×‰?4×B!×‘C‘×˜š ÍU ÍUÍru×‰œ“×‰	Ú 7cassandra://V6JTUvLOTP4aY5uYS4KYuA96gyeOAKt4qAoO31GSLoMÎ CÍ`Í'Íp×‰	Ú 7cassandra://seghEE4DVGy0O2X3L4Kee_4ENMlMa4s9Ff7VYiqPjQ4Í¹ÉÍ`ÍÍà×‰	Ú 7cassandra://CYUsK3F3N_6O2iM1SR-qwjdfGnzn1323vTKrRpEY7u4Í9âÍ`ÌÔÍ ×i&dJxÖ{.ˆ}Ì‘× ×i&eJxÖ{.ˆ}Ï Í°ÍÌÃ9×H»http://www.advocatenews.net××Ðˆ×ˆE×i&dJxÖ{.ˆ}²×‰EÚ»Vol. 35, No.46
-FREEwww.advocatenews.net
oca
Free
Every Friday
Revere Veterans Committee Dinner
Dance honors those who served
781-286-8500
Friday, November 14, 2025
Councillors seek clarification
on placing memorial signage
on school property
By Barbara Taormina
A
t their last meeting, the
City Council unanimously
approved a motion presented
by Ward 3 Councillor Anthony
Cogliandro that the Early
Childhood Playground at the
Lincoln School be dedicated
in memory of Chris Chavarria.
They have since learned that
the proposed memorial was
turned down by Superintendent
Diane Kelly because approving
a memorial was not
within the councilâ€™s purview.
COUNCILLORS | SEE Page 4
Twenty-eight veterans from the Veterans Home at Chelsea, American Legion members and Jewish
War veterans were honored during Sundayâ€™s Revere Veterans Committee Dinner Dance at
the Casa Lucia Function Facility. Local and state politicians were also recognized for their contributions
to veterans. Shown from left to right, Revere Veterans Committee Co-Chair Ira Novoselsky
(left), Mayor Patrick Keefe, Congressman/U.S. Senate candidate Seth Moulton and
Veterans Committee Co-Chair Al Terminiello presented Certifi cates of Appreciation signed by
the Co-Chairmen and a Revere Veterans Committee Certifi cate of Recognition. See photo highlights
on pages 12 & 13. (Advocate photo by Tara Vocino)
Anthony Cogliandro
Ward 3 Councillor
Dr. Dianne Kelly
Supt. of RPS
Revere Boxing gives Revere teen
a sense of healing, focus and purpose
By Melissa Moore-Randall
I
f you walk into the Revere
Boxing Youth Outreach CenIzaiah
â€œBottlesâ€ Rosa and his trainer and mentor Brad Ouellette.
ter any afternoon, you will
fi nd 14-year-old Izaiah Rosa,
known as â€œBottlesâ€ in the ring,
enjoying what he loves best.
Rosaâ€™s journey into the boxing
ring started a year ago. â€œI
kept telling my mom that I
wanted to try boxing. At fi rst,
she was nervous about the
idea, but she still supported
me. One day, at a school fair,
she met a Chelsea police offi -
cer who mentioned the Revere
Boxing Program. That connection
opened the door for me
to walk into the gym for the
very fi rst time and thatâ€™s how
my journey with boxing offi -
cially began.â€
Rosa said joining boxing has
been the best decision he ever
made, providing him with discipline,
focus and something
positive that he can dedicate
himself to. Boxing has taught
him the true meaning of commitment,
and for the fi rst time,
he felt proud to be part of a
sport that pushes him, motivates
him and makes him believe
in his own future.
Raised in a single-mom
household without a father
fi gure, boxing has become a
source of healing, focus and
purpose. â€œMy mom has always
been the strongest infl uence
in my life. Unfortunately, my
dad struggles with alcoholism,
and because of that, I do not
have a relationship with him.
That absence has aff ected me
in many ways, but it has also
pushed me to find my own
outlet. For me, that outlet has
been boxing. Stepping into
the ring has given me a way to
release the frustration Iâ€™ve carried
and turn it into something
positive. Even without my fatherâ€™s
support, my mom has
shown me what true strength
looks like. She has sacrifi ced so
much and worked tirelessly to
raise me on her own. Through
her example, Iâ€™ve learned resilience,
independence, and
the importance of family. Every
time I train, I carry her lessons
with me, and I fi ght not
just for myself, but for the future
she has worked so hard
to give me.â€
BOXING | SEE Page 8
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THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 2025
Massachusetts House Passes
Bill to Remove Outdated and
Offensive Terms in General Laws
Bill removes out-of-date and offensive terms related
to persons with disabilities
B
OSTON â€” Wednesday,
November 5, 2025 â€” The
Massachusetts House of Representatives
today passed a
bill that removes outdated
and off ensive language in the
General Laws to describe persons
with disabilities. The language
in the bill removes all
variations of outdated terms
such as â€œhandicapped,â€ â€œdisabled,â€
and the â€œr-word.â€ The
bill replaces these terms with
current terminology such as
â€œperson with a disability.â€
â€œAs lawmakers, we know
that words matter,â€ said
Speaker of the House Ronald
J. Mariano (D-Quincy).
â€œThis legislation is our latest
eff ort to ensure that our state
laws do not use antiquated
words that carry negative
connotations, words that also
serve as a reminder of past injustices.
I would like to thank
Representatives Livingstone,
Finn and Garballey for their
work on this important legislation.â€
â€œRemoving
out-of-date and
off ensive language from the
Massachusetts General Laws
to describe people with disabilities
is an important step
in ensuring that our values
are also refl ected in our statutes,â€
said Representative
Jay D. Livingstone (D-Boston),
House Chair of the Joint
Committee on Children, Families
and Persons with Disabilities.
â€œAs legislators, it is our job
to help make sure that people
with intellectual or developmental
disabilities feel included,
accepted and embraced
for who they are, and this is an
important step in doing so.â€
â€œUpdating our laws to reflect
dignity and respect is
more than symbolic, itâ€™s about
ensuring every person in Massachusetts
is seen and valued,â€
said Representative Jessica
Giannino (D-Revere). â€œWords
matter, and by removing outdated
and harmful language,
weâ€™re reaffi rming our commitment
to inclusion and equality.
I want to thank Speaker
Mariano and Chair Michlewitz
for their continued leadership
in making sure our laws
refl ect the values of todayâ€™s
Commonwealth.â€
â€œI am pleased that this legislation
appears fi nally ready
to head to the Governorâ€™s
desk. While we as a society
have done a much better
job of assisting and caring
for some of the neediest, the
language of in our laws has
not kept up. This legislation
goes a long way to matching
our legal words to our public
actions,â€ said Representative
Jeff rey Rosario Turco
(D. Winthrop).
Last year, the Massachusetts
Legislature renamed
the Massachusetts Rehabilitation
Commission (MRC) as
MassAbility, a change that
defi nes the agencyâ€™s role in
supporting residents with
disabilities live independently.
The name change refl ects
the intention to empower individuals
living with disabilities
and move away from outdated
terminology as the offi
ce undergoes broad changes
towards a more expansive
model for disability employment
services and independent
living.
The bill passed the House
of Representatives 154-0 and
now moves back to the Senate
for further consideration.
Christmas Stockings
for Our Veterans
T
he Revere Veteranâ€™s Service
Offi ce and the RossettiCowan
Senior Center are combining
their resources to get
knitted Christmas Stockings for
local veterans. We are asking
for new (please) 4-ply and at
least 4 oz. skeins of Red, Green
or White Yarn. These stocking
are to be knitted or crocheted
by volunteers from the Rossetti-Cowan
Senior Center. All
donations can be dropped off
at the Revere Veteranâ€™s Service
Offi ce at 249R Broadway Monday-Friday
9 a.m.-5 p.m., or the
Rossetti-Cowan Senior Center
at 25 Winthrop Avenue 9 a.m.-5
p.m. Any questions, please call
781-286-8119.
Also, if you would like to
be part of this program, and
knit one, two or three stockings,
you are so welcome to
do so. We encourage any artistic
Christmas Holiday schemes
that will personalize this gift
for a deserving veteran. This
small gift from our community
will mean so much to someone
that has given so much
and may have so little.
The Revere Veteranâ€™s Service
Offi ce is here for our veterans,
and thanks you for your generosity
in helping us serve them
throughout the year
Thank you,
Danny Hernandez, VSO,
City of Revere
RevereTV Spotlight
f you havenâ€™t followed RevereTV
on all of your social
media outlets, now is the time
to do so to stay â€œIn the Loop.â€
This is a play on words for the
studioâ€™s weekly public service
announcement that is recorded
in at least four languages.
RTV often partners up with departments
within City Hall to
get the latest information out
about events and community
resources. The most recent announcement
currently posted
and also playing in between
I
programming on all television
channels is an annual event for
Thanksgiving.
Watch â€œIn the Loopâ€ to hear
more about how Mass Badge,
in partnership with the City
of Revere and the Revere Police
Department, is hosting
their 12th Annual Community
Thanksgiving Dinner! Join
them for a complimentary
meal with family and friends
at Casa Lucia on Tuesday, November
25, from 5 to 8 p.m. No
RSVP is required â€” just go and
enjoy the festivities! For more
information, feel free to reach
out using the contact numbers
provided at the bottom of the
fl yer in these videos. Free rides
are also available to and from
the event. Simply contact Patriot
Taxi. Keep tuned in to RevereTV
to stay â€œIn The Loop.â€
Although Thanksgiving is
coming up soon, RTV is still airing
coverage of some recent
community events celebrating
Halloween. Barktoberfest
2025 is an annual event organized
by Revere Parks and Recreation
with a variety of activities
and treats meant to be
completely dog-friendly. This
year, local pet vendors were
on site with giveaways, and
many attendees had their pets
participate in wearing fun costumes!
You can watch Barktoberfest
coverage on RTVâ€™s YouTube
page or in between programming
on television.
RevereTV | SEE Page 4
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Page 3
MASSACHUSETTS HOUSE PASSES HOME CARE BILL
Bill establishes a licensure process for home care agencies
B
OSTON â€” Wednesday,
November 5, 2025 â€” The
Massachusetts House of Representatives
today passed a
bill that establishes a licensure
process for home care
agencies to ensure that consumers
receive quality nonmedical
services, and to protect
home care workers. The
bill tasks the Executive Offi ce
of Health and Human Services
(EOHHS) with implementing
the licensure process, and
grants the secretariat the authority
to approve licenses,
survey and investigate home
care agencies, and impose
fi nes when appropriate. Under
the bill, home care agencies
would be required to disclose
anyone with a 5 percent
ownership interest in the
agency, carry workers comholder
Advisory Committee
to make recommendations
on standards and procedures
to address the abusive treatment
of home care workers,
personal care attendants
(PCAs), and home care consumers.
The bill also grants
additional anti-discrimination
protections for PCAs.
Lawrence A. Simeone Jr.
~ Since 1989 ~
* Corporate Litigation
* Criminal/Civil
* MCAD
Jessica Ann Giannino
State Representative
pensation and liability insurance,
and provide appropriate
levels of training for their
employees.
The bill also creates two advisory
councils: the Home Care
Jeff rey Rosario Turco
State Representative
Oversight Advisory Council to
help guide the development
and implementation of the
home care licensure process,
and the Home Care Worker
and Consumer Abuse Stake*
Zoning/Land Court
* Wetlands Litigation
* Workmenâ€™s Compensation
* Landlord/Tenant Litigation
* Real Estate Law
* Construction Litigation
* Tax Lien
* Personal Injury
* Bankruptcy
* Wrongful Death
* Zoning/Permitting Litigation
300 Broadway, Suite 1, Revere * 781-286-1560
lsimeonejr@simeonelaw.net
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MASS HOUSE | SEE Page 5
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THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 2025
COUNCILLORS | FROM Page 1
And councillors were not happy
with that decision.
This week, Cogliandro presented
a motion requesting
the city and school administration
provide the council
with a comprehensive report
detailing the jurisdictional
responsibilities over school
property, including areas and
matters under the control of
the city, areas under the control
of the school department
and any other departments or
entities that hold jurisdiction
over school property.
What Kelly wants to include in
the report is a copy of the cityâ€™s
20-year-old policy, informed by
state law, that gives the School
Committee exclusive authority
over memorials and school
names.
Kelly said sheâ€™s just enforcing
the policy on behalf of the
School Committee, during a
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brief telephone interview with
The Advocate.
Cogliandro explained his motion
was borne out of frustration
for having the memorial for Chavarria
denied.
