what’s blooming in town this week to make your walks more enjoyable
By Laura Eisener
W
ith the glorious
Fourth of July arriving
this coming
Thursday, there are quite a few
gardens which are showing
off some red, white and blue
decorations. In many places
the flower colors are picking
up the theme, with patriotic
planters, tricolor flower arrangements
out on the table
at the barbecue and shrubs
that echo the colors of the
flags and bunting on porches
and walls.
True blue is one of the most
sought-after flower colors, and
in my supermarket bouquet of
red gerbera, red carnations,
white daisy mums and “blue
daisies,” all the flower colors
are natural except the blue
daisies, which rely on some
kind of blue food coloring for
their bright color. Florists can
use a sprayed-on color or the
coloring can be drawn up by
the stems’ vascular system by
using a nontoxic color in the
water. Spray paint will be a bit
more durable, as the drawnup
color may fade if the flowers
are then placed in a vase
with non-colorized water.
However, there are some flowers
in our gardens that do have
a natural blue hue, though few
of them, except hydrangeas
and delphiniums, have long
enough stems for most traditional
vases and cut flower arrangements.
Pale
blue dwarf morning glory
(Evolvulus ‘Blue My Mind’),
scarlet petunia (Petunia ‘Supertunia
Mini Vista Scarlet’), dark
blue lobelia (Lobelia ‘Laguna
Dark Blue’) and white calibrachoa
(Calibrachoa ‘Minibells
White’) make up a mixed planter
bowl that will keep the patriotic
colors going all summer
long on my front steps.
The dwarf morning glory
(Evolvulus spp.) is an uncommon
annual flower, but some
hybrids are available in nurseries
which can be very nice additions
to gardens and containers.
There are about 100 species
in this genus, and most are
from South America. They differ
from our more familiar morning
glories (Ipomoea, Convolvulus,
Calystegia spp.) in that
the dwarf morning glories do
not climb at all, and their five
petals are more separate, not
completely fused into a funnel.
The foliage also is very different,
as these leaves are oval, not
heart shaped or angular. True to
the trait which gives the family
(Convolvulaceae) its common
A patriotic bouquet on an
outdoor table sets the scene
for a holiday breakfast. (Photo
courtesy of Laura Eisener)
Pale blue dwarf morning glory and white calibrachoa can make up part of a patriotic color
scheme, or when used without red can be a soothing combination with seashore vibes.
(Photo courtesy of Laura Eisener)
Dark blue lobelia is the perfect
plant for tiny flower
pots in a red, white and blue
scheme. (Photo courtesy of
Laura Eisener)
name, dwarf morning glories
open in the morning and close
up at night. The hybrid ‘Blue
My Mind’ is a bright blue with a
white star-shaped center. It is a
beautiful color in the sunshine
but will close up before the fireworks
start.
Hydrangeas are looking
spectacular this summer. Blue
varieties (Hydrangea macrophylla,
Hydrangea montana
and hybrids) are blooming a
bit earlier and certainly more
abundantly than in most recent
years. On many plants,
it looks like every stem has a
flower cluster. The rainy weather
last summer produced a lot
of buds for this year, and the
mild winter ensured the buds
remained viable until bloom
time. While last week the hot
days caused flowers to wilt by
afternoon, this past weekend’s
frequent sprinkles kept the
Lina Tollis of Lynnhurst has
set her New Guinea impatiens
against a spectacular
blue hydrangea. (Photo courtesy
of Laura Eisener)
plants well hydrated throughout
the day – perfect conditions
for blue hydrangeas.
Lina Tollis’s garden in Lynnhurst
looks very festive, as she
has set delightful pots of Saugus
colors – red and white
New Guinea Impatiens (Impatiens
hawkeri) – against a backdrop
of her beautiful true-blue
hydrangeas. Nearly 20 years
ago, when the original ‘Endless
Summer’ hydrangea was introduced,
it made growing blue
hydrangeas north of Cape Cod
much more rewarding than in
the past. Until then, most blue
hydrangeas would bloom only
50% of the time, and you might
go several years without seeing
a single blossom if the winters
were too cold. There was a successful
end result of hybridizing
the very bud hardy white flowering
species (Hydrangea arborescens)
with the popular blue
A bowl of red, white and blue flowers decorates a front
porch with patriotic colors. (Photo courtesy of Laura Eisener)
bigleaf hydrangea (Hydrangea
macrophylla). The variety ‘Endless
Summer’ can bloom on
both old wood (buds formed
last summer) and new wood
(buds formed this spring), and
now there are many other
new hydrangea varieties which
share this excellent characteristic.
If your hydrangea is over 20
years old, it is not going to perform
as reliably and there may
be years when there are no
blossoms at all.
New Guinea impatiens are
among the most popular annuals
in recent years. Their
flowers come in a wide range
of colors, and the foliage has
an interesting texture as well as
sometimes having other colors
in the leaves. Like the hydrangea
beside them in Lina’s garden,
they prefer morning sun
and afternoon shade, so they
can be successful companions
through the season.
