×‰?4×B!×‘C‘×˜š Í( Í(Í€u×‰œ”×‰	Ú 7cassandra://u_oBXjmShX52GuiNKmBC5HB2UR9V5Lz_gvMlV3U36XkÎ íûÍ`ÍœÍ)×‰	Ú 7cassandra://ICswCQRkI5sKsjALEpKNqcT_mWaNPezvdlG34QGfa4YÍ›kÍ`ÍJÍà×‰	Ú 7cassandra://NtbXea8ms_gaxUFlG6A7exq6LNI2vpyL4VQA8y9Y4oYÍ2´Í`Ì°Í ×‰	Ú 7cassandra://XoLzQmltEA1hgoAVDiSWsrEPiDnadjU2apeLysaaBOkÎ  ÍWîÍ ÍÅÍñ×e:×ŸÚXç 6ß*‰‘× ×e:×ŸÚXç 6ß*Œ Í€Í’Ì¿9×H»http://www.advocatenews.net××Ðˆ×ˆE×e:×ŸÚXç 6ß*m×‰EÚVOTE NOVEMBER 7TH
Your Local News & Sports Online - Scan Here!
î€‹î€³î’îî€‘ î€¤î‡î™î€‘î€Œ
Vol. 33, No.43
-FREEwww.advocatenews.net
Rizzo
and Keefe spar
in back-and-forth
Mayoral debate
By Barbara Taormina
B
onnie Curran turned out a couple
hours early for this weekâ€™s
mayoral debate to wave a sign for
Acting Mayor Patrick Keefe, who
is in what appears to be a tight
race with former mayor and curFree
Every Friday
781-286-8500
Friday, October 27, 2023
Thousands attend Rec
Dept. Trunk A Treat
PATRICK KEEFE
Candidate for Mayor
rent Councillor-at-Large Dan Rizzo.
â€œWe need people out there to
make the hard decisions. He took
the bull by the horns when it came
to the high school,â€ said Curran,
adding that Keefeâ€™s support for a
DAN RIZZO
Candidate for Mayor
DEBATE | SEE Page 18
NEVER TOO OLD: Revere Senior Center staff , shown from left to right: Mina Canas, Anna Picardi
and Debbie Peczka DiGiulio, dressed as witches, with Luna Linares, 4, as Wednesday from the
Addams Family, Lea Linares, 8, as Cinderella, Tammy Linares, 8, as Elsa, and Francesca Linares, as
Casper the Friendly Ghost. See next weekâ€™s Advocate for photo highlights. (Advocate photo by Tara Vocino)
The leaders we trust, trust Patrick Keefe to lead!
KEEFE
Patrick
MAYOR
Believe in Revere
Vote on or before Tue. Nov 7
Governor Maura Healey
Lt. Governor Kim Driscoll
Congresswoman Katherine Clark
State Senator Lydia Edwards
At-large Councilor Gerry Visconti
At-large Councilor Steve Morabito
School Committee Carole Tye
i
Paid for and authorized by the Keefe Committee
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THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, OCTOBER 27, 2023
~ THINKING OUT LOUD ~
Bring Back Columbus Day Parade
By Sal Giarratani
nyone who follows my printed
opinions knows I have
been getting upset with each
passing year during the month
A
Dan - 1972
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F
ormer Clerk of Chelsea District Criminal Court, Harry Landry. "I've
known Dan Rizzo for many years and can think of no one more
qualifi ed to protect our families and neighborhoods. He has always
placed public safety as his highest priority and his experience is unmatched.
That's why I wholeheartedly endorse Dan Rizzo for Mayor.
~ LETTER-TO-THE-EDITOR ~
In support of ward
5 candidate Angela
Guarino-Sawaya
Dear Editor,
Itâ€™s hard to believe that we
are just weeks away from the
general election in Revere. Iâ€™ve
been a Ward 5 resident for over
40 years. So much has changed
over these years. Revere is no
longer what it used to be. Our
beautiful beach now has endless
apartment buildings, traffic
jams, overpopulation and
has an uptick in crime. You must
now leave the city for any resemblance
of fun. The movie
theater that I visited since I was
a kid also became a casualty.
Enough is enough. I am tired
of having the same politicians
with empty promises smiling at
me while lining their own pockets.
Iâ€™m tired of endless tax hikes.
Iâ€™m tired of folks heading to the
beach in the summer and having
to be afraid of street fi ghts
or gun shots fl ying over them.
I want a leader who is going to
put us fi rst. A leader who cares
and will be open and transparent
about what is going on in
this city and how it will aff ect
its residents. Transparency and
politics rarely go together. That
is why I have been supporting
Angela Guarino-Sawaya since
day 1. Iâ€™ve witnessed fi rst-hand
her leadership abilities. As president
of the POPBA, she has
kept us informed and fully disclosed
of everything that is happening
in our neighborhood.
In fact, I donâ€™t recall a past president
being as open as she is.
Unfortunately, what can come
with great leadership is criticism
that she is responsible
for everything negative in the
neighborhood. What residents
fail to realize is that the city is
responsible for most issues relating
to parking, construction
and street issues, and certain
rules that pertain to both the
public and private beaches. AlELECTION
| SEE Page 16
of October. As we all know, all
normal activity went into suspended
animation with the
coming of the pandemic, but
we looked like we lost Columbus
Day forever; not over COVID,
but over the radicalized Left
fantasy with cancel culture.
Columbus that guy used to
be a hero and now he has been
COLUMBUS | SEE Page 5
Our 51st Anniversary
Chris 2023
Former Chelsea
District Criminal
Court Clerk Endorses
Dan Rizzo for Mayor
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Page 3
DAN RIZZO
FOR MA Y O R
The leadership we know for
the future we deserve.
Dan Rizzo is the only candidate with the experience and
the willingness to get Revereâ€™s overdevelopment crisis under
control. Out-of-town developers are engaged in a feeding frenzy,
overdeveloping Revere too rapidly and building housing that our
residents canâ€™t afford. As a result, our quality of life is suffering.
Weâ€™re mired in traffic, our communities are less safe, and our
schools are underfunded and overcrowded.
We need Danâ€™s plan for
smart growth.
î€‚ Help Revere grow responsibly
î€‚ Create predetermined traffic mitigation
î€‚ Ensure city services match our cityâ€™s growth
Dan Rizzo understands the issues of the cityâ€™s top executive better
than anyone. He has a pragmatic approach that will allow Revere to
move into the future in ways that help improve our quality of life
rather than overwhelm it.
For more
information on
public safety,
watch:
For more
information on
overdevelopment
watch:
DAN RIZZO
FOR MA Y O R
DANRIZZO.ORG 781-710-3139
Political advertisement paid for and approved by The Committee to Elect Dan Rizzo.
Election Day: November 7th
×‰	Ú 7cassandra://0dbiJicvlT41FeFhTRTbnY30dA7zKID59JH6BFyC02sÍ#ÑÍ`Ì°Í ×e:×ŸÚXç 6ß*p×e:×ŸÚXç 6ß*oÍ
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THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, OCTOBER 27, 2023
Lawrence A. Simeone Jr.
Attorney-at-Law
~ Since 1989 ~
* Corporate Litigation
* Criminal/Civil
* MCAD
* Zoning/Land Court
* Wetlands Litigation
* Workmenâ€™s Compensation
* Landlord/Tenant Litigation
* Real Estate Law
* Construction Litigation
* Tax Lein
* Personal Injury
* Bankruptcy
* Wrongful Death
* Zoning/Permitting Litigation
300 Broadway, Suite 1, Revere * 781-286-1560
lsimeonejr@simeonelaw.net
Need a hall for your special event?
The Schiavo Club, located at
71 Tileston Street, Everett is
available for your Birthdays,
Anniversaries, Sweet 16 parties
and more?
Call Dennis at
(857) 249-7882 for details.
JOHN MACKEY & ASSOCIATES
~ Attorneys at Law ~
* PERSONAL INJURY
* REAL ESTATE
* FAMILY LAW
* PERSONAL BANKRUPTCY
* LANDLORD/TENANT DISPUTES
14 Norwood Street
Everett, MA 02149
Phone: (617) 387-4900 Fax: (617) 381-1755
WWW.JMACKEYLAW.COM
State Representatives Jeff rey Turco and Jessica Ann Giannino are shown with Revere Police Offi -
cers Brendon Leslie, right, and Christopher Panzini after the offi cers were recognized at the 40th
Annual Trooper George L. Hanna Memorial Awards for Bravery in Worcester.
O
n October 10, 2023, State
Representatives Jessica Giannino
(D-Revere) and Jeff rey
Turco (D-Winthrop) attended
the 40th
Annual Trooper George
L. Hanna Awards for Bravery
in Worcester, where three Revere
Police Officers were recognized.
Offi cer Brendon Leslie
was awarded the highest honor,
the Medal of Honor. Sargent
Jackie Dean and Offi cer Christopher
Panzini were awarded
Medals of Valor. Sgt. Dean was
unable to attend.
The Hanna Memorial Awards
for Bravery is an annual award
ceremony named after Trooper
George L. Hanna, who lost his
life serving the Commonwealth
on February 26, 1983. Trooper
Hanna began his career on October
15, 1974, and served for
nearly 10 years with the Massachusetts
State Police. On Saturday,
February 26, 1983, Trooper
Hanna conducted a motor
vehicle stop in the town of Auburn.
Three men and two women
were in the vehicle, and when
Trooper Hanna removed the occupants
for questioning, he was
instantaneously shot six times
by one of the male suspects.
He died later that evening in a
Worcester hospital, leaving behind
his wife, Marilyn, and three
children: Deborah, Kimberly and
Michael. His three assailants are
serving life sentences.
The Hanna Awards, which
î€ªî€µî€¤î€±î€§ î€²î€³î€¨î€±î€¬î€±î€ª î€¶î€³î€¨î€¦î€¬î€¤î€¯î€„
î€ªî€² î€·î€²
î€µî€¨î€¹î€¨î€µî€¨î€¶î€¨î€¯î€©î€¶î€·î€²î€µî€¤î€ªî€¨î€‘î€¦î€²î€°
î€·î€² î€µî€¨î€¶î€¨î€µî€¹î€¨ î€²î€±î€¯î€¬î€±î€¨
î€²î€µ î€¶î€¦î€¤î€± î€´î€µ î€¦î€²î€§î€¨
î‚‡ î€”î€“î€“î€ˆ î€¦îîŒîî„î—îˆ î€¦î’î‘î—î•î’îîîˆî‡ î€©î„î†îŒîîŒî—îœ
î‚‡ î€±îˆîšîîœ î€¦î’î‘î–î—î•î˜î†î—îˆî‡ î€©î„î†îŒîîŒî—îœ
î‚‡ î€˜î€“î€“î€“ î€¯î…î€‘ î€²î™îˆî•î–îŒîîˆî‡ î€¨îîˆî™î„î—î’î•
î‚‡ î€¶îˆî†î˜î•îˆ î€¸î‘îŒî—î–î‚±î€¹î„î•îŒî’î˜î– î€¶îŒîîˆî–
î‚‡ î€¶î—î„î—îˆî€î€²î‰î€î€·î‹îˆî€î€¤î•î— î€¶î˜î•î™îˆîŒîîî„î‘î†îˆ î€¦î„îîˆî•î„î–
î‚‡ î€¶îˆî†î˜î•îˆ î€¸î‘îŒî—î–î‚±î€¹î„î•îŒî’î˜î– î€¶îŒîîˆî–
have been held annually since
1983, have become a symbol of
prestige, within both the law enforcement
community and the
Commonwealth as a whole. Itâ€™s
an opportunity to publicly recognize
the bravery of members
of the law enforcement community
who put their lives on
the line by dedicating themselves
to safety throughout Massachusetts.