â€œIt was turned down by the
Superintendent saying we
didnâ€™t have the purview to vote
this in. What was worse was an
email went out saying donâ€™t
make any memorials, donâ€™t
talk about it,â€ he said. Cogliandro
added he was beside himself
that there was no eff ort for
school department and the city
to collaborate on a memorial for
Chavarria.
â€œWhen a young man battles
leukemia, and still has a great
attitude, gives everything he
has and still lights up a room, he
deserves to be recognized,â€ said
Cogliandro. â€œIâ€™m not sure why
the Superintendent turned it
down other than it wasnâ€™t within
our purview. My heart goes
out to Chrisâ€™ family because this
would have been awesome.â€
Cogliandro said his new motion
was for any future instances
of memorials on school properRevereTV
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While watching the Community
Channel, youâ€™ll see
that the Rossetti-Cowan Senior
Center, which is also the
Offi ce of Elder Services, held
their yearly Halloween Dance
Party at the event hall in St.
Anthonyâ€™s Church. The musical
guest was DJ Alan LaBella,
and partygoers got to eat
good food and dance the day
away. RTV is playing video coverage
of this yearâ€™s party every
ty and he vowed, â€œIâ€™m not going
to let this go, that young man is
going to get something.â€
Kelly said the School Department
held a ceremony and tree
planting honoring Chavarria
several years ago at Rumney
Marsh Academy where Chavarria
was a student.
Ward 1 Councillor Joanne
McKenna shared a piece of history
to help the council understand
the superintendentâ€™s decision.
She reminded fellow councillors
that a few years ago, a Revere
High student was killed on
Revere Beach. His friends came
to the council and asked for a
memorial mural to be installed
at the basketball court at Lincoln
School. The mural was also
denied. McKenna couldnâ€™t recall
if Kelly came to the council to explain
but she remembered Kellyâ€™s
reasoning.
â€œShe just didnâ€™t want to make
the schools memorials, and the
proposed mural died in the water,â€
said McKenna who added
she supported Cogliandroâ€™s motion
for a report.
Kelly said overwhelming
weekday at noon through the
month of November.
On October 24, 2025, Laundromax
celebrated the grand
opening of its expanded Revere
location at 120 Veterans of Foreign
Wars Pkwy. You can watch
the ribbon-cutting ceremony
on the RTV Community Channel.
This channel is where you
can watch all of the aforementioned
RevereTV event coverage
and more. It is available for
viewers who subscribe to Comcast
on channels 8 and 1072 and
schools with memorial benches
and plaques could, in time,
make them feel like graveyards
that could trigger emotional
reactions, especially in young
children.
â€œThere are a lot of pieces to
this,â€ she said.
Councillor-at-Large Anthony
Zambuto didnâ€™t hide his frustration
with the decision to turn
down the proposed memorial
for Chavarria. â€œI am not pleased
with the response from the superintendent,â€
said Zambuto.
â€œIt seems that the city council
is only good to be bullied into
funding a high school. Iâ€™ve had
it with the tactics of the superintendent.
Itâ€™s a disgrace to turn
down this memorial. Iâ€™m very
angry about this. Itâ€™s a disgrace
to turn this down and pull this
jurisdiction stuff when we just
funded a half-a-billion-dollar
high school.â€
Cogliandro ended the discussion
with a point directed at the
school administration. â€œIf they
are worried about memorials,
the name of the school is Abraham
Lincoln.â€
those that have RCN on channels
3 and 614.
RevereTV aired live coverage of
last weekâ€™s city election. Although
this is not replaying on RTV GOV,
you can watch the full special program
on YouTube. Once again,
RevereTV thanks all of the volunteers
who helped gather election
results at the polls as they closed,
and to hosts Kathi-Anne Reinstein,
State Representative Jessica
Giannino and Mayor Patrick
Keefe for their time, analysis and
commentary that night.
Monogram D4 Double siding
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Page 5
MASS HOUSE | FROM Page 3
â€œThis legislation takes important
steps to improve services
for seniors, and to ensure a safe
work environment for home
care workers,â€ said House
Speaker Ronald J. Mariano
(D-Quincy). â€œI want to thank
Chairman Stanley for his work
on this legislation, as well as all
my colleagues in the House for
recognizing the importance of
these reforms.â€
â€œThis legislation could not
have been passed at a more
critical time,â€ said Representative
Thomas M. Stanley
(D-Waltham), House Chair of
the Joint Committee on Aging
and Independence. â€œWith our
aging population expected
to grow exponentially in the
coming years and the number
of family caregivers shrinking,
the demand for home care
will subsequently increase. It is
critical for the Commonwealth
to have the proper standards
and protections in place for
home care agencies to ensure
consumers receive quality care
and our dedicated home care
workers are properly trained
and supported in the field.
Iâ€™m grateful to Speaker Mariano,
Chairman Michlewitz and
my colleagues in the House
for once again prioritizing the
needs of our aging population
and continuing to champion
policies that promote aging in
place and help older adults remain
independent.â€
â€œThis legislation delivers
meaningful protections for
both home care workers and
the people they serve,â€ said
Representative Jessica Giannino
(D-Revere). â€œBy establishing
clear standards and accountability,
weâ€™re ensuring
that seniors and people with
disabilities receive the quality
care they deserve and that the
workers who provide that care
are properly trained and supported.
Iâ€™m grateful to Speaker
Mariano and Chair Michlewitz
for prioritizing this important
step toward a safer, more reliable
home care system for everyone
in the Commonwealth.â€
â€œAs the Commonwealth has
moved to provide greater at
home support for seniors in
need, our laws and regulations
have not kept up. This
important legislation will provide
greater oversite and protections
for homecare workers
and the seniors they serve,â€
said Representative Jeff rey
Rosario Turco (D. Winthrop).
Oversight:
Transparency &
Accountability
â€¢ Grants EOHHS the ability to
fi ne any person or entity that
represents themselves as a
home care agency without
proper licensure, or that violates
any other rules and
regulations
â€¢ Grants EOHHS the ability to
work with the Executive Offi
ce of Aging and Independence
(AGE) and the Department
of Public Health (DPH)
on surveying and investigating
home care agencies to
ensure compliance
â€¢ Requires EOHHS to conduct
a suitability review for all liALL
DEPOSITS ARE INSURED IN FULL.
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censure applicants, including
for all individuals with at
least a 5 percent ownership
interest in the agency, and a
review to ensure that all applicants
have sufficient financial
capacity to provide
a minimum standard of care
â€¢ Requires EOHHS to publish a
list of all licensed home care
agencies on its website
â€¢ Establishes standards for
consumer-specific service
plans and contracts, including
a description of services,
total cost of care, and agency
contact information
â€¢ Establishes quality metrics
and standards for monitoring
home care agency performance
Workforce
Protections
â€¢ Establishes procedures to
ensure home care workers
have safe working conditions,
adequate training,
and a process for submitting
complaints
â€¢ Requires licensed home care
agencies to have coverage
for workerâ€™s compensation
and liability insurance, and
to provide adequate equipment
and supplies to home
care workers
â€¢ Creates the Home Care Worker
and Consumer Abuse
Stakeholder Advisory Committee
to study and make
recommendations on standards
and procedures for addressing
abusive treatment,
including physical, verbal,
mental abuse, and bullying
of home care workers, PCAs,
home care consumers, and
family members, including:
â€¢ Reporting abusive treatment
and debriefi ng after
incidents of abusive treatment
â€¢
Tracking and retaining records
of abusive treatment
â€¢ Informing home care workers
of potentially unsafe
working environments
â€¢ Training for all employees
of home care agencies, including
on escalation cycles
and eff ective de-escalation
techniques
â€¢ Grants PCAs anti-discrimination
protections to shield
them from harassment or
discrimination based on sex,
race, religion, etc.
Minimum Standards
for Home Care Workers
â€¢ Requires several background
screening checks for all
home care workers
â€¢ Establishes annual training
and competency requireGerry
Dâ€™Ambrosio
Attorney-at-Law
Is
Your Estate in Order?
Do you have an update Will, Health
Care Proxy or Power of Attorney?
If Not, Please Call for a Free Consultation.
14 Proctor Avenue, Revere
(781) 284-5657
ments, including:
â€¢ Confi dentiality and privacy
rights of home care consumers
â€¢
Infection control and communicable
diseases
â€¢ Handling of emergencies,
including safety and falls
prevention
â€¢ Observing, reporting, and
documenting changes
in home care consumer
needs and environment
â€¢ Identifying and reporting
suspected abuse, neglect,
or theft
â€¢ Understanding Alzheimerâ€™s
disease and dementia,
including person-centered
care, activities of daily living,
safety, and dementia-related
behaviors and
communication
Having passed the House
of Representatives 153-1, the
bill now goes to the Senate for
consideration.
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THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 2025
Snow Thrower Safety Tips:
Keep Best Practices in Mind This Winter
C
learing snow and ice from
driveways, sidewalks and
parking lots is no small job.
You rely on your outdoor power
equipment to do the heavy
lifting, and itâ€™s important to
keep safety in mind. The Outdoor
Power Equipment Institute
(OPEI) reminds home and
business owners to use snow
throwers, often referred to as
snow blowers, safely and offers
tips to help.
â€œWeather today is unpredictable.
You need to have your
snow thrower serviced and
ready to power up,â€ says OPEI
President and CEO Kris Kiser.
â€œReview your ownerâ€™s manual
so you can use your equipment
safely.â€ Kiser says preparation
is key and that home
and business owners should
consider the following:
Review the ownerâ€™s manual.
Check the ownerâ€™s manual
for safe handling procedures.
If the manual cannot
be found, look it up online,
and store a copy on your computer
so itâ€™s available to reference
in the future. Review how
to operate controls. Be able to
shut off equipment quickly.
Check equipment. The snow
thrower should be powered
off when being checked over.
Adjust any cables and check
the auger.
Charge batteries. Locate
the batteries for your snow
thrower and charge them fully
before it snows.
Purchase fuel. Be sure to
use the correct fuel recommended
by the equipmentâ€™s
manufacturer. For most gasoline-powered
snow throwers,
that is E10 or less. Often
fuel stations are closed after
a storm so buy gasoline in
advance of storms. Fuel that
is more than 30 days old can
phase separate and cause operating
problems. For more information
on fueling properly
see www.opei.org/programs/
ethanolwarning
Store and use fuel properly.
Place gasoline in a proper
fuel container and label it
with the date purchased and
the ethanol content. Store fuel
safely and out of the reach of
children. Fill the fuel tank outside
before starting the engine
and while the engine is cold.
Never add fuel to a running or
hot engine.
Clear the area. Snow can
sometimes hide objects. Doormats,
hoses, balls, toys, boards,
wires, and other debris should
be removed from areas you intend
to clear. When run over
by a snow thrower, these objects
may harm the machine
or people.
Dress for winter weather.
Locate safety gear now, and
place it in an accessible closet
or location. Wear safety glasses,
gloves and footwear that
can handle cold and slippery
surfaces when operating the
snow thrower.
KEY SAFETY TIP: Never
put your hands inside the auger
or chute. Use a clean out
tool to unclog snow or debris
from the snow thrower.
Your hands should never
go inside the auger or chute.
Turn OFF the snow thrower
if you need to clear a clog.
If you need to remove debris
or unclog snow, always turn
off the snow thrower. Wait
for all moving parts to come
to a complete stop before
clearing any clogs or debris.
Operate in visible conditions.
Never operate
the snow thrower without
good visibility or light.
Aim with care. Never throw
snow toward people or cars.
Keep children or pets inside
and away from your snow
thrower when it is operating.
Use extreme caution on
slopes and hills. Use caution
when changing directions
on slopes. Do not attempt
to clear steep slopes.
Know where the cord is. If using
an electric powered snow
thrower, be aware of where
the power cord is at all times.
Avoid tripping.
BBB Scam Alert: Use caution when searching
for weight loss products online
T
he Better Business Bureau
(BBB) is warning consumers
about a troubling trend involving
deep-fake videos that
promote a weight loss product.
Over the course of two
months, BBB Scam Tracker
received over 170 reports regarding
a product called LipoMax,
which is marketed as a
form of the popular â€œpink salt
trickâ€ on social media.
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â€¢ How scammers use AI-generated
deepfake videos of
celebrities and doctors to
market weight loss products
like LipoMax
â€¢ Real consumer experiences,
including reports of fake endorsements,
improper billing,
poor product quality
and pressure to buy more
supplements
â€¢ Steps you can take to protect
yourself from weight
loss scams, including spotting
misleading ads, avoiding
subscription traps and
reporting suspicious activity
Reports
describe how fake
videos were used to sell the
supplement. Consumers reported
seeing deep-fake videos
of celebrities, such as
Oprah Winfrey, as well as alleged
physicians, endorsing
the product on social media.