Many container gardens rely
on blue shades of annual lobelia
with its abundant small
flowers to give necessary color
to red, white and blue gardens.
They can play the starring role
in tiny flowerpots, which are
ideal for sitting on narrow window
sills or can even be planted
in teacups at each place setting
on the table. The lobelia
plants in the picture above (Lobelia
‘Laguna Dark Blue’) came
in six packs, which is why their
root system is still able to fit
into the small pots.
Editor’s Note: Laura Eisener is
a landscape design consultant
who helps homeowners with
landscape design, plant selection
and placement of trees
and shrubs, as well as perennials.
She is a member of the Saugus
Garden Club and offered to
write a series of articles about
“what’s blooming in town”
shortly after the outbreak of the
COVID-19 pandemic. She was
inspired after seeing so many
people taking up walking.
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Page 15
Tomorrow is “Shred It”
Day in Saugus
Town DPW will receive fi nancial and personal paper it can shred to
recycle instead of shipping it to the trash incinerator to be burned
T
own Manager Scott C.
Crabtree announced
this week the return of
a once-popular “Shred-It” event
for town residents who are willing
to recycle fi nancial and personal
papers instead of sending
them to the trash-to-energy
incinerator to be burned.
“In Massachusetts, hundreds of
thousands of taxpayers’ dollars
are spent each year to dispose
of paper in waste facilities that
burn paper which could be recycled,”
Crabtree said in a press
release issued by his offi ce on
Wednesday. “The Town encourages
residents to take advantage
of this opportunity to support
the environment and protect
their sensitive information,
especially documents containing
fi nancial or personal information.”
THE
SOUNDS| FROM
PAGE 13
rocky terrain; best for ages
eight years and up. Meet at
the Visitor Center. Rain cancels.
On
Fridays now through August,
the Visitor Center will
host a Kidleidoscope from
10:30–11:30 a.m. Come join
our park interpreter for a story
time and nature walk! Complete
a small craft and explore
the woods! Walks are gently
paced and approximately
one mile, though not accessible
for strollers; appropriate
for families with children
three to fi ve years old. Meet
at the Visitor Center. (No program
on July 13.)
There will be Family Fishing
on Saturdays now through
August from 9:30–11:00 a.m.
at Camp Nihan (131 Walnut
St.). Join our park interpreter
for a drop-in fi shing program!
Learn how to fi sh, what fi sh
live in our ponds and how to
catch and release responsibly.
Bait and a handful of rods will
be provided, but feel free to
bring your own gear and fi sh
with us and share your tips!
No license required if fi shing
in this program. Appropriate
for families with children
five years old and up. Meet
at Camp Nihan. Rain cancels.
Summer track is coming
Coach Christopher Tarantino’s
popular Summer Track
for youths ages fi ve through
The “Shred-It” event will take
place tomorrow (Saturday,
June 29) from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m.
behind the DPW at 515 Main St.
“We fi rst held this event in
2017 and held it annually until
the pandemic,” Crabtree said.
“We are happy to be able to
respond to requests for its return
and encourage all Saugus
residents to take advantage
of this opportunity,” he
said. “While shredding provides
a secure means of disposal
for sensitive documents,
it also contributes signifi cantly
to our community’s eff ort to
reduce waste and support the
environment.”
Crabtree noted the benefi ts
of paper recycling according
to the Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA):
• Recycling one ton of paper
18 begins on July 1. The program
is scheduled for 6 to 8
p.m. at the track outside Belmonte
STEAM Academy. Registration
will run from June 2428.
Here is the schedule:
July 1-5: fi rst formal week.
July 8-11: second formal
week.
July 12, 10 a.m.-12 p.m.:
makeup practice (if necessary).
July
12, 6 p.m.: pasta dinner
at Prince.
July 13, 9 a.m.: in-house
meet at Serino Stadium.
July 15-18: retrain week.
July 20: Summer Showdown,
Cranston, R.I.
July 24: wrap up.
Cost: $250 fi rst year, $200 returning
with uniform, $150 if
three years or more in summer
program; includes pasta dinner,
t-shirt, uniform and entry
into Summer Showdown.
Please note that these programs
are not being off ered
through the town’s Youth
& Recreation Department.
Please contact Coach Christopher
Tarantino directly with
questions at 781-854-6778
or christophertarantino24@
gmail.com.
CHaRM Center is open
The Town of Saugus recently
announced that the CHaRM
Center is open Wednesday
and Saturday from 8 a.m. to
2 p.m. Residents will be required
to buy a $25 Sticker to
use the Compost Facilities as
well as to recycle hard plassaves
about 4,100 kWh of electricity
compared to its disposal.
• One shower uses roughly
2kWh of energy (assuming an
electric water heater).
• Each ton of paper recycled,
therefore, saves enough energy
for more than 2000 showers.
• One mature tree provides
enough oxygen each year to
support two people.
• Each ton of paper recycled
saves approximately 17 mature
trees, or enough oxygen
to support 34 people for a year.
“The Town of Saugus encourages
all residents to protect
their data and support the environment!”
Crabtree said.