This year the event
took place at Mechanicâ€™s Hall in
Worcester.
On the evening of Friday, April
8, 2022, Offi cer Brendon Leslie
and Offi cer Christopher Panzini
were on patrol in separate,
marked police cruisers when
they observed a man acting erratically
in the middle of Broadway:
obstructing traffic and
waving his arms in the air near
a bus stop. Leslie radioed Revere
Control and was advised
that the two offi cers conduct
a well-being check and further
investigate what the suspect
was doing in the middle of the
roadway.
The offi cers parked in a nearby
lot to observe the suspect, who
was about 10 to 15 yards away.
Using supplemental lights on
his cruiser, Leslie immediately
observed that the suspect was
armed with a handgun. Leslie
radioed other responding units
that the suspect was armed, exited
his police vehicle, drew his
firearm, taking cover behind
the police vehicle, and issued
verbal commands to â€œDrop the
gun!â€ The suspect refused and
continued standing in the middle
of the roadway, waving the
fi rearm and posing a signifi cant
danger to the offi cers, motorists
and pedestrians.
Sergeant Jackie Dean arrived
on the scene to support Leslie
and Panzini â€“ working to de-escalate
and achieve a peaceful
surrender â€“ when the suspect
raised his fi rearm and fi red one
round at Sergeant Dean in his
police vehicle. The suspect subsequently
turned toward Leslie
and Panzini and began fi ring
at them. Leslie fi red one round
at the suspect, striking him in
the lower leg. With the suspect
wounded on the ground, Dean
pinned the subject down while
Leslie kicked the firearm out
of the suspectâ€™s reach. The trio
placed the suspect into custody
without further incident.
For their heroic actions that
day to confront an armed individual
posing a serious and immediate
threat to public safety,
the Selection Committee confers
the George L. Hanna MedOFFICERS
| SEE Page 18
Revere Police Officers Sgt. Jackie
Dean, Brendon Leslie and Christopher
Panzini recognized at 40th
Annual
Trooper George L. Hanna Memorial
Awards for Bravery in Worcester
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Page 5
COLUMBUS | FROM Page 2
turned into a neo-Nazi, I guess.
Most Italian Americans had
nothing against the good admiral,
but now that we know he
was indeed not a perfect human
being, he must disappear from
all aspects of our lives. Treat him
like he never existed or just think
he was Hitlerâ€™s grandpa.
Over the past few years
post-Pandemic, we should have
been able to bring back the
October parade tradition, but
many in the Italian American
community seemed afraid they
would be called out as white supremacists
or something worse.
Many went silent or tried to rename
Columbus Day into something
us.
Why is it we keep naming
holidays or months after every
group out there but pretend
that the Italian community
counts for nothing? The City of
Boston has offi cially renamed
the still federal holiday into Indigenous
Peoples Day.
Well, much to my surprise,
right here in The Advocate, I read
the page one story that Revere
City Councilors seem ready to
bring back the Columbus Day
parade. According to the news
report, if all goes well moving
forward, the City of Revere
could see a return of the parade
in October 2025. I wish it
could be sooner but I am good
with having a parade once again
every two years starting in 2025.
Some of the Revere councilors
talked about the paradeâ€™s name.
Some thought it could simply
be called the Italian American
Heritage Parade & celebration,
but I agree 100 percent with
Councillor at Large Tony Zambuto;
we get to decide who we
honor, no somebody else who
thinks they know better than
us. Put me down as one member
of East Bostonâ€™s Italian American
community who canâ€™t wait
for October 2025. I wonâ€™t only
watch it; I will match in it again
as I usually do.
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THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, OCTOBER 27, 2023
~ POLITICAL ENDORSEMENT ~
Ward 2 Councillor Novoselsky
Endorses Jaramillo for City
Council at-large
C
ouncillor Ira Novoselsky has
endorsed Juan Pablo Jaramillo
for City Council at-large.
Councillor Novoselsky is the
dean of the Revere City Council
and thinks the newest and
youngest member of the Revere
City Council should be Jaramillo.
â€œI
am proud to endorse Juan
who has been a leader in our
community and an advocate
for the Shirley Avenue Neighborhood
which I represent on
the council. I have gotten to witness
Juanâ€™s development as one
of our young leaders and partnered
with him to deliver a better
quality of life for Ward 2 and
I have no doubt he will bring his
experience to the rest of the city,
I look forward to serving alongside
him on the council,â€ said Novoselsky.
RONâ€™S
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For
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02176
NEW
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100 GALLON MINIMUM
Yard Sale
Saturday, October 28
starting at 9:00 AM
111 Holyoke Street, Malden
Jaramillo was a lifelong Ward
2 resident until he and his wife
bought a home near the Immaculate
Conception Church
where they are raising their oneyear-old.
â€œI
grew up watching and learning
from Councillor Novoselsky,
and his dedication for Ward 2
is unmatched,â€ said Juan. â€œThe
councillor has been an incredibly
supportive partner to the
neighborhood I grew up in; delivering
results that improve its
residentsâ€™ quality of life, term after
term. I am honored to receive
the endorsement of someone I
consider to be an outstanding
public servant,â€ Juan added.
Jaramillo, who placed in the
top five on September 19thâ€™s
preliminary election, was the
only candidate for councillor atlarge
to win outright all the precincts
in any ward in that contest,
doing so in Novoselskyâ€™s
Ward 2.
This endorsement demonstrates
Juanâ€™s momentum
heading into the November
7th General Election. He has
received the endorsement of
community leaders like School
Committeewomen Carol Tye
and Stacey Rizzo, former Councillor
Guinasso, Ward 1 Councillor
Joanne McKenna, State
Senator Lydia Edwards, and organizations
like the AFL-CIO,
the Sierra Club, Painters DC35,
IBEW 103, and the Environmental
League of Massachusetts,
among others.
The last day to vote is Tuesday,
November 7th, however early
voting begins on October 21st
at city hall.
~ POLITICAL ENDORSEMENT ~
Eric Lampedecchio Endorses Angela
Guarino-Sawaya for Ward 5 Councillor
Heartfelt Thanks to Eric Lampedecchio for His Generous Endorsement
â€œI
am writing to express my deepest
gratitude for Ericâ€™s gracious
endorsement. His steadfast commitment
to serving the community is
nothing short of inspiring. Through
his exemplary service, he has cultivated
a nurturing environment that
fosters growth, connection, and mutual
support.
Heâ€™s not only been a role model
through his actions but also an extraordinary
friend whose kindness
and generosity know no bounds.
His unwavering support and encouragement
have been a beacon
of light, guiding me towards success
and fulfi llment.
Eric, thank you for being an allaround
great person. Your integrity,
dedication, and warmth make you
an incredible asset to our community
and a cherished friend. I am honored
to have your endorsement, and
I will endeavor to uphold the values
and commitments we share in service
to our community.â€
â€œI am excited to support Angela Guarino-Sawaya for Ward 5!
Angela has been an advocate for the Point of Pines neighborhood
for quite some time now, regularly planning events that
bring residents together and keeping the community informed.
It has been exciting to see her expand her advocacy and leadership
beyond the Point of Pines to all of Ward 5, and I look forward
to her impact on the city as a whole.â€ - Eric Lampedecchio.
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Page 7
First Congregational Church of Revere Food Pantry
receives $40K GBFB Community Investment Grant
Grant empowers local food pantry to boost community reach with new Operations Manager!
GRANT | SEE Page 21
tant Manager of the Food Pantry
here at the First Congregational
Church of Revere. Iâ€™ve been
with the First Congregational
Church as the Nursery Coordinator
since January, and Iâ€™ve developed
such a deep appreciation
for our community that I recently
accepted an off er to extend
my services through the
Food Pantry.
Growing up in Suff olk CounPictured
from left to right: Will Kenney, Nicoletta Giardina and
Wendy Baur. (Courtesy photo)
First Congregational Church of Revere (Courtesy photo)
F
irst Congregational Church
of Revere (FCCR) is excited
to announce that our food pantry
has been awarded a $40,000
Community Investment Grant
from The Greater Boston Food
Bank (GBFB). Our food pantry
has always been volunteerbased,
and, with these funds, we
can hire our fi rst staff person, Nicoletta
Giardina, to serve as the
Operations Manager. The annual
Community Investment Grant
program â€“ originally founded
in 2013 â€“ has now been investing
in GBFB partner agencies for
10 years.
Nicoletta will assist us to better
serve our diverse community.
Besides assisting with the
overall food pantry operations,
she will also help recruit and
train essential volunteers. She
will work on off ering more nutritious
food, including culturally
connected and dietary specific
foods. As a team, FCCR is actively
seeking fundraising opportunities
to expand our service
hours and potentially introduce
client choice through
preordering.
For 40 years, FCCR Food Pantry
has been an emergency food
provider for food-insufficient
families in Revere and nearby
areas. Immediately following
the pandemic in April 2020,
the number of unique families
(those that visited at least
once) rose 147%. Our food pantry
went from serving about 200
unique households each month
in March 2020 to almost 1,000
households currently. Revere
has 12-13% of families living at
or below poverty levels. These
families were hardest hit during
the pandemic, with many
employed as essential workers.
In 2022, we served 3574 unique
families, and we still see many
new clients each week, particularly
immigrants new to our
community.
We are blessed with the help
of many volunteers and GBFB to
serve so many families in need
in these diffi cult times.
Statement from Nicoletta
Giardina, Operations Manager
Greetings! My name is Nicoletta
Giardina (pictured in middle),
and Iâ€™m excited to introduce myself
as the new Operations Assisty,
it feels great to give back
and further strengthen my ties
within the community. Whether
it was caring for geriatric patients,
assisting local insurance
agencies, teaching universal
pre-kindergarten, or nurturing
and nannying local kids, community-building
has been the
core of my endeavors; with this
variety of experience, Iâ€™ve also
developed my operational skills
in project management, decision-making,
process improvement,
and communication. In
my new role, I hope to collaborate
with you all to further nurture
the bonds within our community.
As Iâ€™ve identifi ed, success
in the community is only
possible when we strengthen
our connections through communication
and collaboration.
Iâ€™m confi dent that with our dedicated
team, we can achieve
more than we ever dreamed of
in service of community.
I currently hold an AS in Early
Education from Bunker Hill
Community College and am
working to fi nish my BS in Early
Childhood Education with a
minor in Child Homelessness &
Trauma from Lesley University.
Outside of work, I enjoy singing,
playing piano, reading, and the
beach. I am eager to hear from
and collaborate with those who
continue to serve this community.
I look forward to working
together and making a positive
impact.
Gerry
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
On Election Day,
Tuesday, November 7
â€œPlease
consider
me for
one of
your
six
votesâ€
Re-Elect
John Kingston
Revere School Committee
(Paid Pol. Adv.)