Reports have been received
from the following states: Arizona,
Arkansas, California,
Colorado, Florida, Georgia, Illinois,
Indiana, Kansas, Kentucky,
Louisiana, Maine, Maryland,
Massachusetts, Minnesota,
Missouri, Montana, Nebraska,
Nevada, New Hampshire,
New Jersey, New Mexico,
New York, North Carolina,
Ohio, Oklahoma, Oregon,
Pennsylvania, Rhode Island,
South Carolina, Tennessee,
Texas, Virginia, West Virginia,
Wisconsin.
A consumer from Illinois told
BBBâ€˜s Scam Tracker: â€œI was on
Facebook and noticed a video
with Oprah Winfrey and a doctor
speaking of the â€˜pink salt
trick dietâ€™. Oprah herself talked
about the magnifi cent results
as did others on the video.
Oprah also claimed she
funded the project to manufacture
the LipoMax product
(pink salt trick). I fi gured
Oprah-this must be legit. Over
$400 after ordering the prodBBB
Scam Alert |
SEE Page 9
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Page 7
REVERE CIT Y COUNCIL ROUNDUP
Revere.city has
the answers
T
he City Council met this
week with Vamshi Paili
who presented his AI-powered
public data accessibility
platform. Revere.city is packed
with federal, state and municipal
data and quickly provides
answers to questions
about anything Revere. Users
can look up a wide range
of practical information such
as the percent of Revere residents
who are U.S citizens, the
length of a commute time or
the average level of profi ciency
for Revere students in math
and reading.
Paili explained that some of
the data fueling Revere.city
is real time or dynamic data
such as train schedules from
the MBTA or crime data from
the Revere Police Department.
But users can look for very
detailed information such as
the number of residents employed
in certain industries
or the amount of money the
city spends on debt service.
And thatâ€™s just the beginning.
Revere.city is fi lled with clear
and accessible graphs that not
only show diff erent slices of
data, but the graphs also provide
relevant comparisons to
state and national trends. Revere.city
makes it easy to fi nd
specifi c information that now
can require hours of digging.
Councillors asked questions
about the accuracy of the data
which Paili explained is taken
from established sources
such as the U.S. Census or the
Mass. Department of Unemployment.
The
council voted to ask the
mayor to issue an RFP for Revere.city
which Paili said the
city could have for free for a
six-month trial basis. He suggested
a link to Revere.city on
the cityâ€™s website.
Toys for Tickets
returns
he popular Toys for Tickets
program that lets anyone
with an unpaid parking fi ne
T
C
donate an unused toy, up to
$30 in value, to have the donated
amount waived on their
ticket is back. There is a maximum
of fi ve tickets in parking
fi nes allowed under the program.
Toys for Tickets begins
on November 17 and ends at
the close of business on December
12.
And on December 6th
and 27th
, 13th
20th
,
parking at all metered
spots will be free to promote
local holiday shopping.
Setting the tax factor
T
he council responded to
the city assessorâ€™s request
for a public hearing to establish
the minimum residential
tax factor for fi scal year 2026.
The hearing will be held on
December 1st
.
Congrats to the Flag
Football Champs
C
ouncillor-at-large Robert
Haas filed a motion that
the City Council recognize the
Revere Jr. Patriots Flag Football
team for their undefeated
season which ended with a
championship at NCYFC 2025
Flag Football tournament on
November 1.
Recognizing
Sebastian
Agudelo Gomez
T
he council supported a motion
from Councillor-atlarge
Juan Pablo Jaramillo that
the City Council award a Certifi
cate of Commendation to
Sebastian Agudelo Gomez for
his contribution to educating
and informing the residents
of Revere. Jaramillo also wanted
Gomez honored for representing
the Colombian-American
community with integrity
and distinction here in the
largest Colombian-American
community in the Commonwealth
of Massachusetts.
Revere police
body cams
ity Council President Marc
Silvestri fi led a motion requesting
the Chief of Police
at 781-286-8500 or Info@advocatenews.net
ccall he Adv
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Spotlight on AFC
Urgent Care
C
ouncillors supported
Ward 1 Councillor Joanne
McKennaâ€™s motion to invite
AFC Urgent Care, 339 Squire
Road, to a council meeting
to discuss local healthcare
needs and the services Urgent
Care provides. McKenna
said a recent illness led her to
Urgent Care which she never
realized was a few doors
down from Market Basket,
even though it opened about
three years ago. She asked
the receptionist about the
empty waiting room and was
told many Revere residents
donâ€™t know Urgent Care is on
Squire Road.
Urgent Care isnâ€™t meant to
replace an emergency room
or a family doctor, but it can
save time and travel in many
cases. Mckenna feels AFC Urgent
Care is a Revere asset and
wants to make sure all residents
know about it.
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THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 2025
M&T Bank First Time Homebuyer Seminar at Rumney
Marsh Academy Rescheduled for December 4th
R
EVERE, MA â€” The M&T
Bank First-Time Homebuyer
Seminar, originally
scheduled to be hosted this
Thursday, November 6 at the
Rumney Marsh Academy, has
been postponed to Thursday,
December 4. The event
will still be held at the Rumney
Marsh Academy, from
5:30pm-8:00pm.
The event is designed to offer
an overview of the process
and answer questions about
those interested in the journey
to homeownership. Peter
Katsarakes, Assistant VP
and Mortgage Loan Offi cer at
M&T Bank, along with a team
of experts, will discuss requirements
for qualifying for
a mortgage and the process
for applying, and will answer
questions you may have. They
will also share information
about the ONE+ Mortgage
program, designed to be an
attainable and affordable
mortgage option for incomeBOXING
| FROM Page 1
When asked what his biggest
î€µîîšî”î€‚
î€…î€šî€–
î€–î€šî€šî€
î€¤îîîî†î„î•îŠîƒîî†î”î€‚
î€…î€šî€–
î€’î€î€’î€šî€–î€
accomplishment has been, he
said it has yet to be met. â€œWinning
my first official boxing
fi ght was a dream come true.
I had imagined that moment
countless times, but the reality
was even better than I could
have ever pictured.â€
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eligible fi rst-time homebuyers
in Greater Boston.
In addition to representatives
from M&T Bank, representatives
from the City of
Revere will be on hand to
share information about the
First Time Homebuyer Downpayment
Assistance Program
and other resources available
for those seeking aff ordable
homeownership opportunities.
Rosa
credits his trainer, Brad
Ouellette, for his success. â€œI am
beyond thankful for him, and
words canâ€™t fully describe the
amount of gratitude I feel. He
has been like a father, like a
brother, and truly the greatest
mentor. From day one in the
program, we connected, and
ever since weâ€™ve worked day in
and day out. Brad has played a
huge role in shaping the man
Iâ€™m becoming. Having a positive
role model who genuinely
cares about me has meant
the world, especially coming
from a boy who never really
had a strong male role model
in his life. I couldnâ€™t have gone
through this process without
him. Everyone at Revere Boxing
has been amazing, from Joe
Singer to all the coaches but the
bond Iâ€™ve built with Brad will
last a lifetime. He came into my
life at a time when things were
sensitive and delicate, and his
guidance, support, and belief
For more information or to
RSVP, please contact either:
Peter Katsarakes, M&T Bank:
pkatsarakes@mtb.com or
Joe Gravellese, City of Revere,
jgravellese@revere.org
The City of Revere and M&T
Bank apologize for any inconvenience
regarding the date
change and look forward to
welcoming those interested
on December 4.
in me have made all the difference.â€
Rosa
heads straight to the
gym every day after school. One
day he hopes he can be recognized
as a great boxer. â€œMy goal
is to leave behind a legacy â€” a
story that will be written in the
history books for future generations
to read about.â€
He hopes his story inspires
others. â€œAs young adults, itâ€™s
easy to be tempted by the
streets or pulled in the wrong
direction, but Iâ€™ve learned that
when you fi nd something you
truly love whether itâ€™s a sport, a
hobby, or anything that brings
you joy youâ€™ll give it your all and
chase that dream. It doesnâ€™t
matter if you come from a broken
home or not. A lot of people
say negative things about
kids raised by single moms, but
I want to be living proof that a
single mom can raise a young
man who chooses the right
path and does good in life.â€
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Izaiah â€œBottlesâ€ Rosa competing in his fi rst boxing match at Rumble
in Revere.
Custom Fit To Your New or
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Page 9
M
Day with a heartfelt video
presentation during homeroom,
honoring family members
of students, alumni,
faculty and staff who have
served or are currently serving
in the U.S. Armed Forces.
MC honors Veterans Day with
special tribute and presentation Football Pats hit a roadblock
at Newburyport; Belmont
alden Catholic commemorated
Veterans
As part of the dayâ€™s observance,
seventh- and eighthgrade
students had the distinct
honor of witnessing
Jared Belliveau â€™97, History
Teacher and Cross-Country
Coach, receive the Legion
of Merit. The Legion of
Merit is one of the highest
U.S. military decorations and
is awarded for exceptionally
meritorious conduct in the
performance of outstanding
services and achievements.
MC is proud to recognize
and celebrate the dedication
and sacrifice of all who have
served our country.
R
forfeits upcoming game
By Dom Nicastro
evere High School football
had more than a sugar high
on Halloween night. It beat Everett
for the second straight
season for its second in a row
against the GBL giant to close
out the fi rst part of its regular
season at 3-5 overall and 3-3
in the Greater Boston League.
But a week later, it had arguably
its two worst losses: one
on the football fi eld and one
off. Revere fell to Newburyport,
27-6, Friday night, Nov.
7, in the consolation round
then learned a few days later
it would not possibly have
a football game the following
week, giving the players a 20day
lull between games. The
Patriots were scheduled to
play Belmont at home Friday
night, Nov. 14, but, according
to a call to The Advocate from
Revere coach Lou Cicatelli on
Pictured from left to right: MC President John K. Thornburg, awardee Jared Belliveau â€™97 and MC
Principal Jeff rey P. Smith â€™95. (Photo Credit: James Black)
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Tuesday morning, Nov. 11, Belmont
decided not to play and
will forfeit.
Cicatelli said Belmont, which
is 0-9 and has scored just 36
points this entire season, felt it
could not compete with Revere
and decided not to play. An
email from The Advocate to Belmont
Athletics Director Adam
Pritchard on Tuesday morning
went unreturned as of press
time. Frank Shea, athletics director
for Revere High School,
told The Advocate he got a call
from Belmontâ€™s athletics director
Monday night, Nov. 10, informing
him of the decision
not to play the Patriots.
The consolation round is
a two-week round in which
teams that donâ€™t make the
MIAA playoff s and those who
lose in the fi rst round compete
against one another in a weekSPORTS
| SEE Page 10
St. Anthonyâ€™s Flea Market
Festival of Trees
250 Revere St., Revere, Lower Hall
November 8 * 2:00 - 8:00 PM
November 15 * 10 - 8:00 PM
Santa arrives Saturday * 12-2
Free hot dogs and chocolate milk 12-2
Law Offices of
JOSEPH D. CATALDO, P.C.
â€œATTORNEYS AND COUNSELORS AT LAWâ€
î‚‡ ESTATE/MEDICAID PLANNING
î‚‡ WILLS/TRUSTS/ESTATES
î‚‡ INCOME TAX PREPARATION
î‚‡ WEALTH MANAGEMENT
î‚‡ RETIREMENT PLANNING
î‚‡ ELDER LAW
369 Broadway Everett, MA 02149 (617)381-9600
JOSEPH D. CATALDO, CPA, CFP, MST, ESQUIRE.
AICPA Personal Financial Specialist Designee
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THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 2025
Sports | FROM Page 9
SOLE BENEFIT TRUSTS
hese types of Trusts are
typically utilized when a
family member is going into
a nursing home and there
has been no advanced planning.
An example would
be if you owned your own
home and had not placed
it into an irrevocable Trust.
Furthermore, you need to
be admitted into a nursing
home and have a disabled
child, disabled grandchild
or some other disabled individual
that you would like
to leave the house to.
If you transferred your
home to this type of trust,
you would still be able to
qualify for MassHealth benefits.
The transfer would
not be subject to the fi ve
year look-back period due
to this Trust solely benefi
tting the disabled child,
grandchild or other disabled
individual.