Please contact Solid Waste/
Recycling Coordinator Scott
A. Brazis at 781-231-4036 with
any questions.
tics. The rest of the Facility’s
features are free to use for any
Saugus resident. Residents are
also allowed three TVs or computers/CRT
monitors for free
per household each year. The
Town of Saugus reserves the
right to refuse any material
if quantity or quality is questionable.
The
final date the CHaRM
Center will be open for the
season is December 14. However,
the Facility will be open
the following winter dates,
weather permitting: January
18, 2025, from 8 a.m. to 2 p.m.;
February 15, 2025, from 8 a.m.
to 2:00 p.m.; March 15, 2025,
from 8:00 a.m. to 2:00 p.m.
Please contact Solid Waste/
Recycling Coordinator Scott
A. Brazis at 781-231-4036 with
any questions.
Brick program for Saugus
War Monument
The Saugus War Monument
Committee, once again, is
sponsoring the Buy-A-Brick
Program to honor all those
who have served their country.
If you would like to purchase
one in the name of
someone who is presently
serving or has served, in the
memory of a loved one, or just
someone from your family,
school, etc., the general pricing
is $100 for a 4” X 8” brick
(three lines) or $200 for an
8” X 8” brick (fi ve lines). Each
line is a maximum of 15 characters.
The improvement and
THE SOUNDS | SEE PAGE 17
Say nir
Sa
ay nior
y Senior
Seni
by Jim Miller
Do You Need a
Digital Will?
Dear Savvy Senior,
My wife and I had our estate
plan – including a will, power
of attorney and advance directive
– drawn up about 10 years
ago but have recently read that
our plan should include a digital
will too. What can you tell us
about this?
Almost 80
Dear Almost,
If you or your wife spend
much time online, adding a
separate digital will document
to your estate plan that provides
a list of your digital assets
would be extremely helpful
to your loved ones when
you die, not to mention it will
help protect your privacy.
Here’s what you should know.
Do You Have Digital Asset?
The term “digital assets” refers
to personal information
that is stored electronically
on either a computer or an
online cloud server account
that belongs to an individual.
Anyone who uses email,
has a PIN code protected cell
phone, makes online purchases,
or pays bills online has digital
assets.
Digital assets generally require
a username, a password,
or a PIN to access and can be
diffi cult if not impossible to retrieve
if someone is incapacitated
or passes away.
Creating a digital will (also
known as a digital estate plan)
will help your loved ones access
your electronic devices
and online accounts more easily
so they can manage your
electronic aff airs, according to
your wishes, after you’re gone.
This in turn will also protect
your digital assets from hackers
or fraud, which can happen
to dormant accounts after
you die.
How to Write a Digital Will
Your fi rst step in creating a
digital will is to make an inventory
list of your digital assets,
which includes everything
from hardware to email accounts.
Here are a few categories
to help kick-start your list:
Electronic devices (computer,
smartphone, tablet, external
hard drive).
Digital fi les (for photos, videos
or documents)
Financial accounts (like bank
and brokerage accounts, credit
cards, cryptocurrency).
Bill paying accounts (utilities,
mortgage accounts)
Social media accounts (like
Facebook, Instagram, Twitter,
LinkedIn).
Email accounts (Gmail, Yahoo,
Outlook, etc.).
Cloud-storage accounts
(like Google Cloud, iCloud,
Dropbox, Microsoft OneDrive)
Movie or music streaming
services (like Netflix, Hulu,
Spotify, Apple Music)
Online purchasing accounts
(like Venmo or PayPal)
Subscription services (magazines,
newspapers, Amazon
Prime, etc.).
Reward programs (travel,
stores, etc.).
Membership organizations
(AARP, AAA, etc.).
When making your list,
you’ll need to include usernames,
passwords, PINS, account
numbers or security
questions for accessing each
account. And provide instructions
on how you want your
assets managed after your
death. For example: Do you
want certain accounts closed,
archived or transferred? Do
you want specifi c fi les or photos
to be deleted or shared
with loved ones? Do you want
your social media profiles
memorialized or deleted? Be
clear and specifi c about your
wishes.
You’ll also need to appoint a
digital executor that you trust
to execute your wishes after
you die.
From a legal perspective,
you should know that most
states have enacted the Revised
Uniform Fiduciary Access
to Digital Assets Act (RUFADAA),
which legally recognizes
digital estates. This law
gives your personal representative
or executor legally protected
access to your online
accounts.
Once your digital will is written,
store it with your other
estate plan documents either
in a fi reproof safe or fi le cabinet
at home, on your computer
hard drive, with your estate
planning attorney or online at
a reputable digital estate planning
service like Everplans.
com or Clocr.com. But make
sure your executor knows
where it is and has access to it.
Also remember to keep your
digital will be updated regularly
when you create any new
digital accounts or change
passwords.
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.
ior
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THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FriDAy, JUnE 28, 2024
OBITUARIES
~ In Memoriam ~
James D. Mitchell, Jr.
May 3, 1937 - June 30, 2023
Diana
Chapdelaine
joy for over 25 years. Diana resided
in Lynn, Revere, Saugus,
and Winthrop during her life.