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THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, OCTOBER 27, 2023
RE-ELECT
REVERE CITY COUNCIL
Revere students deserve the best
learning opportunities to succeed
both in and out of the classroom
On the Council Marc will:
Advocate for measures that will eliminate MCAS testing as a requirement
Work to expand access to school based mental health services
Fight to ensure our youngest residents have the best educational
experiences not the cheapest
ELECTION DAY NOVEMBER 7
Gov. Healey Announces
$164 Million for Economic
Development Projects Through
Community One Stop for Growth
Announcement Delivers Funding from 13 State Grant Programs That
Will Help Create 8,000 New Housing Units, 10,000 jobs, and
5.4 Million Square Feet of Commercial Development
Re-Elect MarcSilvestriforRevereCityCouncilAt-Large
Paid for by CTE Marc Silvestri
425r Broadway, Saugus
Located adjacent to Kohls Plaza Route 1 South
in Saugus at the intersection of Walnut Street
We are on MBTA Bus Route 429
781-231-1111
We are a Skating Rink with
Bowling Alleys, Arcade and
two TVâ€™s where the ball
games are always on!
PUBLIC SKATING SCHEDULE
12-7 p.m.
Sunday
Monday
Tuesday
Wednesday
Thursday
Friday
Saturday
$9.00
Price includes Roller Skates
Rollerblades/inline skates $3.00 additional cost
Private Parties
7:30-11 p.m.
$10.00
Price includes Roller Skates
Adult Night 18+ Only
Private Parties
Private Parties
4-7 p.m. $9.00
12-9 p.m.
7:30-11 p.m. $10.
18+ Adults Only After 7 PM
$9.00
Everyone must pay admission after 6 p.m.
Sorry No Checks - ATM on site
Roller skate rentals included in all prices
Inline Skate Rentals $3.00 additional
BIRTHDAY & PRIVATE PARTIES AVAILABLE
www.roller-world.com
American Legion Post 69 to
Host Monthly Karaoke Night
American Legion Post 69 will host its monthly karaoke night on Friday, October 27
from 7:00 PM to 11:00 PM. The event is open to the public and all are welcome to
attend.
Karaoke is a fun and entertaining way to spend an evening with friends and family.
Itâ€™s also a great way to meet new people and make new friends. At American Legion
Post 69, karaoke is held in a casual and relaxed atmosphere, so everyone can feel
comfortable participating.
No matter what your singing ability is, youâ€™re sure to have a good time at karaoke
night at American Legion Post 69. Thereâ€™s a wide selection of
î–î’î‘îŠî– î—î’ î†î‹î’î’î–îˆ î‰î•î’îî€ î–î’ îœî’î˜î‚¶î•îˆ î–î˜î•îˆ î—î’ î‚¿î‘î‡ î–î’îîˆî—î‹îŒî‘îŠ îœî’î˜
enjoy singing.
If you are unable to be with us, there will be another karaoke
night on November 10.
American Legion Post 69 is located at 75 Meridian Street,
Malden. For more information about the karaoke night events,
please call (617) 324-9570.
All are welcome to attend this fun and entertaining event!
Gove. Maura Healey is shown addressing the attendees of city and state offi cials at Suff olk Downs
development this past week.
REVERE â€“ Governor Maura
Healey, Lieutenant Governor
Kim Driscoll, Economic Development
Secretary Yvonne Hao
and Housing & Livable Communities
Secretary Ed Augustus
announced this week $164
million for 338 grant awards to
support local economic development
projects in 161 communities
across the state. The
awards were made through
the Community One Stop for
Growth, an application portal
overseen by EOED that provides
a streamlined process for municipalities
and organizations to apply
for 13 state grant programs
that fund economic development
projects related to planning
and zoning, site preparation,
building construction, infrastructure,
and housing development.
The
grants were announced
during a kickoff celebration at
Suff olk Downs in Revere honoring
recipients of awards through
FUNDING | SEE Page 9
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Page 9
FUNDING | FROM Page 8
the MassWorks and HousingWorks
grant programs, two of
the largest programs in the One
Stop. Revere is a recipient of a
MassWorks award for the redevelopment
of Suff olk Downs, as
well as a Housing Choice program
grant.
â€œOne Stop is a vital economic
development tool to spark
growth, spur development
and strengthen local economies
across the state,â€ said Governor
Healey. â€œThese funds will
help make possible community-led
projects that build vibrant
downtowns and unlock economic
potential in every region
of Massachusetts, while creating
new jobs, housing, and opportunity.â€
â€œBuilding
strong communities
is essential to advancing
economic development across
Massachusetts,â€ said Lieutenant
Governor Driscoll. â€œThe One
Stop for Growth allows us to
partner with cities and towns
statewide to support their economic
development goals while
empowering them to pursue
their vision for growth. Weâ€™re
excited to announce this yearâ€™s
awards to 161 Massachusetts
communities and canâ€™t wait to
see economic progress they
help make possible in the years
to come.â€
Through this round of the One
Stop, EOED received 783 applications
from 239 communities
representing every region
of the state. Of the 336 applications
awarded, 26 percent are located
in a rural or small town, 33
percent are located in a Gateway
City, and 61 percent are located
in an MBTA Community, and 49
percent are located in a Housing
Choice Community. EOED
estimates the One Stop awards
will help create more 8,000 new
housing units across the state
including 3,000 new aff ordable
units, 10,000 new permanent
jobs, and more than 5.4 million
square feet of new commercial
development.
â€œThe One Stop is an essential
vehicle through which our administration
can invest in Massachusetts
communities, advance
equitable and easy access
to state resources and support
the foundation upon which
our state economy is built,â€ said
Secretary of Economic Development
Yvonne Hao. â€œWe are
building an economy that works
for everyone, in every region
of Massachusetts, and weâ€™re
thrilled to make these investments
in more than 330 local
economic development projects
around the state.â€
As the administration vigorously
works to turn the tide of
the housing crisis, easy access
to One Stop is an important tool
for communities,â€ said Secretary
of Housing and Livable Communities
Ed Augustus. This portal
simplifi es the application process
to tap into valuable funding
to programs like HousingWorks
and Housing Choice Community
Grants, programs that allow
communities to begin to unlock
more housing where they
need it.â€
The FY24 One Stop awards
include:
â€¢ MassWorks Infrastructure
Program â€“ $91 million awarded
to 53 projects
â€¢ HousingWorks Infrastructure
Program â€“ $33,528,797
awarded to 15 projects
â€¢ Underutilized Properties
Program â€“ $16,552,817 awarded
to 39 projects
â€¢ Rural and Small-Town Development
Fund â€“ $5,000,000
awarded to 17 projects
â€¢ Housing Choice Community
Grants â€“ $4,730,000 awarded
to 34 projects
â€¢ Site Readiness Program â€“
$2,857,058 awarded to 10 projects
â€¢
Urban Agenda Grant Program
â€“ $2,500,000 awarded to
28 projects
â€¢ Community Planning
Grants â€“ $4,850,000 awarded
to 79 projects
â€¢ Brownfields Redevelopment
Fund â€“ $1,340,000 awarded
to 8 projects
â€¢ Collaborative Workspace
Program â€“ $950,000 awarded
to 39 projects
â€¢ Massachusetts Downtown
Initiative â€“ $550,000 awarded
to 22 projects
â€¢ Commonwealth Places â€“
$375,000 awarded to 9 projects
â€¢ Real Estate Services Technical
Assistance â€“ $250,000
awarded to 8 projects
The full list of grant recipients
and project descriptions is available
on the EOED website.
MassWorks, one of the stateâ€™s
largest competitive grant programs,
off ers cities and towns
fl exible capital funding to support
and accelerate housing
production and job growth.
This year, the administration is
awarding grants to 50 communities,
including fi ve communities
that are receiving their fi rst
ever MassWorks award. Among
this yearâ€™s MassWorksâ€™ projects,
26 are supporting mixed-use or
commercial developments and
15 are improving road safety in
small towns. These projects will
create an expected 4,525 units
of housing, as well as more than
4,100 permanent jobs and 9,800
construction jobs.
HousingWorks provides municipalities
with grants for a variety
of infrastructure improvements
that spur housing development
and preservation.
In this inaugural year of the
grant program, EOHLC awarded
grants to 15 communities to
support or preserve 2,108 units
of housing.
â€œThrough the One Stop, the
Healey-Driscoll administration
provides cities and towns with a
streamlined process to apply for
state resources that bring key
projects in their communities
to life,â€ said Undersecretary of
Economic Foundations Ashley
Stolba. â€œWe are grateful to our
teams at the Executive Offi ce of
Economic Development, Executive
Offi ce of Housing and Livable
Communities, and MassDevelopment,
who worked
with hundreds of communities
over the past several months to
identify projects in 161 municipalities
that will have a meaningful
impact on local economic
growth.â€
â€œThis $164 million investment
from the Healey-Driscoll Administration
will help cities, towns,
and local partners tackle important
projects that will make a
diff erence in easing the housing
shortage, creating jobs, breathing
life into underused properties,
and advancing community
goals across Massachusetts,â€
said MassDevelopment President
and CEO Dan Rivera. â€œOur
team at MassDevelopment administers
six of the One Stop
grant programs on behalf of
the Commonwealth, utilizing
our subject matter expertise
and deep understanding of local
community and economic
development issues to maximize
the impact of these public
dollars.â€
"Revere is in the midst of an
exciting transformation - from
Revere Beach to Suff olk Downs
and Shirley Ave, the city continues
to drive forward with
great momentum. Our growth
wouldnâ€™t be possible without
the support of the Governor
and her team and resources
provided through the One
Stop for Growth grants," said Revere
Acting Mayor Patrick Keefe.
â€œThis program gives us the tools
to inform our planning eff orts,
improve the quality of life in our
neighborhoods, and support
economic development for all
in the city, allowing Revere to
compete again for the fastestgrowing
city in the Commonwealth."
"On
behalf of the people of
Revere, I extend my appreciation
to Governor Healey and Lt.
Gov. Driscoll for their leadership
in promoting these One Stop
Awards,â€ said Representative Jeffrey
Rosario Turco, D-Winthrop.
â€œWith these grants, the City of
Revere can continue its strategic
planning to improve both
economic opportunity and the
quality of life for our residents."
â€œHaving a single application
portal and collaborative review
process of community development
grant programs is a great
tool for gateway cities, like Revere,â€
said Representative Jessica
Giannino, D-Revere. â€œThis
process streamlines the experience
for the applicant and better
coordinates economic development
programs which means
more resources and programming
for our communities.â€
~ ESTATE SALE ~
64 LINDEN AVE, MALDEN
Sat., October 28 & Sun., October 29
- 10:00 AM to 4:00 PM -
5 rooms of furniture, bedroom sets, dining
room set, formal living room set, kitchen
wares, vintage clothing, china, serving
pieces, Kick-Knacks, vinyl records,
Capodimonte collectibles, also included
in the garage are vintage tools, ladders,
garden tools and masonry supplies.
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THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, OCTOBER 27, 2023
ANGELA
GUARINO-SAWAYA
FOR COUNCILOR WARD 5
ENDORSEMENT
I write to endorse Angela Guarino-Sawaya
to be the next Ward 5 City Councilor.
I have known Angela for nearly two
children were in school together, Angela
served on the parent board and was our
dedicated countless hours to ensure that
each school child and family had the best
experience they could have expected.
As a community activist, Angela has
against unbridled development which is
Angela has proven that she will always
side with the residents of Ward 5.
years, Angela has worked with her fellow board members to reinvigorate a
and independent voice to make sure that its concerns and its issue are not
Sawaya to be Ward 5â€™s new champion on the Revere City Council.