Also, upon your death
after MassHealth having
paid for most of your nursing
home level care, there
would be no payback requirement
to MassHealth
from the assets in the Trust.
The assets would be protected
for the disabled
benefi ciary.
T
The assets in this Trust
must only benefi t the disabled
beneficiary and no
one else. The Trust will not
interfere with any governmental
benefits the disabled
individual may already
be receiving. However,
the terms of the Trust
must provide for repayment
of those benefits
upon the death of the disabled
beneficiary. If such
a provision does not exist
in the Trust, the Settlor of
the Trust (for example, the
parent) will not qualify for
MassHealth benefi ts.
If there are assets remaining
in the Trust upon the
death of the disabled child
and upon repayment of all
of the governmental benefi
ts, distributions of those
remaining assets can be
made to family members.
Transfers made to such a
Trust would be considered
a completed gift. There is
no gift tax in Massachusetts
and the federal exemption
will be $15million per individual
as of January 1, 2026.
Therefore, even though
technically a gift tax return
would be required to
be fi led, no gift tax would
have to be paid. If there
are income producing assets
in this type of Trust,
the Trust would have to fi le
for a new federal identifi -
cation number and would
have to fi le a Trust income
tax return using Form 1041.
If the Trustee were to make
distributions of income to
the disabled beneficiary,
the Trustee would claim a
distribution deduction on
the tax return by issuing a
Schedule K-1 form to the
disabled beneficiary. The
disabled benefi ciary would
then report the taxable income
on his or her individual
income tax return.
Joseph D. Cataldo is an Estate Planning/Elder Law Attorney,
Certifi ed Public Accountant, Certifi ed Financial Planner,
AICPA Personal Financial Specialist and holds a Masterâ€™s Degree in Taxation.
Be prepared before the next power outage.
ly makeshift schedule. Shea said
teams can opt out of consolation-round
games by Saturday
afternoon (in this case Nov. 8),
a week ahead of the games. But
Belmont, he said, informed Revere
of its decision on Monday,
Nov. 10, â€œwhich leaves us scrambling
because all the matchups
have been made.â€
â€œI think theyâ€™ve just had
enough,â€ Shea said. â€œTheyâ€™re 0-9.
I think they felt this game meant
nothing, and they wouldnâ€™t be
competitive. That was me reading
between the lines. They cited
some scores, some lopsided
scores. â€¦ Itâ€™s unfortunate for
our kids and our team, but it is
what it is. You canâ€™t force somebody
to play you. The only gripe
I had I told their AD is you should
have just taken a bye.â€
Instead, Revere, as of The Advocateâ€™s
press time on early evening
Tuesday, was searching for
an opponent. That would be a
tall order considering the second
week of the consolation
roundâ€™s games are set. The Patriots
would need to fi nd an opponent
that took a bye within
the rules but would now reconsider
by taking on Revere. Maybe
even fi nd a foe out of state;
many Massachusetts teams
put out-of-state teams on their
schedule; it is unclear if that is
allowed in this case.
If they didnâ€™t fi nd a foe, the Patriots
would have a 20-day lull
between their fi nal two games:
Friday, Nov. 7, against Newburyport;
and Thanksgiving
Day, Thursday, Nov. 27, at home
against Winthrop (10 a.m.).
Belmont has been shut out
fi ve times. It is coming off fi ve
brutal defeats: 41-0 against Arlington,
50-0 against Woburn,
41-0 against Reading, 42-8
against Winchester, 40-0 against
Wayland.
Cicatelli finds no excuses,
however, for opting out of a
game with four daysâ€™ notice.
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â€œYou donâ€™t do that,â€ Cicatelli
said. â€œIâ€™m shocked. You leave us
hanging. You could have taken
the bye week. A lot of teams do
that. And they didnâ€™t do that.
Now I have to get creative with
our boys. I will. Itâ€™s going to take
some creativity on our part to
make things work â€” keep them
together, which we will.â€
Revere gets a forfeit win and
improves to 4-6. Belmont drops
to 0-10.
Meanwhile, can Belmont just
do this without a repercussion
outside a simple forfeit loss?
The MIAA handbook does not
specifi cally address conditions
around consolation-round cancellation
rules or single-game
cancellations. It only covers
rules when a team cancels a
season after playing one offi cial
game. An email to the MIAA on
the matter went unreturned as
of press time.
As for Revereâ€™s work on the
football field, the Patriots fell
to Newburyport, 27â€”6, on
the road Friday night in the
fi rst round of the consolation
bracket â€” a frustrating followup
to their 21â€”14 win over Everett
that had marked back-toback
victories over the Crimson
Tide for the fi rst time in recent
memory. Revere (4â€”6) had little
rhythm on off ense against
the Clippers.
â€œIt was close in the fi rst half
â€” it was only 7-0 â€” but off ensively,
we were awful,â€ said Cicatelli.
â€œWe couldnâ€™t get any sustained
drives. They pinned us
deep all night.â€
The Patriotsâ€™ defense held
strong for much of the game but
couldnâ€™t contain Newburyport
quarterback Jack Miller, who
used his legs and arm to keep
drives alive.
Cicatelli credited his defensive
unit with keeping Revere within
reach until late in the third
quarter. â€œIt wasnâ€™t as bad as the
score looked,â€ he said. â€œWe gave
up one big play and a few shortfi
eld touchdowns. The defense
was on the fi eld all night.â€
Revereâ€™s lone score came midway
through the second half on
a one-yard run by senior running
back Reda Atoui, following
an interception by linebacker
Bryan Fuentes that briefl y gave
the Patriots a spark.
The loss dropped Revere to
3â€”6 overall at the time, dampening
the momentum from
consecutive wins over Malden
and Everett that had reignited
hopes of a strong fi nish. The Patriots
had scored 61 combined
points in those two wins and
appeared to be rounding into
form behind a dominant off ensive
line and the return of key
players from injury.
Now, theyâ€™ll have to regroup
â€” and possibly do so entirely
on the practice fi eld for two and
a half weeks before hosting the
Vikings on Turkey Day. â€œWeâ€™ve
got to get back to practicing the
right way,â€ Cicatelli said. â€œWhen
weâ€™re healthy, and we play with
energy, we can compete with
anybody.â€
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Page 11
RHS SPORTS FALL ROUNDUP
Revere boysâ€™
soccer bows out in
Round of 32, caps
strong season
By Dom Nicastro
R
evere High School boysâ€™
soccer made another postseason
appearance under fi rstyear
head coach Gerardo Rodriguez,
reaching the Division
2 Round of 32 before falling
to three-time defending state
champion Oliver Ames, 4-1.
The Patriots, seeded No. 32,
faced the top-seeded Tigers
on their home fi eld in North
Easton. Oliver Ames entered
the tournament 12-1-3, while
Revere fi nished its season at
10-4-5.
Revere reached the Round
of 32 with a 3-2 victory over
Southeastern Regional in the
preliminary round. Senior
striker Patrick Valentim scored
twice, and Jeronimo Agudelo
added a goal to help secure
the win.
Rodriguez said his fi rst year
as head coach was full of learning
moments but also progress.
â€œIâ€™m
very satisfi ed with the
growth I saw from the boys,â€
he said. From mid-July summer
workouts through preseason
and into the fall, Revere
developed a lot as a team, the
coach added.
Facing Oliver Ames provided
a clear benchmark for the
program.
â€œI thought it was a pretty
good game plan. The reality
of playing a very tough, welloiled
machine at their house,
you have to play a very clean
game,â€ Rodriguez said. â€œWe
competed in open play, but
you have to play a very clean
game against a team like that.
Three of their goals came on
corners, and that shows thereâ€™s
a separation the level of focus
and level of seriousness that
you have to take in and be able
to perform on a given night
on a very tough time. Weâ€™ll be
able to watch and learn from
it and apply new things.â€
Rodriguez praised sophomore
goalkeeper Cristian
Flores for his development.
â€œHe had a very good game
against Oliver Ames and grew
up this season,â€ the coach said.
At the start of the year, he was
hesitant to come out for balls
on corners, the coach said,
but, by the end, he was challenging
everything. That kind
of growth is huge, Rodriguez
said.
Looking ahead, the Patriots
expect to return nine or
10 players, including a core of
rising seniors who will anchor
the midfi eld and attack.
â€œIâ€™m looking forward to seeing
all these guys come back,
and weâ€™ll be very strong in
midfi eld and forward, but we
will have to pretty much reconstruct
our defense,â€ Rodriguez
said. â€œIâ€™m looking forward
to having a competitive team
next fall and learning for myself
as a fi rst-year head coach.
Being an assistant for a long
time has its perks, but going
through the things that you
go through as a head coach,
now that I know, I can plan
things better.â€
The coach is targeting
a shakeup for non-league
games and is eyeing teams like
Brookline, Newton North and
BC High, â€œteams that are usually
very competitive in states.â€
Rupp, Hamdani
close standout crosscountry
careers
T
he Revere girls cross-country
team wrapped up its
season at the Division 2A state
race at Northfi eld Mountain, a
steep 5K course that marked
the fi nal competition for seniors
Olivia Rupp and Rania
Hamdani.
Head coach Katie Sinnott
said the pairâ€™s leadership and
commitment defi ned the program.
â€œCoaching them has
been an absolute pleasure,â€
she said. â€œTheyâ€™re strong runners
who led us to winning
records the past few seasons.â€
Rupp narrowly missed advancing
individually to the
state fi nals, fi nishing just outside
the top 10 cutoff. â€œShe
may have been disappointed,
but Iâ€™m not,â€ Sinnott said.
â€œShe and Rania gave everything
they had to the raceâ€”
TEAM LEADERS: Olivia Rupp and Rania Hamdani at the Division 2A state race at Northfi eld Mountain.
(Courtesy photo)
the perfect way to fi nish their
high school careers.â€
Hamdani, known for her
powerful fi nishing kick, joined
the team last year and quickly
became a key scorer. Rupp,
a four-year runner and team
captain, leaves behind a reputation
for consistency and
positivity. â€œOlivia never complained,
never quit, and always
lifted up her teammates,â€
Sinnott said. â€œSheâ€™s the kind
of athlete every coach wishes
for.â€
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‚Page 12
THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 2025
By Tara Vocino
wenty-eight veterans from
the Veterans Home at Chelsea,
American Legion members
and Jewish War veterans
were honored during Sundayâ€™s
Revere Veterans Committee
Dinner Dance at the Casa Lucia
Function Facility.
T
Revere Veterans Committee Dinner Dance
honors those who served
Mayor Patrick Keefeâ€™s son Patrick
proudly serves our nation.
MRO-certified Veterans Service
Agent Al Terminiello said
approximately 181 veterans
have come through the mostly
food bank.
The American Legion with Elks Lodge members and Jewish War veterans saluted during the National
Anthem.
For the fi rst time at the event,
a city councillor sang the National
Anthem. Shown here is
Ward 5 Councillor Angela Guarino-Sawaya.
Veteransâ€™
Service Offi cer Daniel
Hernandez read Governor
Maura Healeyâ€™s proclamation.
Revere Veterans Committee Co-Chairs Ira Novoselsky
(left) and Al Terminiello presented State
Senator Lydia Edwards with a Certifi cate of Appreciation
for her eff orts to support veterans.
State Senator Lydia Edwards serves in the Mass.
Army National Guard as a First Lieutenant and
Judge Advocate General Offi cer.
Revere Veterans Committee Co-Chairs Ira Novoselsky
(left) and Al Terminiello presented Ward
5 Councillor Angela Guarino-Sawaya with a Certifi
cate of Appreciation for her eff orts to support
veterans.
State Representative Jeffrey
Turcoâ€™s son, Rosario, plans to
enter the National Guard.
Congressman/Senate candidate
Seth Moulton said he was
welcomed home after serving,
but not all veterans were, especially
Vietnam ones. He acknowledged
them publicly.
Revere Veterans Committee CoChairs
Ira Novoselsky (left) and
Al Terminiello with host Pamela
Blyakhman
Revere Veterans Committee Co-Chairs Ira Novoselsky
(left) and Al Terminiello presented
State Representative Jeff rey Turco with a Certifi
cate of Appreciation for his eff orts to support
veterans.
Revere Veterans Committee Co-Chairs Ira Novoselsky
(left) and Al Terminiello presented
Councillor-at-Large Anthony Zambuto with a
Certifi cate of Appreciation for his eff orts to support
veterans.
Shown from left to right: Revere
Veterans Committee Co-Chair
Ira Novoselsky, Congressman/
Senate candidate Seth Moulton
and Veterans Committee CoChair
Al Terminiello presented
Moulton with a challenge coin.