In addition to her devotion
to her family, Diana had a profound
love for dogs throughout
her life. Her home was
filled with the joyful presence
of furry companions, whom
she cared for deeply and considered
part of her family.
In 2001, Diana began her
t is with deep sorrow
and much love that we
mourn the passing of Diana
Chapdelaine on June 21st
in Winthrop, MA, following a
long illness. Diana was born
on March 24, 1948, in Saugus,
Mass, the oldest daughter of
Vincent Galli and Marie “Peggy”
Merlino.
She is survived by her husI
Dad,
It’s
hard to believe its been a year since you
passed, so many days gone by without you.
So many days when we don’t feel your
presence, or hear your voice filled with words of
love, wisdom and calm.
But in our hearts we’re all together, we see and
hear you, but it can never ease the pain.
You left this world too soon as it was God’s Will
to take you from us, to ease your pain.
If we could only have one more moment to
tell you how much we love and miss you.
Our only solace is knowing we will all be together
again some day.
Love & Miss You Every Single Day,
Ethelyn, Jeff, Jim, Marianne, Todd, Julie,
Dan, Lucy and all your grandchildren
& great-grandchildren
band, William Chapdelaine of
Saugus; her two sons, Matthew
Chapdelaine and his
fiancé Kathleen Ross of Acton,
Maine, and Marc Chapdelaine
and his wife Christina
Chapdelaine of Winthrop; her
mother-in-law, Annette Slocomb
of Saugus; and her sisters,
Cheryl Marazzi and Carol
Galli, both of Malden. Diana
also leaves behind her
grandchildren, Maggie, Marc
Jr., Maya, Luciana, and Samuel,
whom she shared a special
bond with.
After graduating from Burdette
Business College, Diana’s
career began at the old
Saugus Hospital as a medical
secretary and continued at
the old Lynn Hospital. In 1988,
she joined forces with Patricia
Palman and ran the Main Office
at Austin Prep, a role that
brought her great pride and
player went on sale?
10. “Rhapsody in Blue” starts
with what instrument?
1. On June 28, 1919, the
treaty ending World War
I was signed at the Palace
of Versailles, which
is called what in French?
2. In what 1978 musical film
would you find the song
“Summer Nights”?
3. On June 29, 1613, the
Globe Theatre was destroyed
by fire during
what Shakespeare play
with a title including
“VIII”?
4. In 1912 the Society for
the Prevention of Useless
Giving was founded
to reduce Christmas gifting,
including expensive
gifts to bosses, and was
all female until what president
joined?
5. On June 30, 1966, NOW
was founded; what does
NOW stand for?
6. In the nonsense poem
“Jabberwocky” what creature
was killed?
7. How are Flicka, Silver and
Trigger similar?
8. In what 2013 musical film
would you find the song
“In Summer”?
9. On July 1, 1979, what
Sony portable cassette
11. In what U.S. state would
you find the Treasure
Coast?
12. In 1841 what president
then Mass. rep dined on
turtle soup at the White
House on Independence
Day?
13. On July 2, 1964, what
president signed the Civil
Rights Act?
14. How are Rocket, Roman
Candle and Strobe similar?
15.
What Frenchman with a
long name said, “Humanity
has won its battle. Liberty
now has a country”?
16. What U.S. founding docbattle
with Parkinson’s disease.
For over 20 years, she
valiantly fought a disease
that gradually took everything
from her. Despite these
challenges, her unwavering
love for her family and
her deep faith in Mary, the
mother of Jesus, guided her
through. During her darkest
days, she found solace in
her prayers to Mary. Her faith
was a cornerstone of her life,
and she cherished her mother,
mother-in-law, children,
and grandchildren with a profound
and steadfast love. Diana
was a wonderful person
whose kindness and warmth
touched everyone she met,
leaving behind a legacy of
love and compassion.
The funeral service will be
held on Saturday, June 29th,
at 11:30 AM at St. Michael’s
Archangel Church, located
at 320 Winthrop Street, Winthrop.
In lieu of flowers, donations
may be made to The
Michael J. Fox Foundation
(www.give.michaeljfox.org)
in memory of Diana Chapdelaine.
Linda
E. (Fritz)
Barressi
O
f Saugus. Died on
Sunday, June 23rd
at the Brentwood
Rehab in Danvers at the
ument did The Pennsylvania
Evening Post publish
before other newspapers?
17.
On July 3, 1878, what
originator of the song
“Yankee Doodle Dandy”
was born?
18. In Bristol in what N.E.
state is the oldest Fourth
of July parade?
19. What mostly self-educated
U.S. president said,
“Nothing but harmony,
honesty, industry, and
frugality are necessary to
make us a great and happy
people”?
20. On July 4, 2015, in Beijing,
the 2nd annual International
Space-out competition
was held where
participants do what?
age of. She was the wife of
the late Sal “Ron” Barressi.
A lifelong resident of Saugus,
Mrs. Barressi was the
daughter of the late Richard
H. and Ethel M. (Hunter)
Fritz. Linda enjoyed gardening
and running Babe Ruth
and the Grid Iron Club with
her husband.