All my best,
State Representative
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·THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, OCTOBER 27, 2023
Page 11
~ POLITICAL ENDORSEMENTS ~
Veteran Councillors Novoselsky and Silvestri Trade Endorsements
ue being a champion for our
residents and an asset on the
council, which is why I proudly
endorse Marc for re-election to
the city council.â€
Silvestri expressed his gratitude
for Novoselskyâ€™s endorsement,
adding, â€œHe has been a
mentor on the council and good
friend, and I look forward to another
term together serving the
residents of Revere.â€
Their mutual endorsement
highlights their commitment to
working together for the betterment
of Revere. Novoselsky and
Silvestri are both avid advocates
for their constituents, and their
re-election will ensure that the
people of Revere continue to
have strong representation on
the city council.
Ward 2 Councillor Ira Novoselsky (left) and Councillor-at-Large Marc Silvestri
REVERE â€” Revere City Council
members Ward 2 Councillor
Ira Novoselsky and Councillor
At-Large Marc Silvestri have announced
their mutual endorsement
for re-election ahead of
the upcoming general election
on November 7.
Silvestri praised Novoselskyâ€™s
unwavering commitment to the
residents of Ward 2: â€œAs a constituent
and fellow veteran, I am honored
to endorse my friend Ira for
re-election. I have seen fi rsthand
his dedication to Ward 2 residents
and have been privileged to work
alongside him to advocate for
veteransâ€™ issues, including building
veteranâ€™s housing at 123 Shirley
Ave,â€ said Silvestri.
As the longest-serving member
of the Revere City Council,
for the last 21 years, Novoselsky
has worked tirelessly on the
council to improve the lives of
Ward 2 residents, focusing on
public safety, community development,
aff ordable housing,
and playing a vital role in overseeing
the revitalization of the
Shirley Ave Business District.
Silvestri also expressed his appreciation
for Novoselsky, stating,
â€œIâ€™m very grateful for the
support and endorsement from
Councillor Silvestri in my bid for
re-election. As a lifelong resident,
my heart and soul belong
to Ward 2 and its residents, and
their well-being will always be
my top priority as we continue
moving the city forward.â€
Silvestri remains committed
to working on behalf of all residents,
and Novoselsky highlights
Marcâ€™s dedication to serving
the people of Revere. â€œI know
Councillor Silvestri will continSABATINO
INSURANCE
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THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, OCTOBER 27, 2023
~ POLITICAL ENDORSEMENT ~
Revere DPW AFSCME Local 880 Employees and
Crossing Guards Endorse Paul Argenzio for Ward 4
T
he Revere Department of Public
Works AFSCME Local 880
Employees and Crossing Guards
recently voted to endorse Paul Argenzio
for Ward 4 City Councillor.
Paul Argenzio stated, â€œI thank
the Public Works Department
and Crossing Guards for their
strong vote of confi dence in me
and my campaign. It has been my
pleasure and honor to be a past
member of AFSCME for 37 years,
as well as serving as president
for 14 of those years. I take great
pride in the many years of Union
involvement I have experienced
and shared alongside my fellow
union members. If I am elected to
the Council, I will continue to advocate
for and support workersâ€™
rights across the city in all unions
and positions.â€
~ POLITICAL ENDORSEMENT ~
State Rep. Jeffrey
Turco Endorses
Reelection of Ward
2 Councillor Ira
Novoselsky
â€œTo the Voters of Ward 2:
I write to endorse Ira Novoselsky
for reelection to the Revere
City Council.
Ira is a full time and full-service
City Councilor. He works tirelessly
to hear the concerns of his
constituents and to make sure
those concerns are addressed.
As the City Councilor whose
Like us on Facebook advocate newspaper
Facebook.com/Advocate.news.ma
Ward has probably changed
the most dramatically over the
past ten years, Ira has focused
on making sure that the needs
of the residents have not been
forgotten.
I have always been impressed
that Ira is everywhere and at
every event. I am reminded of a
simple rule of life, you must show
up. Ira Novoselsky shows up.
I proudly endorse my friend
and colleague Ira Novoselsky
for another term as your Ward
2 City Councilor and urge you
to vote for him on November 7,â€
said State Representative Jeff rey
Rosario Turco.
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Page 13
~ POLITICAL ANNOUNCEMENT ~
Riaz Garcia announces
candidacy for Revere School
Committee
M
y name is Riaz Garcia
and I am running
to serve on the Revere
School Committee.
I am a lifelong Revere
resident. I attended
the old Kiddie Koop, the
Garfi eld School, and am
a proud graduate of the
Revere High School Class
of 2018. I graduated from
Boston University with a
degree in Economics in
2022, making me one
of the fi rst people in my
family to earn a college
degree. In my day job as
an Investment Analyst,
I specifically work with
foundations and school
endowments. Many institutions
often invest their
money to cover things like operating
costs, scholarships/grants,
and future buildings/projects. I
believe my expertise as both a
former student and now fi nancial
professional can be valuable
in helping to shape the future of
our district.
I was raised by my Honduran
mother who worked as a Nursing
Assistant to provide for my
interacted with gracious
staff members, and was
surrounded by many inspiring
classmates.
I am running for School
RIAZ GARCIA
older sister and I. Later, our family
grew to four when my mother
married my Guatemalan father,
who works as a car painter. We
grew up as long-time renters in
Revere. My parents instilled in
us the value of our education as
one thing that no one could take
away from us. I am tremendously
grateful for the education I
received here in Revere. I was
taught by amazing educators,
Committee because I
believe in our schools
and know that we can
do more to support our
students, families, and
staff . If elected, my priorities
include recruiting
and retaining a more diverse
staff, bringing in
more trades, improving
alumni engagement,
and getting our high
school graduation rate
as close to 100% as possible.
I understand the
unique challenges of
our district because I grew up
in it. I know how hard our educators
and staff work because I
was one of their students. And I
know I can deliver for our school
district because Revere prepared
me to.
I humbly ask for one of your
six votes for School Committee.
Facebook: Riaz Garcia for Revere
School Committee Instagram:
@garciaforrevere
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~ ELECT ~
ANTHONY
CAGGIANO
For Revere School
Committee
Committed to Making
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î€²î˜î• î€¶î†î‹î’î’îî–î€„
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FLEET
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THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, OCTOBER 27, 2023
Councillor-at-Large candidate Jaramillo has endorsement
of Tye, Edwards and Boncore at his fall fundraiser
By Tara Vocino
R
eceiving the endorsement of School Committee member Carol
Tye, State Senator Lydia Edwards, and former Senator Joseph
Boncore, Councillor-at-Large candidate Juan Jaramillo held his fundraiser
at the Beachmont Veterans of Foreign Wars last Thursday.
Marie Voto danced with Councillor-at-Large candidate
Anthony Parziale.
Ward 5 City Councillor candidate Angela
Guarino Sawaya with Jaramillo.
Adrienne and Dan Maguire with candidate Jaramillo.
Cousin Nathaniel Arias
said Jaramillo treats everyone
like family.
School Committee member candidate Kathryn Schulte Grahame,
candidate Jaramillo and School Committee member Carol Tye.
Ward 1 City Councillor candidate John
Stamatopoulos with candidate Jaramillo
Former State Senator Joseph
Boncore said Jaramillo
has hope in Revere.
Shown from left to right: intern for Acting Mayor Patrick
Keefe Kathy Nguyen, Acting Mayor Patrick Keefe,
Jr., candidate Jaramillo and Councillor-at-Large Marc
Silvestri. (Advocate photos by Tara Vocino)
Jaramillo, and his wife, Crystal, said his
campaign is about investing in the people
who built this city.
Supporters, shown from left to right: Liana Jorge Matute, Natividad
Hernandez, Jacqueline Monterroso, candidate Jaramillo, Laila
Pietri and Lilian Wendy Vargas during Jaramilloâ€™s fundraiser
last Thursday night at the Beachmont Veterans of Foreign Wars.
School Committee member
Carol Tye said Jaramillo is a Revere
success story.
Family members, shown from left to right: uncle Andres Arias,
cousin Samuel Arias, father Oscar Jaramillo, mother Irene Arias,
candidate Juan Pablo Jaramillo, son Lucas Jaramillo, wife Crystal
Jaramillo and cousin Nathaniel Arias.
State Senator Lydia Edwards
encouraged early voting.
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Page 15
Rep. Turco holds packed reception at Beachmont VFW
Last Saturday evening, family, friends and supporters gathered at VFW Post 6712 in Beachmont to support
State Representative Jeff ery Rosario Turco. The popular representative played a big part in the reopening
of the post, getting much-needed funding for renovations. He was well received by local veterans, and residents
of the Winthrop and Revere Communities. A delicious buff et was provided to all those in attendance
as well as music by â€œSmokinâ€™ Joeâ€ Cheff ro.
Adrienne and Dan Maguire were on hand to support
State Representative Jeff Turco.
Representative Turco with special guests: former State Representative RoseLee Vincent, City Council President
Pro Tempore/Ward 1 Councillor Joanne McKenna, candidates for Councillor-at-Large Wayne Rose and
Anthony Parziale, candidate for Revere School Committee member Anthony Caggiano, State Representative
Jessica Ann Giannino, candidate for Councillor-at-Large Stephen Damiano Jr., Ward 2 Councillor Ira Novoselsky
and Ward 6 Councillor Rick Serino.
Former Councillor Steven Reardon, Commander of
American Legion Post 161 Joseph Cole and Representative
Turco
Welcoming his guests: candidate for Ward 4 Councillor
Paul Argenzio, candidate for Councillor-at-Large Don
Martelli and Wayne Rose.
State Representative Jeff Turco with his family: wife Melissa
and children Rosario, Dominic, Matteo, Grace, Mary and
Joseph.
Candidate for Councillor-at-Large Stephen Damiano
Jr., Councillor-at-Large Marc Silvestri,
candidate for Ward 6 Councillor Chris Giannino,
candidate for Councillor-at-Large Alex Rhalimi
and candidate for Ward 1 Councillor John
Stamatopoulos.
Representative Turco with supporters Mariann Maff eo, Irma Accettullo,
Charles Russo and Geri Damiano.
Revere residents Lillian Vega and Jennifer
and Juan Carlos Aguilar with Representative
Jeff Turco.
Candidate for Mayor/Councillor-at-Large Dan
Rizzo (right) joined Representative Turco at the
Beachmont VFW; they are shown with Ward 6
City Councillor Rick Serino, City Council President
Pro Tempore/Ward 1 Councillor Joanne
McKenna and State Representative Jessica Giannino.
State
Representative Jeff Turco is shown with Lucille Monuteaux, Fran Piantedosi,
Lulu Montanino and Jojo Ruggiero.
Acting Mayor Patrick Keefe (second from right) with Representative
Turco, State Representative Jessica Giannino,
Councillor-at-Large Marc Silvestri and Ward 6 Councillor
Ricky Serino
Denise LoConte with State Representative
Jeff Turco
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THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, OCTOBER 27, 2023
ELECTION | FROM Page 2
though she is not responsible
for many of these issues, she
still makes herself available and
will do her best to try to answer
questions that go beyond her
scope and will fi ght for a cause
and help you out the best she
can. She was also an educator.
Teachers are role models for
students. They are enthusiastic,
seek to solve problems and put
their students fi rst. They stand
up for their students and want
the best for them. This leadership
quality can go beyond a
classroom. One example is that
Angela testifi ed in front of the
Joint Committee on Environmental
and Natural Resources
at the State House calling on
the shutdown of Wheelabrator
and holding them accountable
for the endless pollution
and excessive emissions that
are released in the air that affect
many of us. I currently do
not see that type of leadership
in Ward 5. In fact, Iâ€™m not sure I
ever did. We need this. We need
folks in leadership roles who
care about us!