Shown from left to right: Councillor-at-Large Robert Haas, School Committee Member Anthony Caggiano, School Committee Member
John Kingston, State Senator Lydia Edwards, Ward 2 Councillor Ira Novoselsky, Mayor Patrick Keefe, First Lady Jennifer Keefe, Ward
5 Councillor Angela Guarino-Sawaya, Congressman Seth Moulton and event co-host Al Terminiello.
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Page 13
Shown from left to right: Seated: Veterans Home at Chelsea veterans
George Bradshaw, who served in Germany, Vietnam veteran
David Haight and Army veteran Peter Goss; standing: Vietnam
veterans Charley Sarcia, Richard Duval and John Goodwin.
Shown from left to right: Standing: Al Mattaliano
and Susan Doty; seated: Ernest Brown,
Marie Loconzolo and Rocco Falzone.
Shown from left to right: Vincent LaMarro, Richard
Terminiello, III, Richard Terminiello, Sr., Carolyn Zidel
and Al Terminiello.
Shown from left to right: Veterans Home at Chelsea veterans Gulf War veteran
Corinne Beckett, Korea veteran George Gambal, Vietnam veteran William Call, Vietnam
veteran Jake Dalton, Pamela Blyakhman, Vietnam veteran James Lavers, Recreation
Therapist Mirna Polanco and Fort Bragg veteran William Surette.
Shown from left to right: Standing: Pamela Blyakhman, Helen Cirillo (holding a picture
in memory of her father, World War II veteran Joseph Aceto and his friend, Nicholas Barnett)
with Sandy DeChristoforo (in memory of her father, World War II veteran Alfonso
DiChiara and her brother, Vietnam veteran Nicholas DiChiara); seated: Julia Delloiano,
Joan Papa, Ken Mason and Thomas Miller.
Shown from left to right: Standing: Rossetti-Cowan Senior Center members Beverly Forgione and Judi
Dâ€™Ambrosio; seated: Betty Iannzzi, Dotty Ditalia, Kathy Smith, Paula Steverson, Millie Schettino, Phyllis Prizio
and Annmaria Firicano with the raffl e items.
Shown from left to right: Standing: Rossetti-Cowan
Senior Center members Vietnam veteran Dale Willett,
Maureen Willett, Denise Rampelberg, Nancy Monkiewicz
and Susan Foti; seated: Eleanor Vieira, Sandi Lozier
and Linda Doherty.
The dance fl oor was bustling during Sundayâ€™s Revere Veterans Day celebration at Casa Lucia Function Facility. (Advocate photos by Tara Vocino)
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THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 2025
Malden Catholic High School Hosts Events at new Fieldhouse
From creative costumes to Middle School Trick-or-Treat fun, Halloween at MC was full of laughter and community spirit. Our students, faculty, and staff brought the energy
â€” making it a day to remember!
A truly special day for MC! We celebrated our fi rst all-school Mass for grades 7â€”12 with Archbishop Henning, followed by the blessing of our new 50 Crystal St. building.
The eveningâ€™s ribbon cutting grand opening was fi lled with joy, gratitude, and hope for the future. Thank you to everyone who made this milestone possible!
Middle school is all about discovery, friendships, and growth! Our new Grade
7 and 8 students have settled in beautifully â€” exploring new subjects, meeting
teachers, and building lasting memories. Every day brings new lessons and
laughter as they begin their exciting journey at MC!
Weâ€™re so proud of
our senior athletes!
Senior Night honored
their hard work,
leadership, and spirit
across all fall sports.
Thank you, seniors,
for your dedication
and for leaving an incredible
legacy at MC!
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Page 15
By Bob Katzen
If you have any questions about this weekâ€™s report, e-mail us
at bob@beaconhillrollcall.com or call us at (617) 720-1562
THE HOUSE AND SENATE:
Beacon Hill Roll Call records local
representativesâ€™ and senatorsâ€™
votes on roll calls from the
week of November 3-7.
CHANGE ARCHAIC LANGUAGE
REFERRING TO PERSONS
WITH DISABILITIES (H
4704)
House 152-0, approved and
sent to the Senate a bill that
would modernize and remove
archaic language in state laws
to refl ect the evolution of terminology
relating to persons
with disabilities. The Senate
has already approved a different
version of the measure,
and the House version now
goes to the Senate for consideration.
Changes
include replacing
â€œhandicapped personsâ€ with
â€œpersons with disabilities;â€ replacing
â€œthe mentally retardedâ€
with â€œpersons with an intellectual
disability;â€ replacing â€œretarded
childrenâ€ with â€œchildren
with an intellectual disability;â€
and replacing â€œdisabled American
veteransâ€ with â€œAmerican
veterans with disabilities.â€
â€œAs lawmakers, we know that
words matter,â€ said Speaker of
the House Ron Mariano (DQuincy).
â€œThis legislation is our
latest eff ort to ensure that our
state laws do not use antiquated
words that carry negative
connotations, words that also
serve as a reminder of past injustices.â€
â€œRemoving
out-of-date and
off ensive language from the
Massachusetts General Laws to
describe people with disabilities
is an important step in ensuring
that our values are also
refl ected in our statutes,â€ said
Rep. Jay Livingstone (D-Boston),
House Chair of the Committee
on Children, Families
and Persons with Disabilities.
â€œAs legislators, it is our job to
help make sure that people
with intellectual or developmental
disabilities feel included,
accepted and embraced for
who they are, and this is an important
step in doing so.â€
(A â€œYesâ€ vote is for the bill.)
Rep. Jessica Giannino Yes
Rep. Jeff Turco Yes
HOME CARE (H 4706)
House 153-1, approved and
sent to the Senate a bill that
would establish a licensure process
for home care agencies
that supporters say will ensure
that consumers receive quality
non-medical services, and that
home care workers are protected.
The
Executive Offi ce of Health
and Human Services (EOHHS)
would implement the licensure
process and have the authority
to approve licenses, survey
and investigate home care
agencies and impose fi nes. The
measure also would require
EOHHS to conduct a suitability
review for all licensure applicants,
including for all individuals
with at least a 5 percent
ownership interest in the agency;
review applicants to ensure
that they have suffi cient fi nancial
capacity to provide a minimum
standard of care; and require
EOHHS to publish a list of
all licensed home care agencies
on its website.
Other provisions require minimum
standards for home care
workers by mandating several
background screening checks
on them; training and competency
requirements for home
care workers including confi -
dentiality and privacy rights of
home care consumers; infection
control and communicable diseases;
handling of emergencies,
including safety and falls prevention;
identifying and reporting
suspected abuse, neglect
or theft; and understanding Alzheimerâ€™s
disease and dementia,
including person-centered
care, activities of daily living,
safety and dementia-related
behaviors and communication.
The legislation implements
workforce protections for employees
including establishing
procedures to ensure home
care workers have safe working
conditions, adequate training
and a process for submitting
complaints; requiring licensed
home care agencies
to have coverage for workerâ€™s
compensation and liability insurance;
creation of the Home
Care Worker and Consumer
Abuse Stakeholder Advisory
Committee to study and make
recommendations on standards
and procedures for addressing
abusive treatment, including
physical, verbal, mental
abuse and bullying of home
care workers, personal care assistants,
home care consumers
and family members; and informing
home care workers of
potentially unsafe working environments.
â€œThis
legislation could not
have been passed at a more critical
time,â€ said Rep. Tom Stanley
(D-Waltham), House Chair of
the Committee on Aging and
Independence. â€œWith our aging
population expected to grow
exponentially in the coming
years and the number of family
caregivers shrinking, the demand
for home care will subsequently
increase. It is critical
for the commonwealth to have
the proper standards and protections
in place for home care
agencies to ensure consumers
receive quality care and our
dedicated home care workers
are properly trained and supported
in the fi eld.â€
â€œWith persistent staffing
shortages and projections of
growing need, urgent legislative
action is needed to establish
improved oversight over
home care agency employers,
better prepare to meet future
care demands and to reduce
the far-too-common abuse and
workplace bullying of home
care workers and/or their consumer
clients,â€ said Cari Medina,
Executive Vice President of
1199SEIU, the union which represents
more than 60,000 home
care worker members. â€œ[We]
strongly support this bill to establish
a new state process for
the licensure of Massachusetts
home care agencies, to implement
improved operational
standards for these agencies
and to direct the adoption of
new minimum standards and
operational procedures for addressing
abusive treatment and
bullying of home care workers
and/or their consumers.â€
Betsey Crimmins, Executive
Director of Mass Aging Access,
said that Mass Aging Access
and its statewide network of
24 Aging Services Access Points
strongly support the bill.
â€œMassachusetts does not license
non-medical home care
services, even though these services
are essential to helping
older adults and people with
disabilities live safely and independently
in their own homes,
resulting in better health outcomes
and an improved quality
of life,â€ said Crimmins. â€œThe passage
of [this legislation] will fi ll
longstanding gaps in the commonwealthâ€™s
current system,
bring Massachusetts in line with
the majority of other states and
strengthen our long-term services
and supports network. â€œ
Rep. John Gaskey (R-Carver),
the only representative to vote
against the bill, did not respond
to repeated requests from Beacon
Hill Roll Call asking him why
he opposed the measure.
(A â€œYesâ€ vote is for the bill. A
â€œNoâ€ vote is against it.)
Rep. Jessica Giannino Yes Rep.
Jeff Turco Yes
MORE SUPPORT FOR MILITARY
FAMILIES (S 2709)
Senate 39-0, approved and
sent to the House a bill that
supporters say would provide
enhanced safety, stability and
educational opportunities for
military families, and position
the Bay State for greater federal
defense investment and economic
growth around its six military
bases.
The bill would guarantee that
BHRC | SEE Page 16
- LEGAL NOTICE -
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î€·î€«î€¨ î€·î€µî€¬î€¤î€¯ î€¦î€²î€¸î€µî€·
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î€¶î˜îµµî’îîŽ î€³î•î’î…î„î—îˆ î„î‘î‡ î€©î„îîŒîîœ î€¦î’î˜î•î—
î€•î€— î€±îˆîš î€¦î‹î„î•î‡î’î‘ î€¶î—î•îˆîˆî—
î€¥î’î–î—î’î‘î€ î€°î€¤ î€“î€•î€”î€”î€—
î€‹î€™î€”î€šî€Œ î€šî€›î€›î€î€›î€–î€“î€“
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î€¨î–î—î„î—îˆ î’î‰î€ î€¥î€¤î€µî€µî€¼ î€±î€¨î€¤î€¯ î€µî€²î€¦î€®î€¯î€¬î€±
Dî„î—îˆ î’î‰ î€§îˆî„î—î‹î€ î€“î€œî€’î€“î€™î€’î€•î€“î€•î€˜
î€¦î€¬î€·î€¤î€·î€¬î€²î€± î€²î€± î€³î€¨î€·î€¬î€·î€¬î€²î€± î€©î€²î€µ
î€©î€²î€µî€°î€¤î€¯ î€¤î€§î€­î€¸î€§î€¬î€¦î€¤î€·î€¬î€²î€±
To all interested persons:
A petition for î€©î’î•îî„î î€¤î‡îî˜î‡îŒî†î„î—îŒî’î‘ î’î‰ î€¬î‘î—îˆî–î—î„î†îœ î„î‘î‡
î€¤î“î“î’îŒî‘î—îîˆî‘î— î’î‰ î€³îˆî•î–î’î‘î„î î€µîˆî“î•îˆî–îˆî‘î—î„î—îŒî™îˆ î‹î„î– î…îˆîˆî‘ î‚¿îîˆî‡ î…îœî€
î€­îŒîî î€¨î€‘ î€°î„î•î—îŒî‘ of î€¹îˆî•î‘î’î‘ î€«îŒîîî–î€ î€¬î€¯ requesting that the Court enter
a formal Decree and Order and for such other relief as requested
in the Petition.