Mrs. Barressi is survived
by her three children, Joseph
Barressi of Danvers,
Tammie Resse and her husband
Andrew of Derry, NH
and Kelly Barressi of Saugus;
four grandchildren, Ryan,
Kylie, Gabriella and Madison;
and her sister Lorrie Bewersdorf
and her husband
Hans of Saugus. She was
predeceased by one brother,
Richard “Ricky” Fritz and
one sister Darrell Fritz.
Relatives and friends
were invited to attend visiting
hours in the Bisbee-Porcella
Funeral Home, Saugus
on Wednesday June 26 with
a funeral held on Thursday.
Interment in Riverside Cemetery
in Saugus. In lieu of
flowers, donations in Linda’s
memory may be made
to the Alzheimer’s Association
of Massachusetts at alz.
org/manh.
OBITS | SEE PAGE 17
ANSWERS
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
11.
Château de Versailles
“Grease”
“Henry VIII”
Theodore Roosevelt
National Organization for Women
The Jabberwock
They are horses (from TV’s “My Friend
Flicka” and “The Lone Ranger” and Roy
Rogers films, respectively)
“Frozen”
The Walkman
Clarinet
Florida
12. John Quincy Adams
13.
Lyndon B. Johnson
14. They are types of fireworks.
15. Marie-Joseph-Paul-Yves-Roch-Gilbert
du Motier, marquis de Lafayette
16. The Declaration of Independence
17. George M. Cohan
18. Rhode Island
19. George Washington
20. Nothing – they relax on mats in public
and are judged on heart rate.
׉	 7cassandra://sxqmvAkkCErba2WOkGp1XPebStogkI3b4PiJHCu4Oso*}`̰ f}me|׉E^THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FriDAy, JUnE 28, 2024
Page 17
THE SOUNDS| FROM
PAGE 15
upkeep of the monument on
the corner of Winter and Central
Streets rely on the generosity
of donors through fundraising.
The
brick application must
OBITS | FROM PAGE 16
Robert Charles
Tumasz
be in by Sept. 10 to ensure
the bricks will be ready for
Veterans Day. Please contact
Corinne Riley at 781-231-7995
for more information and applications.
About
The Saugus Advocate
cherished
husband of Karen
(Chute) Tumasz, with whom
he celebrated 52 years of marriage.
Born
in Boston and raised
in Malden, Bob was the son
of the late Charles and Lucille
(Sapega) Tumasz. He was a
graduate of Saint Mary’s High
School in Cambridge, where
his passion for football began
and continued throughout
his life. Beyond high school,
Bob remained active in various
sports leagues, including
football and softball.
Bob dedicated 47 years of
O
f Saugus. Passed away
peacefully at home at
the age of 75 on June
24, 2024, surrounded by his
loving family, after fighting
pancreatic cancer for the past
year and a half. He was the
his career to National Grid, formerly
Massachusetts Electric,
where his strong work ethic
and dedication were evident.
Known for his willingness to
take on extra shifts, he forged
lifelong friendships with colleagues,
bonding over shared
interests such as playing darts,
lobstering, and going on fishing
trips.
The Kid Does
Clean Outs
From 1 item to 1,000
* Basements * Homes * Backyards
* Commercial Buildings
The cheapest prices around!
Call Eric: (857) 322-2854
We welcome press releases,
news announcements, freelance
articles and courtesy
photos from the community.
Our deadline is noon Wednesday.
If you have a story idea,
an article or photo to submit,
please email me at mvoge@
comcast.net or leave a mesAn
avid outdoorsman, Bob
took great pride in maintaining
his meticulously kept
yard, tending to it daily with
care and attention to detail.
He also found immense joy
in cheering on his grandchildren
at their sporting events,
demonstrating his unwavering
support even during his
illness. Bob and Karen created
cherished memories traveling
to tropical destinations with
their extended family fondly
referred to as “the cousins.”
In addition to his wife, Bob
is survived by his two children,
Erik Tumasz and his wife
Laura (Iskenderian) of Bedford,
MA, and Susan (Tumasz)
Moore and her husband Tyler
of Portsmouth, NH; five
grandchildren, Mae, Mason,
Noah, Lucas, and Dylan; his
sister Lucy Tumasz and her
husband Mike of Beverly Hills,
FL; and a brother Steven Tumasz
and his wife Laurie of
Chichester, NH. He was predeceased
by a granddaughter
Lylah Moore.
In lieu of flowers, donations
in Bob’s memory may
be made to the National Pancreatic
Cancer Foundation at
https://www.npcf.us/donate/
Relatives and friends are invited
to attend an hour of visitation
in the Bisbee-Porcella
Funeral Home, 549 Lincoln
Ave, Saugus on Friday, June
28 from 11:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m.
followed by a funeral service
in the funeral home at 12:30
p.m. Interment at Woodlawn
Cemetery in Everett.
sage at 978-683-7773. Let
us become your hometown
newspaper. The Saugus Advocate
is available in the Saugus
Public Library, the Saugus Senior
Center, Saugus Town Hall,
local convenience stores and
restaurants throughout town.