Those that know me know
that I love politics and I take a
vote very seriously. I wonâ€™t vote
for someone out of obligation
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î€¹îŒîˆîš î„îî î’î˜î• îîŒî–î—îŒî‘îŠî– î„î—î€ î€¦î„î•î“îˆî‘îŒî—î’î€µîˆî„îî€¨î–î—î„î—îˆî€‘î†î’î
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call he Adv cate Ne spapers
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or promise. It doesnâ€™t matter if
you are a neighbor or someone
I am close to. It doesnâ€™t matter
your race, ethnicity, or gender.
I vote based on who can make
a diff erence and who can bring
change. It has been such an
honor being part of Team Angela.
For many years Iâ€™ve kept
to myself. I would say a quick
hello to folks walking by in my
neighborhood but never fully
engaged. Since Angela, Iâ€™ve really
come out of my shell and
have come into my own. I now
attend neighborhood events
and volunteer. Iâ€™m also stepping
out of my comfort zone.
Iâ€™ve met a lot of local politicians,
attended city hall events,
and engage in open conversations
about the city that I love
so much. I now watch the City
Council meetings and educate
myself on the happenings
within this city that I love
so much. Iâ€™ve become hyper
aware of the current council
and city leadership, and who
is here for the people versus
themselves. Being part of Team
Angela has been an amazing
experience. Whether Iâ€™m sign
holding or walking the streets
with her and handing out fl yers,
Iâ€™ve met so many amazing
people along the way. People
I would now consider friends. I
strongly believe in what Angela
stands for. For the fi rst time, I
am now excited about the possibilities
in my ward. Please go
over to Committee to Elect Angela
Guarino-Sawaya for Ward
5 Revere City Council and Angela
Guarino Sawaya. Reach
out to her or any of us. You will
not be disappointed. We need
change and we need it now.
Thank you.
Signed,
Toni Depaolis
Revere, MA
PASSIVE ACTIVITY LOSSES
T
he passive activity loss rules
limit the ability of taxpayers
to offset salaries, interest
income, dividend income,
self-employment income,
passthrough income generated
from active activities such as
limited liability companies and
S Corporations, lottery winnings,
capital gain income, royalty
income, pension income,
IRA distributions and social security
income with losses from
passive activities, which are
trades or businesses in which
the taxpayer does not materially
participate. Under the passive
activity loss provisions, a
taxpayer can only off set passive
activity losses against passive
activity income. Any disallowed
passive activity loss can
be carried forward to the next
calendar year in order to be off -
set against passive activity income
that might be applicable
for that next calendar year.
In the event there is no future
passive activity income available
to off set the passive activity
losses against, if the passive
activity is subsequently sold, all
unused passive activity losses
can then be deducted in full in
the year of sale.
Tax credits from a passive activity
can only be utilized to off -
set income taxes associated with
that passive activity. Any excess
tax credits must then be carried
forward to be off set against future
income taxes associated
with future passive activity income.
The
passive activity loss rules
also apply to rental real estate.
Taxpayers are allowed to deduct
up to $25,000 per year in rental
losses to be off set against all
other income such as wages, interest
income, dividend income,
capital gain income, etc. The taxpayer
must materially participate
in the rental real estate activity.
The deduction begins to
be phased out once modifi ed
adjusted gross income (MAGI)
reaches $100,000. The deduction
is completely phased out
once MAGI reaches $150,000.
These thresholds apply for both
single taxpayers and married
fi ling joint taxpayers. IRS Form
8582 is used to report passive
activity income and losses. Any
rental losses in excess of $25,000
will be carried over to future
years. For each piece of rental
real estate that you own, you
must keep track of the unused
rental losses that are carried over
each year. If one of the rental
properties is later sold, any unallowed
rental losses will be fully
deductible in the year of sale.
Some taxpayers qualify as a
real estate professional. In order
to qualify, the taxpayer must
work at least 750 hours per year
in a real estate trade or business
and more than 50% of the taxpayerâ€™s
total hours worked during
the year must be in a real estate
trade or business. There is no
limit on the amount of rental loss
a real estate professional can deduct
on his or her tax return unless
the taxpayer is subject to the
excess business loss limitations
as set forth in the Tax Cuts and
Jobs Act of 2017.
Material participation in rental
real estate activities is generally
achieved by electing to aggregate
all of your rental activities
as one activity and demonstrating
that you have worked at
least 500 hours during the year
in this one activity.
It is often very confusing for
taxpayers when they receive
K-1 forms from real estate investment
trusts and limited liability
companies reporting losses.
The K-1 forms may report
that the partner is a limited partner,
thereby indicating no active
participation. This would result
in the interest being deemed
a passive activity. Those losses
can only be off set against other
passive income. If there is no
other passive income, the losses
cannot be off set against any
non-passive income as mentioned
above. As a further note,
if that same passive activity reports
a large capital gain on the
K-1 form as well as a rental real
estate loss or ordinary business
loss, the rental real estate loss
and ordinary business loss cannot
be off set against the capital
gain, as the partner simply
does not actively participate in
the entity, and the capital gain is
not considered passive income.
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.
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Page 17
~ POLITICAL ENDORSEMENTS ~
â€œKEEP KEEFE MAYORâ€ WINS SUPPORT FROM LOCAL
AND STATE LEADERS
Healey, Driscoll, Clark, and Edwards all back campaign to â€œKeep Keefeâ€ as Mayor of Revere
A
s the November election
draws closer, and Revere voters
able to begin early voting
this weekend, the Keefe campaign
announced several significant
endorsements in support
of Patrick Keefeâ€™s eff orts to continue
to keep Revere moving
forward. Governor Maura Healey
and Lt. Governor Kim Driscoll
announced their support along
with C ongresswoman Katherine
Clark and State Senator Lydia
Edwards.
In a joint statement released
today, Governor Healey and Lt.
Governor Driscoll praised Mayor
Keefe.
â€œPatrick Keefe has shown he
is a dedicated advocate for the
people of Revere and we are
proud to endorse him for Mayor.
As a coach, community leader,
Councilor and now as interim
Mayor, Patrick has shown
tremendous commitment to
the success of Revere and, as
Mayor, we know he will be a
tremendous partner to make
Revere, the North Shore, and
our Commonwealth a more vibrant,
competitive and aff ordable
place to thrive.â€
â€œI am grateful to Governor
Healey and LG Driscoll for their
endorsement. They both understand
the needs and challenges
of running a government eff ectively
and effi ciently. I am especially
humbled [for] LG Driscollâ€™s
support, as she knows fi rsthand
what it takes to be an eff ective
mayor,â€ Keefe noted.
Senator Edwards also praised
Mayor Keefe in her announcement
of support. â€œRevere is the
fastest-growing city in Massachusetts.
The potential for Revere
to grow as a destination, to
grow as a job center, to grow as
a welcoming community is immense.
Revere can learn from
other cities on how to grow in a
responsible and aff ordable way.
Revere is already the steward of
natural resources such as Revere
Beach, the Belle Isle and Rumney
and Belle Isle Marshes. As Revere
grows, it can be the leader in environmental
justice. All if this can
happen with the right leader.
That leader is Patrick Keefe.â€
â€œKeefe has the passion, dedication,
and focus needed to
guide Revere into the future. He
also has created a team that is
refl ective of the diversity of Revere
and demonstrated that he
is ready and able to deal with the
day-to-day challenges of running
a city,â€ Edwards continued.
â€œAnd State Senator Edwards
has been a tireless advocate
for our community on Beacon
Hill. She has been critical to Revere
in securing essential state
aid to support our community.
I value her support and friendship
as we work together,â€ Mayor
Keefe replied.
â€œCongresswoman Clark has
been a leader, not only in our
state, but in Washington as well.
To gain her support, knowing
that I am her choice to be her
mayor is incredibly meaningful.
This campaign has been guided
by three simple words â€“ Believe
in Revere. I have always believed
in our hometown, and I am honored
to have the support of my
partners in government at the
state and federal levels. No one
person can do it all on their own.
We must work as a team to get
the job done,â€ Patrick Keefe replied.
â€œI know that we will all
continue to work closely to ensure
a bright future for everyone
who calls Revere home.â€
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THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, OCTOBER 27, 2023
DEBATE | FROM Page 1
school at Wonderland was what
decided her vote.
But there was actually more.
Curran said sheâ€™s watched Keefeâ€™s
work in the community and his
involvement with Revere schools
and youth sports for years. Â°And
heâ€™s still doing it today with the
young ones. I just know he gave
back to the community and he
continues to give back every day,â€
she said.
A couple of hundred feet away,
Bob Anderson was holding a sign
for Rizzo, whom he said he supports
for a number of reasons.
â€œWe want to stop development,
for one thing,â€ said Anderson. â€œAnd
we want to know beforehand
whatâ€™s happening â€“ no hints â€“ just
let us know whatâ€™s happening.â€
OFFICERS | FROM Page 4
al of Honor to Offi cer Brendon
Leslie, and the Medal of Valor to
Offi cer Christopher Panzini and
Sergeant Jackie Dean.
â€œIt fi lled me with pride to attend
the awards and have an
opportunity to thank and recognize
my Revere High School
classmates for their bravery
and valor,â€ said Representative
Giannino. â€œRevere is so lucky to
Anderson also said Rizzo is the
candidate who can control Revereâ€™s
growth and who will listen
to what residents want and need.
â€œDanâ€™s the guy â€“ always was â€“ why
would he change now?â€ asked Anderson.
There
was plenty of horn honking,
waving and thumbs up during
the two-hour sign-holding
event prior to the debate. A few
players from the Revere High
football team, reportedly led by
Keefeâ€™s son, a senior player on the
team, made their way through the
clusters of Rizzo supporters chanting
â€œKeefe, Keefe, Keefe.â€
The Keefe and Rizzo camps
remained divided during the
90-minute debate sponsored by
the Chamber of Commerce and
the Revere Journal. Keefe supporters
fi lled the fi rst 20 or so rows
have selfless officers like Sgt.
Dean, Offi cer Leslie, and Offi cer
Panzini serving and protecting
us. Because of their training and
quick thinking, tragedy was prevented
that day.â€
â€œMassachusetts is home to
the best trained law enforcement
offi cers in the country. The
Hanna awards is both a time of
sadness in which we remember
the evil that exists in our society
but it is also a time to celof
the left section of the Revere
High auditorium and cheered
and applauded with abandon after
Keefeâ€™s every comment or response
to a question. The Rizzo
contingent took the seats on the
right side of the hall and cheered
just as loud for their candidate.
There wasnâ€™t much news or new
ground covered during the debate.
What was diff erent was the
way both candidates jabbed and
insulted each other.
Keefe repeatedly said Rizzo
failed to attend any meetings
about the high school building
project or mitigation for the
Suffix Downs project. After he
lost the election to former Mayor
Brian Arrigo, he left and went
to Florida. â€œHe took his ball and
DEBATE | SEE Page 23
ebrate the everyday acts of valor
and bravery displayed by law
enforcement. This year was particularly
special as we witnessed
three Revere offi cers being honored
in front of the entire Commonwealth,â€
said Representative
Turco.
â€œThe City of Revere Police Department
is extremely proud of
these offi cers for their bravery
and heroic actions,â€ said Police
Chief Dave Callahan.
1. On Oct. 27, 2004, for the
first time in 86 years, what
team won the World Series?
2. How many â€œGet Out of Jail
Freeâ€ cards are there in a game
of Monopoly?
3. What song has the line â€œI
ainâ€™t afraid of no ghostâ€?