The Petitioner requests that:
î€­îŒîî î€¨î€‘ î€°î„î•î—îŒî‘ of î€¹îˆî•î‘î’î‘ î€«îŒîîî–î€ î€¬î€¯ be appointed as Personal
Representative(s) of said estate to serve î€ºîŒî—î‹î’î˜î— î€¶î˜î•îˆî—îœ on the
bond in î˜î‘î–î˜î“îˆî•î™îŒî–îˆî‡ î„î‡îîŒî‘îŒî–î—î•î„î—îŒî’î‘î€‘
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î’î…îîˆî†î—îŒî’î‘ î‰î’îîî’îšîˆî‡ î…îœ î„î‘ î„îµ¶î‡î„î™îŒî— î’î‰ î’î…îîˆî†î—îŒî’î‘î– îšîŒî—î‹îŒî‘ î—î‹îŒî•î—îœ
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î‘î’î—îŒî†îˆ î—î’ îœî’î˜î€‘
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THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 2025
BHRC | FROM Page 15
a child of a military family would
retain a seat in the classroom
at their current school in Massachusetts,
even if their parent
or guardian is temporarily
transferred elsewhere on offi
cial orders. If a military family
moves permanently and arrives
in a Massachusetts community,
the bill also requires a
timely and seamless transition
for students who receive special
education services.
Other provisions allow certain
information from the military
to be admissible as evidence in
state courts for people seeking
temporary domestic violence
restraining orders; allow for federal
judges to transfer juvenile
cases to Massachusetts courts
for off enses that occur on military
bases; and direct National
Guard leadership to track and
report suicide data among veterans
of the Massachusetts National
Guard.
Sen. John Velis (D-Westfi eld),
Senate Chair of the Committee
on Veterans and Federal Aff airs,
said the bill bolsters the way
that Massachusetts cares for
its military families and in turn
helps improve our Department
of Defense scorecard to maintain
critical federal military investments
in our state.
â€œAs we approach Veterans
Day, I am incredibly proud to
be a part of a legislative body
that prioritizes not only our
veterans and servicemembers
but also our military families as
well,â€ said Velis. â€œAt the end of
the day, my focus as Chairman
of the Committee on Veterans
and Federal Aff airs continues
to be on ensuring that our
commonwealth is not only the
very best state for a veteran to
call home, but also a welcoming
and supportive home for
our active-duty service members
and their families.â€
â€œIâ€™m proud that Massachusetts
continues to seek out
ways to support our active military
members and veterans
and their families,â€ said Senate
President Karen Spilka (DAshland).
â€œIn advance of Veterans
Day, it was important that
the Senate reinforce our commitment
to meeting veterans,
active military members and
their families where they are
and provide support to those
who have served and are serving
our nation.â€
â€œMilitary families very often
face diffi cult situations when
parents are called to duty, never
knowing when or where
their service to our country
will take them,â€ said Sen. Mike
Rodrigues (D-Westport), Chair
of the Senate Committee on
Ways and Means. â€œThis bill will
help create a more stable environment
for military serving
families by ensuring continuous
education and a smooth
transition for special education
services when changing
school districts.â€
â€œI have seen firsthand the
power of legislation that seeks
to improve the lives of our military
and military-connected
families,â€ said Jeff rey Chin, Executive
Director of Blue Star Families
of New England. â€œ[The bill]
will provide our military families
a vital component that has
all too often been missing in
their ability to properly provide
educational resources for
their children. These families
are often required to move to
various duty stations as part
of their duty and lifestyle, and
this legislation will allow our
military families to access the
same choices that non-military
families have available to them
with regard to schools and access
to appropriate educational
resources for their children.â€
(A â€œYesâ€ vote is for the bill.)
Sen. Lydia Edwards Yes
DUTIES OF THE ADJUTANT
GENERAL (S 2675)
Senate 38-0, approved and
sent to the House a bill that
supporters say would clarify
the duties of the stateâ€™s Adjutant
General. The measure
provides that the Adjutant
General, Massachusettsâ€™ highest-ranking
military offi ce, has
command of all troops in the
state National Guard while carrying
out the orders of the governor.
The bill also brings state
laws about the National Guard
chain of command into line
with the model used by the
vast majority of other states.
â€œThe legislation currently before
us â€¦ seeks to make a technical
change to streamline our
National Guardâ€™s chain of command
structure and bring Massachusetts
in line with the vast
majority of our sister states,â€
said Sen. John Velis (D-Westfield).
â€œAs currently written,
[Massachusetts law] states that
the Adjutant General shall not
personally excercise command
of troops.â€
Velis continued, â€œThis legislation
clarifi es that the Adjutant
General, in carrying out the policies
and orders of the governor,
has command of all Massachusetts
National Guard troops
â€” ensuring that the leadership
of the Guard is unifi ed and capable
of implementing directives
with precision. Currently,
the Adjutant General lacks the
clear statutory authority to personally
command our troops
during state missions. This gap
can cause confusion in command
structure and limits the
Adjutant General from enforcing
the Massachusetts code of
military justice.â€
â€œIt [is] important to make a
technical clarification to the
command structure of the Massachusetts
National Guard that
brings us in line with most other
states,â€ said Senate President
Karen Spilka (D-Ashland).
(A â€œYesâ€ vote is for the bill.)
Sen. Lydia Edwards Yes
GUARD MEMBERS MUST FOLLOW
ONLY LAWFUL ORDERS
(S 2675)
Senate 38-0, approved an
amendment that would require
that Massachusetts National
Guard service members undergo
training on their obligation
to follow only lawful orders and
that they receive guidance on
how to respond to orders that
violate Americansâ€™ constitutional
or statutory rights.
â€œNational Guard troops
across the country are being
asked to violate the sovereignty
of other states and the constitutional
rights of ordinary
Americans by a president who
wants to use them like pawns
in his game of intimidation,â€
said amendment sponsor Sen.
Mike Moore (D-Millbury). â€œThis
amendment is simple. By creating
a comprehensive training
curriculum for servicemembers,
Massachusetts is empowering
our National Guard with
the knowledge they need to
determine, in the event that
they are federalized, whether
the orders they receive are
lawful. The rights guaranteed
by the United States Constitution
are non-negotiable â€” the
commonwealth of Massachusetts
will not let our Guard be
illegally used against its own
people.â€
(A â€œYesâ€ vote is for the amendment.)
Sen.
Lydia Edwards Yes
ALSO UP ON BEACON HILL
GRADUATE STUDENTS AND
FAMILY LEAVE AND UNEMPLOYMENT
(S 747) â€” The Financial
Services Committee
held a hearing on a measure
that would strike the exclusion
of graduate student workers
from the defi nition of â€œemployeeâ€
in order to allow for graduate
student workers to have access
to paid family and medical
leave and unemployment
insurance.
â€œGraduate students are workers,
plain and simple, oftentimes
with families, mortgage
and the same health, economic
and life challenges that
most working people face,â€
said sponsor Sen. Paul Feeney
(D-Foxborough). â€œThey put in
long hours and perform critical
work. Despite the fact that
they are working for educational
institutions with abundant
endowments, many donâ€™t
have the same paid family and
medical leave and unemployment
insurance benefi ts that
are aff orded other hard-working
people in the commonwealth.
This bill would rightfully
close that loophole and allow
them the same rights as everyone
else.â€
LIFE INSURANCE (S 760) â€”
Another bill heard by the Financial
Services Committee
would allow the holder of a
life insurance policy to update
their benefi ciaries using an online
tool if one is provided by
the life insurance company,
as long as the company takes
reasonable steps to verify that
the identity of the requester
matches the holder of the policy.
This bill would abolish a current
law that requires all benefi
ciary changes to be made in
person, with a â€œwetâ€ signature
and witness present.
â€œTechnology has signifi cantly
developed since life insurance
benefi ciary practices were
set in the commonwealth,â€ said
sponsor Sen. Barry Finegold (DAndover).
â€œMany life insurance
companies are now able to accept
requests to change designated
benefi ciaries under life or
endowment insurance policies,
and this bill brings our legislation
up to speed with the industry.
While we move toward
more technologically advanced
processes, we can maintain
safety and identity verifi cation
in similarly advanced ways. This
bill will help make this process
more convenient and time-effi
cient for all parties.â€
DECEASED ANIMALS ON
STATE HIGHWAYS (H 3678) â€”
The Transportation Committee
held a hearing on a proposal
that would require any
State Department of Transportation
highway employees who
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Page 17
fi nd deceased dogs or cats with
identifi cation, to either attempt
to directly contact the owner or
to notify local animal control offi
cers or the police department.
â€œWhen a pet is hit on a highway
and has a collar or microchip,
the family should be notifi
ed,â€ said sponsor Rep. Richard
Haggerty (D-Woburn). â€œRight
now, thereâ€™s no requirement for
that to happen, leaving families
wondering what happened
to their beloved pets. This bill
would give them answers and
closure.â€
BILL RUSSELL AND BOB
COUSY HIGHWAY (H 3727) â€”
Legislation that would name
the portion of the Massachusetts
Turnpike between Boston
and Worcester, â€œThe Bill Russell
and Bob Cousy Highway,â€ was
also before the Transportation
Committee.
â€œI believe we should pay
homage to celebrated Boston
Celtics teammates and NBA
champions, Bob Cousy and the
late Bill Russell, who were not
only exceptional athletes who
brought many championships
home to Boston, but who were
also two great pillars of our
community here in the commonwealth,â€
said sponsor Rep.
David Linsky (D-Natick).
Linsky continued, â€œBill Russell,
as the fi rst Black coach in
the NBA, was a frequent target
of racially motivated harassment
and abuse. Even as
he received death threats and
hate crimes from his own fan
base, he courageously continued
to pioneer player activism.
Russell marched alongside civil
rights leaders such as Martin
Luther King, Jr. and Medgar Evans,
and continued to fi ght for
civil rights his entire life. Bob
Cousy was also much more
than a basketball player. He
played a tremendous role in organizing
the fi rst playerâ€™s union
in the NBA which helped kickstart
a new era of player empowerment
in sports. Russell
and Cousy both risked their careers
and their lives to fi ght for
what they believed in, and we
should continue to honor them
for their incredible work for our
community.â€
PROHIBIT RECORDING OR
BROADCASTING WHILE DRIVING
(S 2349) â€” The Transportation
Committeeâ€™s agenda also
included a bill, known as Charlieâ€™s
Law, which would prohibit
anyone from video recording
or broadcasting live while driving
a vehicle.
â€œI filed this legislation to
honor my constituent, Charlie
Braun of Northampton â€” a beloved
partner, father, grandfather
and community member
â€” who was struck and killed
by a motor vehicle while riding
his bicycle,â€ said sponsor Sen.
Jo Comerford (D-Northampton).
â€œReports indicate that the
driver of the vehicle was engaged
in a FaceTime conversation
while driving. Charlieâ€™s
tragic death underscored a gap
that remains in our distracted
driving laws, one that this bill
seeks to close.â€
Comerford continued, â€œIn recent
years, there has been a
rapid rise in whatâ€™s known as
â€˜vlogging,â€™ or video recording
or live broadcasting, while behind
the wheel. A 2021 report
from State Farmâ€™s Auto Insurance
Research Department
found that between 2015 and
2020, the number of drivers recording
videos while driving
more than doubled, from 10
percent to nearly one in four.
The data are particularly troubling
among younger drivers:
44 percent of drivers aged 18
to 29 and 37 percent of those
aged 30 to 39, reported recording
videos while driving. Other
states, including Georgia,
Arizona, Tennessee and Utah,
have taken action to explicitly
prohibit this behavior. Massachusetts
should do the same.â€
BREASTFEEDING AND JURY
DUTY (H 2021) â€” The Judiciary
Committee held a hearing
on legislation that would exempt
breastfeeding mothers
from jury duty.
Supporters said that current
law only allows breastfeeding
mothers to delay jury duty up
to one year with a medical exemption.
â€œJury
duty is a civic responsibility
that is a crucial component
of our justice system and
democracy,â€ said sponsor Rep.
Steven Ultrino (D-Malden). â€œBut
breastfeeding parents should
not have to jump through excessive
administrative hoops
simply to request an exemption
or postponement. Currently,
breastfeeding parents
are not guaranteed opportunity
for postponement or a hardship
transfer to a more convenient
location to complete
their juror service. This bill will
ensure that our court system
becomes more family-friendly
and does not pose an undue
burden on new parents and
their infants.â€
PROHIBIT REVOCATION OF,
DENIAL OF OR REFUSAL TO RENEW
A STATE-ISSUED PROFESSIONAL
LICENSE AS A RESULT
OF STUDENT LOAN PAYMENT
DELINQUENCY (S 2139) â€” The
State Administration and Regulatory
Oversight Committeeâ€™s
hearing included a proposed
measure that would repeal the
stateâ€™s current law that allows
for professional licenses to be
revoked from, denied to or refused
to be renewed for individuals
due to a delinquent
student loan. Under the terms
of the proposed measure, with
the exception of the Division of
Banks, no state board of registration
or agency would be
permitted to revoke, deny or
refuse to renew any professional
license.