Your Hometown News Delivered!
EVERETT ADVOCATE
MALDEN ADVOCATE
REVERE ADVOCATE
SAUGUS ADVOCATE
One year subscription to
The Advocate of your choice:
$175 per paper in-town per year or
$225 per paper out-of-town per year.
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Clip & Mail Coupon with Credit Card, Check or Money Order to:
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REAL ESTATE TRANSACTIONS
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.
BUYER1
Contreras, Luznel M
Liu, Qiongzhen
BUYER2
Lopez-Ramos, Ismael A
SELLER1
Littlefield, Keith
Buonofiglio, Robert
Kalloch, Gary G
SELLER2
ADDRESS
11 Columbus Ave
200 Walnut St #2
CITY
Saugus
Saugus
DATE
06.07.24
06.03.24
PRICE
745000
265000
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THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FriDAy, JUnE 28, 2024
Advocate Online: www.advocatenews.net SCAM| FROM PAGE 11
~ School Bus Drivers Wanted ~
7D Licensed School Bus Drivers
Malden Trans is looking for reliable drivers for
the new school year. We provide ongoing training
and support for licensing requirements. Applicant
preferably lives local (Malden, Everett, Revere).
Part-time positions available and based on AM &
PM school hours....15-30 hours per week. Good
driver history from Registry a MUST! If interested,
please call David @ 781-322-9401.
CDL SCHOOL BUS DRIVER WANTED
Compensation: $28/hour
School bus transportation company seeking
active CDL drivers who live LOCALLY (Malden,
Everett, Chelsea and immediate surrounding
communities).
- Applicant MUST have BOTH S and P endorsements
as well as Massachusetts school bus certificate.
Good driver history from Registry a MUST!
-
Part-time hours, BUT GUARANTEED 20-35
HOURS PER WEEK depending on experience.
Contact David @ 781-322-9401.
American Exterior and
Window Corporation
Contact us for all of your
home improvement projects
and necessities.
Call Jeff or Bob
Toll Free: 1-888-744-1756
617-699-1782 / www.americanexteriorma.com
Windows, Siding, Roofing, Carpentry & More!
All estimates, consultations or inspections completed
by MA licensed supervisors. *Over 50 years experience.
*Better Business Bureau Membership.
Insured and
Registered
Complete Financing Available.
No Money Down.
practices before signing a service
contract. Ask for references
from previous customers and
talk with them about their experience.
If you’re suspecting a
scam, check https://www.bbb.
org/scamtracker to see if others
are reporting the same experience.
•
Don’t give in to high-pressure
sales tactics. Con artists
want to provoke an emotional
reaction that would cause you
to give in to their requests without
thinking it through. Take
your time; know that a legitimate
company won’t pressure
you to act. If someone uses aggressive
sales tactics on you, especially
if the offer was initially
unsolicited, it’s best to cut off
communication immediately.
• Get competing bids. Contact
We follow Social Distancing Guidelines!
several solar installers if you plan
on going solar and get bids from
each company. If someone is
pulling a con, they will be much
easier to spot this way. Learn
more about what to ensure is
included in your home improvement
contract at https://www.
bbb.org/all/home-improvement/your-home-improvement-contract
•
Ask plenty of questions and
* Crack Repairing * Pot Hole Filling
* Striping Handicapped Spaces
* Free Estimates
Tom’s Seal Coating
Call Gary: 978-210-4012
Licensed
& Insured
Free
Estimates
Carpentry * Kitchen & Bath * Roofs * Painting
Decks * Siding * Carrijohomeimprovement.com
Call 781-710-8918 * Saugus, MA
General Contractor * Interior & Exterior
Frank Berardino
MA License 31811
• 24 - Hour Service
• Emergency Repairs
BERARDINO
Plumbing & Heating
Residential & Commercial Service
Gas Fitting • Drain Service
617.699.9383
Senior Citizen Discount
consider the answers. Ask questions
about any aspect of a contract
or proposal you don’t understand.
If the company gets
upset about your questions, refuses
to answer them or is vague
with their answers, consider it a
red flag.
For more information:
• Sign up for BBB’s weekly
Scam Alert emails at
https://signup.e2ma.net/signup/1900156/1902645/
•
Find solar panel installers
near you and solar energy contractors
near you at https://
www.bbb.org/near-me/solar-installation
•
Read BBB’s guide to going
solar at https://www.bbb.org/
article/news-releases/26112bbb-tip-a-consumers-guide-togoing-solar
Report
solar installation scams
to BBB Scam Tracker. Your report
can help expose common scam
tactics and reduce scammers’ effectiveness.
Clean-Outs!
We
take and dispose
from cellars, attics,
garages, yards, etc.