4. October 28 is National
Chocolate Day; what fi lm
has the quote â€œWelcome my
friends. Welcome to my chocolate
factoryâ€?
5. What â€œdogâ€ frequently
lives in an underground colony?
6.
On Oct. 29, 1929, was an
event known as â€œBlack Tuesdayâ€
â€“ what happened?
7. According to Guinness
World Records, Pepper X has
beaten Carolina Reaper in
what category?
8. What kind of racing in
northern Africa commonly
uses robotic jockeys?
9. What well-known author
(whose middle name is also
the name of a month) wrote
a short story â€“ originally published
in 1885 â€“ called â€œThe
Candy Countryâ€?
10. On Oct. 30, 1735, John
Adams was born in Braintree;
which consecutive president
was he?
Answers
11. What is a Bram Stoker
award for? (It looks like a miniature
house.)
12. What U.S. city is known
as â€œThe Salmon Capital of the
Worldâ€?
13. What is a group of witches
called?
14. On Oct. 31, 2001, the
Massachusetts Legislature
cleared the names of what
five victims from the 17th
century?
15. What muscle never tires?
16. What locale in NYC â€“
with a name including a color
â€“ hosts what is reportedly
the worldâ€™s largest Halloween
parade?
17. On Nov. 1, 1913, during
the fi rst Notre Dame vs. Army
football game, Notre Dame
used what maneuver (also
a fi rst in football history) to
win 35-13?
18. What animal is most often
associated with a pirate?
19. In what movie does Winifred
Sanderson say â€œDonâ€™t get
your knickers in a twist! We
are just three kindly old spinster
ladiesâ€?
20. November 2 is called by
some The Commemoration
of All The Faithful Departed â€“
better known as what?
1. The Boston Red
Sox
2. Two
3. â€œGhostbustersâ€
4. â€œWilly Wonka &
the Chocolate Factoryâ€
5.
Prairie dog (actually
a rodent)
6. 16 million U.S.
stock market shares
were sold â€“ a precursor
to the Great Depression
7.
Worldâ€™s â€œhottest
chilli pepperâ€
8. Camel
9. Louisa May Alcott
10. Second
11. An award for a
published work of
Horror (It looks like
a haunted house.)
12. Ketchikan, Alaska
13.
A coven
14. Salem Witch Trials
defendants
15. The heart
16. Greenwich Village
17.
The forward pass
18. Parrot
19. â€œHocus Pocusâ€
20. All Soulsâ€™ Day
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Page 19
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THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, OCTOBER 27, 2023
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
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THE HOUSE AND SENATE: Beacon
Hill Roll Call records local representativesâ€™
and senatorsâ€™ votes from the
week of October 16-20.
GUN BILL (H 4135)
House 120-38, approved and sent
to the Senate a bill that changes
some of the stateâ€™s gun laws. Provisions
include limiting the carrying
~ Help Wanted ~
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Director of Maintenance & Modernization
Description: This is a highly responsible position
charged with undertaking all aspects of the Authorityâ€™s
state and federally funded public housing maintenance,
capital, and modernization programs. The incumbent
who works under the general supervision of the
Executive Director provides oversight of the maintenance
î–î—î„ï‚‡î€ î“î•îˆî“î„î•îˆî– î“î•îˆî™îˆî‘î—î„î—îŒî™îˆ î„î‘î‡ î•î’î˜î—îŒî‘îˆ îî„îŒî‘î—îˆî‘î„î‘î†îˆ
schedules, orders supplies and equipment, and works
with state and federal authorities. In addition, the
incumbent consults with and advises the Executive
Director in the planning, design, construction, and
close-out of all modernization related projects. Key
tasks include identifying and prioritizing capital needs,
managing design and construction contracts, ensuring
regulatory and bidding compliance, member of
Procurement Committee, oversight of the day-to-day
maintenance of all Revere Housing Authority property,
îŒî‘î—îˆî•î‰î„î†îŒî‘îŠ îšîŒî—î‹ î–î—î„ï‚‡î€ î•îˆî–îŒî‡îˆî‘î—î–î€ î„î‘î‡ î•îˆîŠî˜îî„î—î’î•îœ î“î„î•î—î‘îˆî•î–î€‘
î€©î˜îî î—îŒîîˆî€‘ î€§îŒî•îˆî†î—î– î„ î–î—î„ï‚‡ î’î‰ î˜î“ î—î’ î€•î€“î€‘
î€´î˜î„îîŒî‚¿î†î„î—îŒî’î‘î–î€ î€¤ îîŒî‘îŒîî˜î î’î‰ î‚¿î™îˆ î€‹î€˜î€Œ îœîˆî„î•î–î‚¶ îˆî›î“îˆî•îŒîˆî‘î†îˆ
in maintenance, construction, supervision of construction,
and administration of modernization program in a public
housing authority or related activities is preferred.
Experience with state and federal procurement regulations,
laws, and practices. Knowledge of Massachusetts construction
regulations/codes and generally accepted construction
and trade practices. Must be able to obtain MCPPO
î†îˆî•î—îŒî‚¿î†î„î—îŒî’î‘ îšîŒî—î‹îŒî‘ î’î‘îˆ îœîˆî„î• î’î‰ î‹îŒî•îˆî€‘ î€¤î…îŒîîŒî—îœ î—î’ îšî’î•îŽ
independently and to set and prioritize workload.
Excellent interpersonal and negotiation skills, excellent
organization, communication, both oral and in writing,
î„î‘î‡ îˆî›î“îˆî•îŒîˆî‘î†îˆ îŒî‘ îî„î‘î„îŠîŒî‘îŠ îî˜îî—îŒî“îîˆ î“î•î’îîˆî†î—î–î€‘ î€©îŒî™îˆ î€‹î€˜î€Œ
years of experience in supervision of employees,
îŒî‘î†îî˜î‡îŒî‘îŠ î€•î€—î€’î€š î–î†î‹îˆî‡î˜îîŒî‘îŠ î’î‰ î“îˆî•î–î’î‘î‘îˆîî€ î‡î„îŒîîœ îšî’î•îŽ î’î•î‡îˆî•î€’
job assignments and routine maintenance of all properties.
Two yearsâ€™ experience may be substituted with a
Bachelorâ€™s Degree in Real Estate Development, Architecture,
Engineering, or Construction Management, or a related
î‚¿îˆîî‡î€‘ î€¤ î†î˜î•î•îˆî‘î— î™î„îîŒî‡ î‡î•îŒî™îˆî•î‚¶î– îîŒî†îˆî‘î–îˆ îŒî– î•îˆî”î˜îŒî•îˆî‡î€‘
Instructions: Please mail resume and cover letter to
î€µîˆî™îˆî•îˆ î€«î’î˜î–îŒî‘îŠ î€¤î˜î—î‹î’î•îŒî—îœî€ î€šî€“ î€¦î’î’îîˆî‡îŠîˆ î€¶î—î•îˆîˆî—î€ î€µîˆî™îˆî•îˆî€
î€°î€¤ î€“î€•î€”î€˜î€” î€¤î—î—î‘î€ î€µî’î–î„ î€ªî„î•î…î„î•îŒî‘î’î€ î€¤î‡îîŒî‘îŒî–î—î•î„î—îŒî™îˆ î€¤î–î–îŒî–î—î„î‘î—î€’
î€¥î’î’îŽîŽîˆîˆî“îˆî• î’î• îˆîî„îŒî î•îˆî–î˜îîˆ î„î‘î‡ î†î’î™îˆî• îîˆî—î—îˆî• î—î’î€
rgarbarino@revereha.com. This position will remain
î’î“îˆî‘ î˜î‘î—îŒî î‚¿îîîˆî‡î€‘ î€·î‹îˆ î€µî€«î€¤ îŒî– î‚³î€¤î‘ î€¨î”î˜î„î î€²î“î“î’î•î—î˜î‘îŒî—îœî€’
î€¤ï‚ˆî•îî„î—îŒî™îˆ î€¤î†î—îŒî’î‘ î€¨îî“îî’îœîˆî•î‚´
î€ºî’î•îŽ î€–î€šî€‘î€˜ î€«î’î˜î•î– î„ îšîˆîˆîŽî€‘
î€¶î„îî„î•îœî€ î€‡î€œî€˜î€î€“î€“î€“ î€ î€‡î€”î€“î€˜î€î€“î€“î€“ î“îˆî• îœîˆî„î•
î€¯î’î†î„î—îŒî’î‘î€ î€µîˆî™îˆî•îˆ î€«î’î˜î–îŒî‘îŠ î€¤î˜î—î‹î’î•îŒî—îœ
of guns into public places including
schools, polling places, government
buildings and the private residences
of others, with an exemption for
law enforcement; cracking down on
the spread of ghost guns with new
registration requirements; updating
the statewide ban on assault weapons;
streamlining the licensing process;
and changing the stateâ€™s â€œred
fl agâ€ law by expanding who may petition
a court for an extreme risk protection
order against a person who
poses a risk of causing bodily injury
to themselves or others beyond
just household members and law
enforcement to include school administrators,
medical professionals
and employers.
â€œToday, as we have always done in
the area of fi rearm safety, the House
takes the lead in acting to make the
commonwealth a safer place by giving
law enforcement the tools they
need to go after ghost guns, keeping
battlefi eld weapons out of our
neighborhoods and keeping our
schools, homes, town halls and polling
locations safe,â€ said chief sponsor
Rep. Mike Day (D-Stoneham),
House Chair of the Judiciary Committee.
â€œWhile Washington is paralyzed
by dysfunction that endangers
Americans across the country,
we in Massachusetts address our
challenges directly and take the
steps necessary to modernize our
fi rearms laws to keep us safe.â€
â€œThe comprehensive gun reform
legislation that the House
passed today will make Massachusetts
residents safer and will further
strengthen the commonwealthâ€™s
status as a national leader in the effort
to combat gun violence,â€ said
House Speaker Ron Mariano (DQuincy).
â€œWhile the commonwealth
annually ranks as one of the safest
states in the entire country from
gun violence, the Supreme Courtâ€™s
[New York State Rifl e and Pistol Association,
Inc. v.] Bruen decision nullifi
ed existing components of our
gun laws, threatening the safety
of the commonwealthâ€™s residents.
With the passage of this legislation,
the House has once again displayed
an unwavering commitment
to ensuring that Massachusetts remains
one of the safest states in the
country.â€
â€œMassachusetts already has some
of the strictest fi rearms laws in the
country, along with the lowest rate
of deaths associated with gun violence,â€
said Rep. Steve Xiarhos (RBarnstable).
â€œThe vast majority of
gun-related crimes are committed
with illegal weapons and not with
legally owned fi rearms, and the focus
of the bill should be based on
listening to our Massachusetts Police
Chiefs and on punishing those
who break the law rather than targeting
law-abiding citizens.â€
â€œInstead of focusing on the elimination
of ghost guns and the link
between mental health and gun
ownership, this legislation attacks
legal, law abiding gun owners who
follow the rules,â€ said Rep. Tood
Smola (R-Warren). â€œThe Massachusetts
Chiefs of Police Association
unanimously opposed this legislation,
yet the proponents of this
bill never said a single word to address
their objection. Unfortunately,
we missed an opportunity to target
the real issues related to gun violence
in this bill.â€
(A â€œYesâ€ vote is for the bill. A â€œNoâ€
vote is against it.)
Rep. Jessica Giannino
Rep. Jeff Turco
Yes
No
FIND OUT THE COST OF THE GUN
BILL (H 4135)
House 130-27, upheld the ruling
of the chair that the debate can begin
on the gun bill despite the fact
that it does not include a fi scal note
detailing the cost of the proposal.