Under current state law, a
borrowerâ€™s state-issued professional
license cannot be revoked
from, denied to or refuse
to be renewed for only a
borrower who is in default on
an education loan. It does not
exempt students who are delinquent
but have not yet defaulted.
Many
professionals including
electricians, plumbers, accountants,
real estate appraisers,
real estate brokers and
massage therapists are required
to be licensed by the
state.
â€œThis is a commonsense bill
that would extend those unemployment
protections to
individuals who are behind on
their student loan payments,â€
said sponsor Sen. Ryan Fattman
(R-Sutton). â€œIt ensures
they donâ€™t fall further behind,
or risk defaulting, if their professional
license is at risk of being
withheld.â€
RANKED CHOICE VOTING
(S 531) â€” The Elections Laws
Committee held a hearing
on legislation that would allow
any city or town to adopt
and implement ranked choice
voting for local elections just
by approving a local bylaw to
do so â€” without having to go
through the current process
which requires a city or town
to fi rst pass a local home rule
petition and then requires approval
by the Legislature. Under
current law, any municipality
seeking to adopt ranked
choice voting for local elections
must go through this
lengthy and uncertain process.
The bill will empower communities
to adopt ranked choice
voting without having to do so.
Ranked choice voting is a
system under which voters
rank one or more candidates
in order of preference. If one
candidate receives more than
50 percent of the fi rst-place
votes, that candidate would
be declared the winner and
no other rounds would be
necessary. If no candidate receives
a majority of fi rst-place
votes, the candidate that receives
the least number of
fi rst-choice votes is eliminated.
The second choice of the
voters who supported the
eliminated candidate now becomes
their fi rst choice and is
added to the totals of the remaining
candidates. The same
process is repeated, if necessary,
until a candidate is the
first choice of a majority of
voters.
â€œRanked choice voting empowers
voters and enhances
ballot access, improving representative
democracy,â€ said
sponsor Sen. Becca Rausch
(D-Needham). â€œIt supports
positive campaigns and bolsters
votersâ€™ confi dence in our
electoral system. Massachusetts
voters understand and
support ranked choice voting,
especially for their local elections.
Iâ€™m proud to sponsor the
bill to clear the red tape preventing
municipalities from
implementing the election
system that voters want for
their communities.â€
BHRC | SEE Page 21
~ HELP WANTED ~
Type of Person Needed:
* Are you an experienced/willing to learn, motivated
person looking for a shop where your skills can be valued?
î€¤ îî’î†î„î î†î’îî“î„î‘îœ îšîŒî—î‹ î„ îƒ€îˆîˆî— î–î‹î’î“ îŒî– î„ î…î˜î–îœî€ î‰î„îîŒîîœî€î’îšî‘îˆî‡
î…î˜î–îŒî‘îˆî–î– î‡îˆî‡îŒî†î„î—îˆî‡ î—î’ î“î•î’î™îŒî‡îŒî‘îŠ î‹îŒîŠî‹î€î”î˜î„îîŒî—îœ î—î•î„î‘î–î“î’î•î—î„î—îŒî’î‘
services and public State inspection services. We are seeking
a talented Automotive Technician or mechanical knowledge to
îî’îŒî‘ î’î˜î• î†îî’î–îˆî€îŽî‘îŒî— î†î•îˆîšî€‘ î€¬î‰ îœî’î˜ î„î•îˆ î‡îˆî“îˆî‘î‡î„î…îîˆ î„î‘î‡ î“î•î’î‚¿î†îŒîˆî‘î—
in automotive technical work with a passion for excellent
customer service, we want to talk to you.
Location:
Malden, MA
Job Description:
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î€¶î—î„î—îˆ î€¬î‘î–î“îˆî†î—îŒî’î‘ î€¯îŒî†îˆî‘î–îˆî€‘ î€³îˆî•î‰î’î•î îîŒîŠî‹î— î‡î˜î—îœ îîˆî†î‹î„î‘îŒî†î„î
preventive duties, including Fleet preventive maintenance.
î€ î€¶î—î„î—îˆ î€¬î‘î–î“îˆî†î—îŒî’î‘ î€¶îˆî•î™îŒî†îˆî–
* Miscellaneous shop duties
Requirements:
* Valid driverâ€™s license with good driving history
î€ î€³î’î–î–îˆî–î– î’î• î“î„î–î– î—î‹îˆ î•îˆî”î˜îŒî•îˆî‡ î€¶î—î„î—îˆ î€¬î‘î–î“îˆî†î—î’î• î€¯îŒî†îˆî‘î–îˆ
Hours:
î€·î˜îˆî–î‡î„îœ î—î‹î•î’î˜îŠî‹ î€©î•îŒî‡î„îœî€ î€›î€î€–î€“ î€¤î€° î—î’ î€˜î€î€–î€“ î€³î€°
î€¶î„î—î˜î•î‡î„îœ î€›î€î€“î€“ î€¤î€° î—î’ î€–î€î€“î€“ î€³î€°
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Contact:
Ed Hyde or David Morovitz
Call: 781-322-9401
Email: ehyde@maldentrans.com
Website: www.maldentrans.com
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THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 2025
1. On November 14, 1851,
â€œMoby-Dickâ€ was published
â€” dedicated to what
Salem native?
2. What male name can be
used to refer to a cat and
a turkey?
3. In what state would you
fi nd an exhibit of World Series
rings?
4. Is coconut a nut?
5. On Nov. 15, 1887, what
painter with the same
name of a state was born?
6. What â€œCabâ€ recorded the
fox trot â€œEverybody Eats
When They Come to My
House?
7. Nov. 16 is National Button
Day; what is motherof-pearl,
which is used in
buttons?
8. How are â€œLittle Lies,â€ â€œDonâ€™t
Do Me Like That,â€ and â€œCry
Me a Riverâ€ similar?
9. Why does â€œThe Gong,â€ the
worldâ€™s largest tubular bell
(in a library in Aarhus, Denmark),
ring after a button is
pressed at a hospital?
10. In what winter sport is a
person lying on their back?
11. On Nov. 17, 1947, what
group also called SAG) approved
using a blacklist?
12. In what year were Qatarâ€™s
Leaning Mosque and Minaret
completed: 1211, 1811
or 2023?
13. Which of these is a real
place in Massachusetts:
Dogpatch, Dogville or
Dogtown?
14. Nov. 18 is National Apple
Cider Day; what president
with the same last name
as one of the Beatles had
the slogan â€œLog Cabin and
Hard Ciderâ€?
15. In 1949 Life magazine reported
on the Man from
Mars Radio Hat; was the
hat sold?
16. How are Amelia, Catalina
and Lucia similar?
17. On Nov. 19, 2002, the Senate
approved of what new
cabinet department?
18. What minister was named
after a word in this quote:
â€œâ€¦the never-to-be-forgotten
increase, of every sort,
wherewith God favoured
the country about the time
of his nativityâ€?
19. What is a boffin: a bird,
craft instrument or scientifi
c expert?
20. On Nov. 20, 1900, Chester
Gould was born; he created
what comic strip detective
with a two-way wrist radio?
Answers
How to Make a Home Safer
and More Accessible as You Age
Dear Savvy Senior,
What simple tips can you recommend
for making a home
age friendly? My husband and I
are in our late sixties and want
to remain living in our home for
as long as possible.
Homebody Hanna
Dear Hanna,
Many older adults, like you
and your husband, want to
stay living in their own home
for as long as possible. But being
able to do so will depend
on how easy it is to maneuver
your living space as you
get older.
There are literally dozens of
simple adjustments and modifi
cations you can do to help
make your home safer and
more accessible for aging-inplace.
Hereâ€™s a summary of tips
from the National Institute on
Aging and AARP, which off ers a
free room-by-room guide with
practical suggestions for older
adults living independently.
ENTRANCE WAY:
â€¢ Have at least one exterior
doorway with step-free access.
If that is not possible,
consider a ramp.
â€¢ Add a bench in the foyer
to sit on when removing
shoes or to set down items
while locking or unlocking
the door.
BATHROOM:
â€¢ Install a walk-in shower with
a bench and nonskid decals
or mats to prevent falls.
â€¢ Add a hand-held nozzle to
the shower head to facilitate
rinsing off while seated.
â€¢ Install grab bars on the shower
wall and near the toilet
â€¢ Put in a taller toilet or add a
toiler riser.
â€¢ Consider plugging in a nightlight.
BEDROOM:
â€¢
If stairs are too difficult to
manage, create a bedroom
on the main level by transforming
a den or an offi ce.
â€¢ Make sure the bed is easy to
get in and out of. Purchase
bed risers?, if needed.
â€¢ Invest in an adjustable bed
for extra comfort.
KITCHEN:
â€¢ Purchase a stove with safety
features that alert the resident
when a burner is on or
have automatic shutoff s.
â€¢ Relocate major appliances to
make them easier to reach.
â€¢ Add slide-out drawers or
trays to existing cabinets for
better access.
â€¢ Install a lever-style, lighttouch
or sensor faucet,
which is easier to use than a
faucet with turn-style knobs
or handles.
FURNITURE & RUGS:
â€¢ Get rid of furniture and clutter
to make rooms easier to
move around in.
â€¢ Use chairs with armrests,
which makes sitting and
standing easier.
â€¢ Avoid furniture with sharp
corners, which can cause
bruises and cuts when
bumped up against.
â€¢ Hide cords out of pathways
â€” but donâ€™t put them under
rugs.
â€¢ Area rugs, if used, should be
secured to the fl oor with a
nonslip mat or anti-slip rug
tape.
For more tips, get a copy of
AARPâ€™s â€œHomeFit Guideâ€ which
is a 36-page fully illustrated
guide and has more than 100
aging-in-place tips and suggestions
that can be made to
an existing house or apartment
or incorporated into designs
for a new residence.
It explains how a smartly designed
or modifi ed home can
meet the varied and changing
needs of its older residents. It
also features easy-to-do, lowcost
and no-cost fi xes that lessen
the risk of trip hazards and
increase the safety of high-use
areas like the bathroom, kitchen
and stairway.
In addition, AARP also off er
videos and a HomeFit AR app
(available for iPhone and iPad)
that can scan a room and suggest
improvements to help
turn your house into a â€œlifelong
home,â€ free from safety
and mobility risks.
Visit AARP.org/HomeFit to order
or download a free copy
of this guide, or to watch their
videos. You donâ€™t need to be
an AARP member to access
this content.
If youâ€™d like more hands-on
help, you could also hire an
occupational or physical therapist
that works with older
adults. He or she can come in,
evaluate your home and recommend
aging-in-place solutions.
And if you get a referral
from your doctor, Medicare
will usually cover a home walkthrough.
Send
your questions or comments to questions@savvysenior.org,
or to Savvy Senior, P.O. Box 5443, Norman, OK 73070.
1.
Nathaniel Hawthorne
2.
Tom (A tomcat is a
male house cat, and a
tom is an adult male
turkey.)
3. NY (at the National
Baseball Hall of Fame
and Museum in Cooperstown)
4.
No; it is a drupe,
which is a fruit that
does not split open
and has one seed
5. Georgia Oâ€™Keeff e
6.
Jazz singer/songwriter/band
leader
Cabell â€œCabâ€ Calloway
7.
It is a mollusk shellâ€™s
hard, iridescent inner
layer.
8. They are songs about
lies.
9. The cityâ€™s parents of
newborns may press
a button that remotely
triggers the
bell.
10. Luge sledding
11. Screen Actors Guild
12. 2023
13. Dogtown (a historic
woodland in Rockport
and Gloucester)
14. William Henry Harrison
(Reportedly, the
slogan made the candidate
seem less aristocratic.)
15.
Yes ($7.95) â€” â€œthe
latest and silliest
contribution to listeners
who feel compelled
to hear everything
on the airâ€
16. They are common
female names and
names of islands.
17. Homeland Security
18. Increase Mather,
whose home (now
the site of the Paul
Revere House) was
destroyed by fi re in
November 1676
19. Scientific expert (a
usually British term
that is sometimes
used to mean nerd)
20. Dick Tracy
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Page 19
OBITUARIES
Lidia Mastromattei
tromattei; her grandchildren,
Gianna and Anthony Macone
and Fiona and Celia Mastromattei,
her sister, Rita Palladinelli
and her sister-in-law and
brother-in-law, Esterina and
Antonio Mastromattei. She
was predeceased by her siblings
Mario, Velia, Ada, Renaldo,
and Antonio Palladinelli.
The Mastromattei famiO
f
Revere. Beloved wife,
mother, grandmother,
and sister, was born on November
12, 1951, in Monte
San Giovanni Campano, Italy.