Call Robert at:
781-844-0472
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Page 19
Charming Home on a Beautiful Tree-Studded Lot 7 Oakwood Ave, Saugus MA
OPEN HOUSE: Sat, June 29 & Sun, June 30 | 12:00-1:30 PM
Discover this charming home nestled on a beautiful treestudded
lot with a sunlit family room on the first floor,
perfect for gatherings, and an oak kitchen with gleaming
hardwood floors. The main bedroom is a true retreat,
featuring a private balcony and his-and-her closets. With
2.5 baths, a spacious deck for outdoor entertaining, and a
convenient garage, this home offers both comfort and
functionality. Despite its serene, private setting, the
homes provides easy access to all amenities. Enjoy the
perfect blend of tranquility and convenience in this
exceptional property.
Reading, Massachusetts
This charming single-family home with 8 total rooms features a legal accessory dwelling
unit, ideal for extended family or rental income. With 4 bedrooms, including the main one
on the first floor with a full bath, it offers plenty of space. The property has two electric
meters for flexibility and efficiency. Situated in a prime location near Market Basket and
the commuter rail, daily commutes are effortless. Enjoy easy access to shopping centers,
major highways, the airport, and downtown Boston, blending suburban tranquility with
urban convenience.
Saugus, MA
Peabody, MA
Seize the opportunity to own two picturesque parcels on Winter St,
Saugus: 128 and 130. With separate addresses and endless potential, this
unique package is priced at $995,000 representing exceptional value in
the real estate market. Don't miss out! Contact Information: Sue
Palomba 617-877-4553 or soldwithsue@gmail.com
Discover the Charm: 2-Bedroom Haven! Gleaming hardwood floors,
natural light, and washer/dryer hookups offer convenience.
Requirements: 680+ credit score, references. Pet-free, smoke-free for
tranquility. Contact Information: Rosa at 781-820-0096 or
soldwithrosa@gmail.com
OPEN HOUSE: Sun, June 30 | 12:00-1:30 PM
6 Granite Rd, Saugus MA 01906
Lynn, MA
Check out this beautifully renovated second unit! You’ll love the brandnew
features inside, even though it doesn’t include a washer/dryer or
parking. The kitchen is equipped with all-new appliances, and the entire
unit boasts stunning new floors. It’s a fresh, modern space waiting for
you to make it your own! Please note, no smoking or pets are allowed.
Contact Sue Palomba 617-877-4553 or soldwithsue@gmail.com
Salem, MA
Discover the comfort and spaciousness of this newer townhouse featuring
5 rooms, 3 bedrooms, and 2.5 baths, with an open-concept kitchen,
dining, and living area. Enjoy granite countertops, an island, recessed
lighting, and a cozy fireplace, along with a dining room that opens to a
balcony with beautiful views, 2 car garage with remote access and a pool.
Contact Sue Palomba 617-877-4553 or soldwithsue@gmail.com
MANGO REALTY INC
38 Main Street, Saugus MA 01906
Let’s make your real estate journey a success - schedule an
appointment with us today!
Contact us Today
781-558-1091
infowithmango@gmail.com
www.mangorealtyteam.com
OPEN HOUSE: Sun, June 30 | 12:00-1:30 PM
Welcome to this beautiful cozy 8-room, 3-bedroom home with so much space and a
comfortable farmers porch. The large eat-in kitchen and dining rom with a built-in
hutch enhance its character. Sliding doors lead to a deck, offering seamless indooroutdoor
living perfect for entertaining. With a new roof installed in 2021, new front
doors and new stairs, and a new deck, the exterior is well-maintained. Enjoy the
spacious, level fenced-in yard, great basement, and a walk-up attic, all within close
proximity to Boston, transportation and the airport.
38 Valley St, Everett MA 02149
Charming 3-bedroom, 1-bath
home with a 2-car garage,
driveway, and yard. Just minutes
from Boston, Encore, and the
airport. Join us for an open house
on Sunday, June 30, from 12:001:30
PM at 38 Valley Street,
Everett. For more details, call
Norma at 617-590-9143.
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THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FriDAy, JUnE 28, 2024
FOR SALE
FOR SALE- RARE OPPORTUNITY TO
PURCHASE THIS RENOWNED REPUTABLE
AUTO REPAIR/TIRE BUSINESS. BRUHM’S TIRE
AND SERVICE HAS BEEN IN THE SAME FAMILY
SINCE 1958. THIS AUTOMOTIVE REPAIR AND
TIRE BUSINESS COMES WITH 4 SERVICE BAYS
WITH 4 LIFTS, SNAP ON AIR COMPRESSOR,
WHEEL BALANCER, TIRE MOUNTING MACHINE,
SECURITY SYSTEM, OFFICE, WAITING AREA,
BATHROOM AND STORAGE AREA. PLENTY OF
PARKING IN THE OPEN LOT AND DRIVEWAY.
CONVENIENTLY LOCATED ON LINCOLN AVE.
SAUGUS $1,900,000
CALL KEITH 781-389-0791
FOR SALE
FOR SALE- TRADITIONAL 3 BED, 1.5 BATH
COLONIAL FEATURING PERIOD DETAIL
THROUGHOUT INCLUDING ORIGINAL
HARDWOOD FLOORS, GORGEOUS BANISTER
& NEWEL POST, DETAILED WOODWORK AND
MOLDINGS, LARGE SPACIOUS ROOMS, HIGH
CEILINGS ON BOTH FLOORS, AND ORIGINAL
STAIN GLASS WINDOW AND ICE BOX.