House GOP Minority Leader
Rep. Brad Jones (R-North Reading)
moved to delay action on the bill
because he said that House rules require
any legislation reported from
the House Ways and Means Committee
which has a cost attached to
it exceeding $100,000 must be accompanied
by a fi scal note detailing
the amount of public money which
will be required to be spent to carry
out the provisions of the proposal.
Acting House Speaker Rep. Kate
Hogan (D-Stow) ruled that a fi scal
note is not necessary. â€œThis is not
within our province to the internal
workings of a particular subject
matter committee and feel the order
is not well taken,â€ said Hogan.
This led to Jonesâ€™ doubting the ruling
of the chair.
Beacon Hill Roll Call asked the
top two Democratic leaders in the
House to comment on the ruling
and why they voted in favor of it.
House Speaker Ron Mariano (DQuincy)
and Majority Leader Frank
Moran (D-Lawrence) did not respond
to repeated requests for a
comment.
â€œIn my opinion, the lack of a fi scal
note on [the bill] is a clear violation
of House Rule 33,â€ said Jones.
â€œThere is no way that implementing
the many provisions contained
in this bill will not exceed a cost of
$100,000. Based on my conversations
with stakeholders, the provision
requiring the State Police to
take over the inspections of fi rearms
dealers from local jurisdictions
alone is likely to cost $1 million
to $2 million per year. Before
voting on such an expansive bill,
House members and the public
have a right to know how much its
implementation is going to cost the
stateâ€™s taxpayers.â€
(A â€œYesâ€ vote supports the ruling
of the chair that debate can proceed
despite the lack of a fi scal note. A
â€œNoâ€ vote is against allowing debate
to proceed and supports the
requirement that a fi scal note be
included before debate can begin.)
Rep. Jessica Giannino
Rep. Jeff Turco
Yes
Yes
OFF-DUTY POLICE OFFICERS (H
4135)
House 158-0, approved an
amendment designed to clarify that
the bill does not ban off -duty police
offi cers from carrying fi rearms
in certain restricted spaces, as long
as the weapon is provided by their
department. The legislation originally
allowed only active, on-duty
police to carry guns in those spaces.
â€œMost, if not all of us, have heard
from our law enforcement community
with concerns about when
and where they would be allowed
to carry fi rearms when not on offi -
cial duty,â€ said amendment sponsor
Rep. Mark Cusack (D-Braintree).
â€œI am off ering this amendment â€¦
to clarify that off -duty active law
enforcement offi cers would be allowed
to carry their department-issued
fi rearms in the following places:
a place owned, leased or under
the control of state, county or municipal
government and used for
the purpose of government administration;
a location in use at
the time of possession as a polling
place and for the storage and tabulation
of ballots; and an elementary
school, secondary school, college
and university, including transport
used for the students, in the areas
contained within.â€
(A â€œYesâ€ vote is for the amendment.)
Rep.
Jessica Giannino
Rep. Jeff Turco
Yes
Yes
DANGEROUSNESS (H 4135)
House 26-132, rejected an
amendment that would allow the
state to move, based on dangerousness,
for an order of pretrial detention
or release on conditions when
a person has been charged with covert
weapons violations or illegal
possession of a fi rearm.
Supporters said the amendment
would give prosecutors the tools
necessary to hold dangerous people
accountable and protect victims
of gun violence.
Rep. Alyson Sullivan (R-Abington),
the sponsor of the amendment,
did not respond to repeated
requests by Beacon Hill Roll Call to
comment on her amendment.
â€œThis amendment is actually part
of a number of bills that are currently
before the Judiciary Committee,â€
said Rep. Christine Barber (DSomerville)
who urged members
to vote against the amendment.
â€œA number of those bills would expand
the pretrial detention of people.
And this committee takes the issue
of expanding pretrial detention
very seriously. The committee is currently
vetting those proposals, and
rather than taking a piecemeal approach
of this one piece, that committee
is looking at all the related
bills in a thoughtful manner. And so
weâ€™re continuing to take a full look
at this issue and I look forward to
those discussions.â€
(A â€œYesâ€ vote is for the amendment.
A â€œNoâ€ vote is against it.)
Rep. Jessica Giannino
Rep. Jeff Turco
No
No
EMPLOYERS MUST DISCLOSE A
SALARY RANGE WHEN POSTING A
JOB (S 2468)
Senate 38-1, approved a bill,
named the Frances Perkins Workplace
Equity Act, in honor of the fi rst
woman to serve as U.S. Labor Secretary.
The measure would require
employers with 25 or more employees
to disclose a salary range when
BEACON | SEE Page 22
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Page 21
OBITUARIES
Bernadette â€œBernieâ€
(Angiulo) DeAngelis
we will always remember her by.
A funeral service will be held
on, Saturday October 28th, 2023
at 9AM-11:30AM at Buonfi glioâ€™s
Funeral Home, 128 Revere
Street Revere, MA 02151. A mass
will follow at St. Anthonyâ€™s
Church in Revere at noon. In
lieu of fl owers, expressions of
sympathy may be made in her
memory to The Jimmy Fund
https://www.jimmyfund.org/
Marie C. (DiModica)
Fallon
O
f Revere, entered into rest
on October 22nd
of 73. Beloved wife of Salvatore
DeAngelis for 55 years. Devoted
mother of Janet Ruzzo and her
husband Ralph and Salvatore
DeAngelis and his wife Kristen,
all of Revere. Cherished grandmother
of Francesca DeAngelis,
Amara Ruzzo and Salvatore
DeAngelis. The loving sister of
Nicole (Angiulo) Sasso and her
husband Jay. Cherished aunt of
Jay Sasso and his wife Heather
and Janel Sasso. Cherished great
aunt of Lily, Isla and Meadow.
Dear daughter of the late Nicolo
and Janet (Piccinni) Angiulo.
Bernie grew up in Beachmont,
graduated from Revere High
School, and raised her family
here. Her pride and love for the
city of Revere was unmatched.
For 31 years, she worked for
the Department of Revenue in
Chelsea until her retirement this
past year. Bernie adored nothing
more than being with her family.
Her grandchildren and nieces
and nephew were the center
of her world. She never missed
a sporting event or school fundraiser
for any one of them. Everybody
loved having â€œGrandma/Auntie
Bernieâ€ in their lives.
Her love for shopping, cooking
and all things Disney are what
GRANT | FROM Page 7
About First Congregational
Church of Revere (FCCR)
FCCR has been a vital community
resource and welcomes any
and all searching for a church
home. Their ministry services
range from providing Sunday
worship (off ered in English and
Cambodian), serving at the food
pantry, youth groups, neighborhood
English as a Second
Language (ESL) classes, Angels
for the Elderly ministry, music
ministries, Sunday School for
Children & Adults, Young Adult
groups and various other community
and small Bible studies.
Their Caring Hearts ministry
also provides food, clothing
dren as they were born and her
great grandchildren. Marie also
stayed very close to her siblings
and their children. She also welcomed
many of her sonâ€™s friends
in as well.
Marie was best known for her
baking. Marie made delicious
pies, cakes, pastries, and other
treats with love. She would always
bake something for any
occasion or simply visiting a
friend. Marie later worked at
Tiernanâ€™s Flower Shop on Broadway
for about 15 years where
she managed the shop and
designed fl oral arrangements.
Marieâ€™s happiest of times were
spending time with her family
and her devoted faith.
She is the beloved wife of 66
at the age
O
f Revere. Died in the loving
presence of her family at the
Kaplan Family Hospice in Danvers
on Sunday, October 22nd
following a brief illness, Marie
just celebrated her 98th birthday,
on September 25th.
Marie was born in Boston to
her late parents Philip & Mary
(Coco) DiModica. She was one of
ten children. Marie was raised &
educated in Revere and was an
alumna of Revere high School,
Class of 1943. On August 31st,
1946, Marie married the love
of her life, William E. Fallon. The
couple remained in Revere
where they would raise their
four sons. Marie was devoted
to her family and proudly raised
her children with good morals,
values, and faith. Marie filled
her home with happiness, love,
and good examples. She welcomed
her daughters-in-law as
if they were her own daughters.
She cherished her grandchiland
services to Revereâ€™s population
experiencing housing instability.
Their mission is to serve
and support the greater Revere
community. Get involved on
their website, catch the Church
Livestream, donate online or call
at 781-284-4158.
About The Greater Boston
Food Bank (GBFB):
GBFB is the largest hunger-relief
organization in New England
and among the largest
food banks in the country. As
the food bank for Eastern Massachusetts,
GBFB is feeding
people in 190 towns across the
region, distributing the equivalent
of nearly 90 million meals
through a network of 600 dedicated
food distribution partyears
to the late William E. Fallon,
Sr. Loving mother of Dr. John A.
Fallon and his late wife Irene of
Lynnfi eld, Atty. William E. Fallon,
Jr. and his wife Joan of Melrose,
Francis X. Fallon and his wife Loretta,
and Daniel J. Fallon and his
wife Peggy of Lynnfi eld. Cherished
grandmother of John A.
Fallon, Jr. of Lynnfi eld, Jennifer
A. Fallon & husband Michael
Hanifan of Lynnfi eld, Elizabeth
M. Fallon & husband Sean Brune
of NH, Mark X. Fallon, both of Revere,
and Christina M. Fallon of
Lynnfi eld. Adored great grandmother
of John A. Fallon, III., Cass
Fallon, Fallon Brune & Shane
Brune. Dear sister of the late
Joan DeStefano, Frank, Domenic,
Joseph, Catherine DiModica,
Rose Carroll, Frances Dakin, Carmella
Doherty & Celia Kelleher.
She is also lovingly survived by
a large extended family, many
nieces, nephews, grandnieces,
& grandnephews.
Family & Friends are respectfully
invited to attend a Memorial
Funeral Mass on Saturday, October
28th at 11:00 a.m. in St. Anthony
of Padua Church, 250 Revere
St., Revere. Interment will
be held privately. In lieu of fl owers,
at Marieâ€™s request, â€œPlease
spend some special times with
your loved onesâ€.
ners and programs. A member
of the national Feeding America
network, GBFBâ€™s mission is to
end hunger here. The organization
remains committed to the
belief that access to healthy
food is a human right regardless
of an individualâ€™s circumstances.
Through policy, partnerships
and providing free, nutritious
and culturally responsive
food, GBFB is committed
to addressing the root causes
of food insecurity while promoting
racial, gender and economic
equity in food access. For
more information and to help
GBFB help others, visit GBFB.
org, follow GBFB on Facebook,
Twitter (@gr8bosfoodbank) and
Instagram, or call GBFB at 617427-5200.
How
to Find a Medical
Escort After a Procedure
Dear Savvy Senior,
Can you recommend some medical escort services
that help seniors get home after a medical procedure?
I need to have a colonoscopy, but my doctorâ€™s
clinic wonâ€™t schedule my appointment unless
I supply them with a name and phone number of
the person taking me home afterward. I live alone
with no family nearby, and my friend doesnâ€™t drive
anymore. Any suggestions?
Need a Lift
Dear Need,
Good question! Finding
â€œdoor-through-doorâ€ medical
escort services for outpatient
screenings and procedures
that involve anesthesia
can be challenging for older
patients without nearby family
or friends to rely on.
Door-through-door escorts
that most clinics require is a
safety measure. With a colonoscopy,
for example, patients often
receive an anesthetic, like
propofol, or a narcotic such as
Demerol or fentanyl, combined
with anti-anxiety medication
like Versed or Valium.