She was born and raised in Italy
before immigrating to the
United States in 1970 at the
age of 18. She initially settled
in New York before making
Revere, Massachusetts, her
permanent home, where she
raised her family. Lidia shared
57 wonderful years of marriage
with her husband, Gino
Mastromattei. She was well
known in the community for
her years of work at Revere
bakeries, including the former
Brandanos and Salvatores and
Joe Paces in Saugus. Lidia had
a love for cooking but found
her greatest joy in caring for
her family.
She is survived by her devoted
husband, Gino Mastromattei;
her three loving children,
Mario Mastromattei,
Gina Macone, and Carlo Masly
would like to thank Mystic
Valley Elder Services, Care
Dimension Hospice and the
3 amazing healthcare workers
from Global Healthcare
Services (Marlene, Rosa, and
Sheila) for their amazing services
and contributions over
the years.
Visiting hours will be held
on Sunday, November 16,
2025, from 3:00 p.m. to 7:00
p.m. at the Buonfi glio Funeral
Home, 128 Revere Street, Revere.
A funeral service will be
held from the funeral home
on Monday at 10:00 a.m., followed
by a Funeral Mass at
11:00 a.m. at St. Anthonyâ€™s
Church, Revere. Interment will
follow in Holy Cross Cemetery.
Mary M. (Alberta)
Albuzetian
lifelong resident of Revere.
Passed away peacefully
with family by her side
on November 10, at the age
of 98. Born in Revere on January
9, 1927, she lived a long
and faith-fi lled life devoted to
her family, her church, and her
community. Mary dedicated
many years of her professionA
A
woman of faith and endless
strength, Mary lived each
day with gratitude and purpose.
She was an avid reader
who enjoyed keeping up
with current events and was
rarely seen without her daily
edition of The Boston Globe
al life as a Dental Assistant for
Dr. Joseph DiPietroâ€™s offi ce in
Revere, where her gentle nature,
compassion, and kind
words brought comfort to
countless patients and colleagues.
Her devotion to service
extended well beyond
her work. She served as Past
President of the Ladies Sodality
of St. Anthonyâ€™s Church
and also the Revere League
for Special Needs. She was
a proud member of the Department
of Mental Retardationâ€™s
Citizens Advisory Board,
the Chatter Box Club of Boston,
and Massachusetts Citizens
for Life. In each role, she
exemplifi ed dedication, humility,
and a sincere concern
for others.
or the weekly Revere Journal.
Her Catholic faith was the cornerstone
of her life and guided
her in all she did.
Mary was the beloved wife
of the late Ara Albuzetian. She
was the cherished mother of
Kara Albuzetian of Revere.
She was the devoted daughter
of the late Thomas and Virginia
(Ciambriello) Alberta of
Revere. Mary is also survived
by many cousins and friends.
Mary will be remembered for
her kind and generous heart,
steadfast faith, and lifelong
commitment to helping others.
Her legacy of service and
compassion will continue to
inspire all who knew her.
Family and friends were invited
to attend visiting hours
on Thursday November 13 at
the Buonfi glio Funeral Home,
Revere, followed by a Funeral
Mass at St. Anthonyâ€™s Church,
Revere. Interment followed in
Woodlawn Cemetery. Please
consider making a donation
in Maryâ€™s memory to the May
Institute, 794 Broadway, Revere,
MA 02151, https://www.
mayinstitute.org/
Robert J. Guerriero
O
f Revere. Passed away on
November 9th at 86 years
of age. He is the beloved husband
of Lois M. (Griffi n) of Revere.
Devoted father of Michael
J. Guerriero and his fi -
anc? Kelley Settipane of Revere,
Mark R. Guerriero and his
partner Anna Contreras of Revere,
Lisa Cefalo and her husband
Felice of Saugus, DebREAL
ESTATE TRANSACTIONS
BUYER1
Banouni, Naima M
Bedoya, Samantha E
Leader, Divisha C
Moreno, Sebastian P
Mu, Limin
Pineda, Julio A
Romero-Ibarra, Francisco
Santella, Alexis
Tran, Trang T
Vilchis, Jailine V
Woude, Ethan V
Granados, Ever J
Tran, Tuyen T
Romero, Jony A
BUYER2
Bedoya, Yaned O
Killian, Sean
Espitia, Sandra C
SELLER1
Zepaj Development LLC
Correa, Wilson A
Aguiar, Humberto G
Mazo, Marcela E
Zepaj Development LLC
Dangelo Ft
Cabrera, Evelyn
Santella, Renee A
Drucas, Michael
Demetrio Louise M Est
Bonasoro, Elizabeth
Demetrio, Joseph
Aguiar, Andreia P
Arango, Jhon J
Dangelo, Pike T
SELLER2
ADDRESS
8 Revere St #3
15 Wave Ave #1B
36 S Irving St
44 Fenno St
8 Revere St #7
33 Lantern Rd
26 Gage Ave
57 Olive St
149 Squire Rd
69 Haskell Ave
184 Crescent Ave
bie Esposito-Corcoran and
the late Laurie A. Guerriero.
Cherished grandfather of Mia,
Thomas, Lila, Robert and Robert.
Dear brother of the late
Grace Solano, Anna Pacella
and Michael Guerriero. He is
also lovingly survived by several
nieces and nephews.
Robert was a longtime Revere
resident for over 60 years
and worked for many years for
Cabot Paint and he also spent
time working as an inspector
for the City of Revere. In his
spare time, he enjoyed being
with his family and he loved
to keep fi t and run.
Family and friends are invited
to attend Visiting Hours on
Friday, November 14th from
10:30 a.m. to 12:00 p.m. in
the Vertuccio Smith & Vazza,
Beechwood Home for Funerals,
262 Beach St., Revere for
A Funeral Service will be conducted
in the Funeral Home
at 12:00 p.m., followed by interment
in Puritan Lawn Memorial
Park, Peabody.
Revere
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
DATE PRICE
10.20.25 650000
10.17.25 585000
10.17.25 768000
10.16.25 870000
10.17.25 650000
10.22.25 685000
10.23.25 820000
10.20.25 800000
10.21.25 275000
10.17.25 640000
10.22.25 750000
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THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 2025
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please call David @ 781-322-9401.
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î€¯î„î‘î‡î–î†î„î“îŒî‘îŠî€ î€¨îîˆî†î—î•îŒî†î„îî€ î€³îî˜îî…îŒî‘îŠî€ î€³î„îŒî‘î—îŒî‘îŠî€ î€µî’î’îƒ€î‘îŠî€ î€¦î„î•î“îˆî‘î—î•îœî€ î€©î•î„îîŒî‘îŠî€
î€§îˆî†îŽî–î€ î€©îˆî‘î†îŒî‘îŠî€ î€°î„î–î’î‘î•îœî€ î€§îˆîî’îîŒî—îŒî’î‘î€ î€ªî˜î—î€î’î˜î—î–î€ î€­î˜î‘îŽ î€µîˆîî’î™î„î î€‰ î€§îŒî–î“îˆî•î–î„îî€
î€¦îîˆî„î‘ î€¸î“î–î€ î€¼î„î•î‡î–î€ î€ªî„î•î„îŠîˆî–î€ î€¤î—î—îŒî†î– î€‰ î€¥î„î–îˆîîˆî‘î—î–î€‘ î€·î•î˜î†îŽ î‰î’î• î€«îŒî•îˆî€ î€¥î’î…î†î„î— î€¶îˆî•î™îŒî†îˆî–î€‘
Clean-Outs!
We take and dispose
from cellars, attics,
garages, yards, etc.
Call Robert at:
781-844-0472
ClassiClassifiedsfieds
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Page 21
BHRC | FROM Page 17
QUOTABLE QUOTES â€” To
no oneâ€™s surprise, Gov. Maura
Healey and President Donald
Trump had sharply diff erent
views of last weekâ€™s elections.
Here are some of their
post-election quotes.
â€œ[The elections were] a resounding
rejection of Donald
Trump.â€
---Gov. Healey.
â€œThe results yesterday,
across the board â€” itâ€™s a referendum
on Donald Trump.
People are not happy with
how heâ€™s handling the economy.
Theyâ€™re not happy about
the fact that under his presidency,
prices continue to go
up. People struggle with affordability
all around this
country, and he hasnâ€™t delivered
on what he promised to
and thatâ€™s what last night was
about.â€
---Gov. Healey.
â€œItâ€™s pretty clear whatâ€™s happening.
[Donald Trump], your
boss, your leader-in-chief,
is taking you all down â€¦
and you got midterms next
year. Read the room. This isnâ€™t
working for people.â€
---Gov. Healey.
â€œAfter last nightâ€™s results, the
decision facing all Americans
could not be more clear. We
have a choice between communism
and common sense.â€
---President Trump.
â€œIf you want to see what
Congressional Democrats
wish to do to America, just
look at the result of yesterdayâ€™s
election in New York,
where their party installed a
communist as the mayor of
the largest city in the nation.â€
---President Trump.
â€œLast night I think, if you
read the pollsters â€” the shutdown
was a big factor for Republicans.
They say that I
wasnâ€™t on the ballot was the
biggest factor.â€
---President Trump.
HOW LONG WAS LAST
WEEKâ€™S SESSION?
Beacon Hill Roll Call tracks
the length of time that the
House and Senate were in
session each week. Many
legislators say that legislative
sessions are only one aspect
of the Legislatureâ€™s job
and that a lot of important
work is done outside of the
House and Senate chambers.
They note that their jobs also
involve committee work, research,
constituent work and
other matters that are important
to their districts.
Critics say that the Legislature
does not meet regularly
or long enough to debate
and vote in public view on the
thousands of pieces of legislation
that have been fi led. They
note that the infrequency and
brief length of sessions are
misguided and lead to irresponsible
late-night sessions
and a mad rush to act on dozens
of bills in the days immediately
preceding the end of
an annual session.
During the week of November
3-7, the House met for
a total of four hours and 51
minutes and the Senate met
for a total of three hours and
57 minutes.
Mon. Nov. 3 House 11:00
a.m. to 11:15 a.m.
Senate 11:03 a.m. to 11:20
a.m.
Tues. Nov. 4 No House session.
No
Senate session.
Wed. Nov. 5 House 11:01
a.m. to 3:24 p.m.
No Senate session.
Thurs. Nov. 6 House 11:00
a.m. to 11:13 a.m.
Senate 12:11 p.m. to 3:51
p.m.
Fri. Nov. 7 No House session.
No Senate session.
Bob Katzen welcomes feedback
at bob@beaconhillrollcall.com
Bob
founded Beacon Hill
Roll Call in 1975 and was inducted
into the New England
Newspaper and Press Association
(NENPA) Hall of Fame
in 2019.
FURNISHED ROOM FOR RENT
EVERETT
1 bedroom, 1 bath furnished room for rent.
$275. per week rent. Two week deposit
plus 1 week rent required.
Call: 617-435-9047 - NO TEXT
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î€¤î‰îŠîŽîî†îš î€³î†îƒî–îŠîî• îî“ î€³î†î‘î‚îŠî“î†î…
î€©îî–î”î† î€§îî–îî…î‚î•îŠîî î€­î†î‚îŒî” î€³î†î‘î‚îŠî“î†î…
î€¢îî î€£î‚î”î†îŽî†îî• î€³î†î‘î‚îŠî“î”
î€¤î‰îŠîŽîî†îš î€ªîî”î‘î†î„î•îŠîî
î€³îîî‡îŠîîˆ î€‡ î€´îŠî…îŠîîˆ
î€®î‚î”îîî“îš î€³î†î‘î‚îŠî“î”
î€¸îŠîî…îî˜ î€ªîî”î•î‚îîî‚î•îŠîî î€‡ î€³î†î‘î‚îŠî“î”
î€¥î“îšî˜î‚îî î€‡ î€¤î‚î“î‘î†îî•î“îš
î€¸î‚î•î†î“î‘î“îîî‡îŠîîˆ
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THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 2025
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At Beyond Financing, we believe every dream home deserves more than a loan
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TRINITY REAL ESTATE
321 MAIN STREET | SAUGUS, MA | VILLAGE PARK
TrinityHomesRE.com
Helping Hands Start at Home.
Join us in spreading kindness this season!
Weâ€™re collecting non-perishable food
items for our local food bank.
Drop off your donations at
TRINITY REAL ESTATE
321 Main Street, Saugus, MA
Village Park Plaza
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Together, we can make sure every family
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We extend our heartfelt gratitude
from the whole team!
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Page 23
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THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 2025
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