EXPANSION POTENTIAL IN THE WALK-UP
ATTIC. GAS HEAT, CENTRAL AIR, ROOF,
REPLACEMENT WINDOWS, GENERATOR, AND
SUNROOM ALL DONE ABOUT 10 YEARS AGO.
OFF STREET PARKING AND 1 CAR GARAGE.
SAUGUS $629,900
CALL DEBBIE 617-678-9710
FOR RENT
COMMERCIAL OFFICE SPACE FOR RENTPRIME
LOCATION. PROFESSIONAL BUILDING
JUST OUTSIDE OF SAUGUS CENTER. PLENTY
OF PARKING. THIS SPACE IS PERFECT FOR
LAWYERS OFFICE, INSURANCE COMPANY,
REAL ESTATE OFFICE, MORTGAGE COMPANY.
WALK IN AREA, SEPARATE OFFICES, RECEPTION
AREA, MENS AND WOMAN'S BATHROOMS,
COMMON CONFERENCE ROOM.
CONVENIENT TO ROUTE 1 AND DOWNTOWN.
SPACE COULD BE SHARED, SPLIT OR THE
ENTIRE SPACE COULD BE LEASED.
SAUGUS $25 CALL KEITH 781-389-0791
FOR SALE
FOR SALE- BEAUTIFUL SUN FILLED
CONTEMPORARY HOME WITH 3
BEDROOMS, 2 & 1/2 BATHS, OPEN
CONCEPT DINING ROOM AND LIVING
ROOM, SPACIOUS FAMILY ROOM AND A
BONUS ROOM. THE OUTSIDE HAS AN
OVERSIZED DECK GREAT FOR
ENTERTAINING. TOPSFIELD $849,900
CALL JULIEANNE 781-953-7870
FOR SALE
FOR SALE- VERY DESIRABLE INDIAN ROCK
NEIGHBORHOOD, OVERSIZED SPLIT
ENTRY ON A LEVEL SIZABLE LOT. 4+
BEDROOMS, 3 FULL BATHS, 2800+ SQFT.
ROOM FOR EXTENDED FAMILY IN THE
FINISHED BASEMENT. CUSTOM BUILT BY
ONE OWNER AND WELL CARED FOR.
SAUGUS $925,000
CALL DANIELLE FOR DETAILS
978-987-9535
FOR SALE
FOR SALE- CONTRACTOR SPECIAL! NEEDS
WORK, BUT WORTH THE EFFORT, HOUSE HAS
GREAT POTENTIAL. BRING YOUR IDEAS TO
THIS 3000 SQUARE-FOOT COLONIAL
FEATURING SIX BEDROOMS AND TWO
BATHROOMS WITH OVER 3 FLOORS OF LIVING
SPACE (NOT INCLUDING WALK-OUT LOWER
LEVEL). BEAUTIFUL ORIGINAL WOODWORK,
FIVE FIREPLACES, 10 FOOT CEILINGS. VINYL
SIDING, NICE SIZE LOT. PARKING FOR 6+
CARS. ALL THE OFFERINGS OF THE
NORTHSHORE. 15 MINUTE DRIVE TO BOSTON.
SAUGUS $850,000
CALL KEITH 781-389-0791
BUILDABLE LOT
• SAUGUS $125,000 CALL KEITH 781-389-0791 FOR FURTHER DETAILS
LOOKING TO
BUY OR SELL?
JOHN
DOBBYN
617-285-7117
CALL HIM
FOR ALL YOUR
REAL ESTATE
NEEDS
MOBILE HOMES
• GREAT YOUNG ONE BEDROOM UNIT IN A VERY DESIRABLE PARK IN MOVE IN CONDITION. 2 CAR
PARKING. LOW PARK RENT OF 410 DANVERS 89,900
• LOT AVAILABLE IN DESIRABLE FAMILY ESTATES COOPERATIVE MOBILE PARK. APPROX 120' X 30'
SEWER AND WATER BRING YOUR UNIT AND HAVE A BRAND NEW BEAUTIFUL HOME....COOP FEE IS
ONY 300- 350 A MONTH PEABODY $84,900
• WELCOME TO SHADY OAKS BRAND NEW MANUFACTURED HOME COMMUNITY. AFFORDABLE YET
UPSCALE LIVING , EACH HOME HAS AMPLE SQUARE FOOTAGE WITH 2 BEDROOMS AND 2 BATHS.
OPEN CONCEPT PERFECT FOR ENTERTAINING. HIGH QUALITY FINISHES FROM TOP TIER
APPLIANCES TO ELEGANT FINISHES. OCCUPANCY DATE APRIL 2024
DANVERS PRICES START AT $229,000 FOR 2 BEDROOM
• PHASE 2 OF SHADY OAKS BRAND NEW MANUFACTURED HOME COMMUNITY.
DANVERS PRICES STARTING AT $200,000
CALL ERIC 781-223-0289
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