These drugs aff ect the brain,
and they can stay in the system
for four to six hours. So,
whatâ€™s needed is someone to
escort you out of the building,
take you back home and see
you into it.
While thereâ€™s no one simple
solution to this medical escort
problem, there are wide variety
of local service providers, nonprofi
ts and home-care companies
that may be able to assist
you. But whatâ€™s available to you
will depend on where you live.
Finding Help
A good fi rst step in making
medical escort arrangements
is to talk to your health care
provider thatâ€™s doing the procedure
to fi nd out if their clinic
off ers transportation services
or if they can refer you to
a local medical escort service
or person who can help you.
If not, see if you can remain in
the clinic for an extended period
of time, until the drugs wear
off , so you can safely drive yourself
home or hail an Uber, Lyft
or taxi to take you.
If these options arenâ€™t available,
here are some sources
you should check into.
Area Agency on Aging
(AAA): Your local AAA is one
of your best resources for locating
transportation services
and should be able to refer you
to medical escorts available in
your community. To fi nd your
AAA call the Eldercare Locater
800-677-1116 or visit Eldercare.acl.gov.
Local
nonprofit groups:
The National Volunteer Caregiving
Network (NVCNetwork.
org) connects about 700 community
organizations nationwide,
most of which provide
door-through-door transportation
without charge.
Shepherdâ€™s Centers of
America: There are 55 affiliates
in 17 states that provide
support services for older
adults â€“ see ShepherdCenters.
org. Most off er escorts to and
from medical appointments
without charge.
Village to Village Network:
There are around 250 local village
networks across the country
(see VTVNetwork.org) that
often help with medical escorts,
though thereâ€™s an annual
fee â€“ usually subsidized for
lower-income seniors â€“ to join
a village.
Home-care companies:
You may also be able to hire
a medical escort through a
home-care agency, or you can
find someone on your own
through websites like Care.
com or CareLinx.com. Note that
Medicare doesnâ€™t cover medical
escorts, but in many states
Medicaid does. If you choose
this option, be sure you give
plenty of notice before your
appointment.
Send your senior questions to: Savvy Senior, P.O. Box
5443, Norman, OK 73070, or visit SavvySenior.org. Jim
Miller is a contributor to the NBC Today show and author
of â€œThe Savvy Seniorâ€ book.
For Advertising with Results,
at 781-286-8500 or Info@advocatenews.net
call The Advocate Newspapers
The A vo
wsp
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BEACON | FROM Page 20
posting a job position. The measure
also would require employers with
100 or more employees to fi le annual
employment data reports, including
information on employee
demographics and salaries, with
the state. In addition, the bill directs
the Executive Offi ce of Labor and
Workforce Development to track
compensation data and fi le an annual
report on data showing the
stateâ€™s progress toward equal pay
for equal work.
The House has already approved
a diff erent version of the proposal.
The Senate version now goes to the
House for consideration.
Supporters said that in the Greater
Boston area in 2021, women on
average were paid 70 cents for every
dollar earned by a man. They
noted this gap widens among communities
of color.
â€œMany workers, especially women
and people of color, underestimate
their own value in the job
market,â€ said Sen. Pat Jehlen (DSomerville).
â€œThe 2016 Equal Pay
Act made real progress on breaking
down barriers by banning employers
asking applicants for salary
history. This helped women and
people of color who were changing
jobs because their past low pay
didnâ€™t follow them their whole lives.
However, it didnâ€™t help applicants
learn how much a job could pay
or how to assess their workâ€™s value
to be able to get past the new
barrier of their salary expectations.
This bill will give workers a better
chance to be paid fairly by giving
them straight forward information
and help them have reasonable expectations.â€
â€œIn
the commonwealth of Massachusetts,
we take pride in our worldclass
academic institutions, competitive
talent pool and vast opportunities
for economic success,â€ said
Sen. Paul Feeney (D-Foxborough).
â€œYet when we take a closer look
at the earnings of commonwealth
residents, it is clear we continue to
fall short of closing long-standing
racial and gender wage gaps that
dramatically suppress the earnings
of women and people of color. By
requiring disclosure of salary ranges
for an open job posting, publishing
aggregate demographic data to
track wage inequities by race and
gender across industries, and protecting
an employeeâ€™s right to ask
for salary range information in the
workplace, we have the opportunity
to recruit and retain skilled workers
while closing the wage gap and
ultimately boosting our commonwealthâ€™s
competitive edge.â€
â€œWhile I agree with the overarching
concept of salary range transparency
postings for larger businesses,
I voted no on this bill because
it would place an undue burden
on small business,â€ said Sen.
Ryan Fattman (R-Sutton), the lone
opponent of the measure. â€œSubjecting
small businesses, who employ
even as few as 25 individuals,
to the salary range posting portion
of the bill with violation fi nes
for failing to properly disclose said
information is unnecessary. Most
small businesses are not equipped
with the technical tools to develop
the most accurate salary ranges for
their job postings. With its existing
laws, Massachusetts already makes
it diffi cult to run a business free of
excessive government mandates
and penalties.â€
(A â€œYesâ€ vote is for the bill. A â€œNoâ€
vote is against it.)
Sen. Lydia Edwards
Yes
ALSO UP ON BEACON HILL
REGULATE TICKETS TO CONCERTS
AND OTHER EVENTS (S 2442) â€“ The
Consumer Protection and Professional
Licensure Committee held a
hearing on legislation that would
require that the total price of tickets
for live entertainment events,
including fees, be displayed to consumers
in a clear and conspicuous
manner at the beginning of the
purchasing process. The measure
would also prohibit price increases
during the purchasing process.
â€œFar too often, surprise fees pop
up at the end of the ticket purchasing
process that consumers
throughout Massachusetts had no
idea about,â€ said sponsor Sen. John
Velis (D-Westfield). â€œWhether itâ€™s
tickets to a Taylor Swift concert or
a Patriots game, people shouldnâ€™t
have to struggle through the process
of finding tickets and then
learn that they canâ€™t even afford
them anymore. At the most fundamental
level, this legislation enables
folks to know their budget when
they go in to buy tickets and know
the amount that theyâ€™re ultimately
going to be asked to spend.â€
HEARING AIDS (H 3554) â€“ The Financial
Services Committee held a
hearing on a proposal that would
require all health care plans to provide
coverage for hearing aids.
â€œI have heard from constituents
about the high cost of hearing
aids, and as a caregiver myself, I witnessed
the vital need for seniors to
be able to hear in order to communicate
and advocate for themselves,â€
said sponsor Rep. Kristin Kassner (DHamilton).
â€œItâ€™s stunning to me that
these important medical devices
are not covered by insurance. This
bill seeks to rectify that.â€
ESTABLISH STUDENTS ENTREPRENEURIAL
AND ECONOMIC INVESTMENT
FUND (H 415) â€“ The Committee
on Economic Development and
Emerging Technologies held a hearing
on a measure that would create
a Student Entrepreneurial and Economic
Investment Fund to provide
an opportunity for interested students
to gain experience in entrepreneurialism
and early-stage business
development while fostering
an economic environment that will
attract students to the commonwealth
and forge a relationship between
the public higher education
system and the Massachusetts business
community.
â€œUnder Massachusettsâ€™ current
exam-driven public education system,
attention to entrepreneurship
and personal improvement
beyond the classroom is often forgotten,â€
said sponsor House MinorTHE
REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, OCTOBER 27, 2023
quately addressed.
ity Leader Rep. Brad Jones (R-North
Reading). â€œThis legislation will provide
valuable opportunities for students,
encourage them to develop
relationships with the public higher
education system and the Massachusetts
business community, and
contribute to the present and future
economic growth of the commonwealth.â€
SMOKING
CESSATION PROGRAMS
(H 1169) â€“ The Health Care
Financing Committee held a hearing
on a bill that would expand
smoking cessation benefits for
MassHealth recipients by providing
coverage for additional cessation
services including individual,
group and phone counseling by a
physician, dentist, behavioral health
counselor, mental health counselor,
certifi ed tobacco use cessation
counselor or other qualifi ed clinicians.
MassHealth the stateâ€™s Medicaid
program that provides health
care for low-income and disabled
persons.
â€œ[The bill] would increase the
number of certifi ed practitioners
available to provide evidencebased
counseling for those seeking
assistance quitting tobacco,â€ said
sponsor Rep. Christine Barber (DSomerville).
â€œNot only will this legislation
help smokers identify their
resources for quitting, but it could
inspire someone who would not
otherwise have taken on the diffi -
cult task of ending their addiction
to do so.â€
BAN STATE FUNDS FOR PLANNED
PARENTHOOD (H 1224) â€“ Another
measure heard by the Health Care
Financing Committee would prohibit
any state funds from being
made available to Planned Parenthood
Federation of America, or to
any of its affi liates.
â€œPlanned Parenthood is a wellfunded
organization that is often
very politically active and very partisan,â€
said Rep. Jospeh McKenna (RWebster).
â€œI believe that this alone
is enough to keep it from receiving
state funding. I further feel that
those who believe that abortion,
the taking of human babyâ€™s life, is
morally reprehensible should not
have their tax dollars go to a private
organization who has this as
its core mission.â€
LIMIT TRAIN IDLING (H 3268) â€“
The Transportation Committee held
a hearing on legislation that would
prohibit a locomotive train engine
from idling longer than 30 minutes.
The measure would also require the
Department of Environmental Protection
to investigate idling violations
and conduct emissions tests
to determine whether a trainâ€™s emissions
exceed carbon regulations,
in which case the violator would
be fi ned up to $5,000 per incident.
Supporters said that trains will often
park and idle for up to 24 hours,
creating a nuisance for those living
in nearby neighborhoods and
harming the environment as well.
They noted there are existing laws
dealing with idling motor vehicles,
including school buses, but the issue
of trains idling in communities
across the state has not been adeâ€œThis
isnâ€™t solely a regional concern;
it aff ects communities spanning
from Cape Cod to the Berkshires,â€
said sponsor Rep. John Barrett
(D-North Adams). â€œ[The bill] will
prevent unnecessary emissions and
improve the quality of life for those
who live close to idling trains.â€
POLICE AND FIREFIGHTER DEATH
BENEFITS (H 2641) â€“ The Public Service
Committee held a hearing on
a proposal that would change the
current law which pays the family of
a deceased police offi cer, fi refi ghter
or corrections offi cer the maximum
pay for the position the person
holds even if that person had
not reached the maximum pay level.
The bill would increase the pension
given to the family of the deceased
by giving them the next
grade-step above his or her position
after their death.
â€œI believe this bill is important so
those who have perished while protecting
their communities can continue
to support their families and
loved ones after their passing,â€ said
sponsor Rep. Angelo Puppolo (DSpringfi
eld). â€œProviding these benefi
ts relieves some of the burden
from those left behind by someone
who perished while actively fulfi lling
their roles and duties.â€
QUOTABLE QUOTES
â€œThe ability to work, play and enjoy
our outdoor spaces is a matter of
environmental justice. This program
is another example of the HealeyDriscoll
Administrationâ€™s eff orts to
ensure our outdoor recreational areas
are fairly and evenly distributed
among all Massachusetts communities.
From a new splash pad
to cool off in the summer to an accessible
town green for all people to
gather, these grants will go a long
way to bringing communities together
outdoors.â€
--- Executive Offi ce of Energy and
Environmental Aff airs Secretary Rebecca
Tepper announcing more
than $6.6 million in grant funding
to make parkland and trail improvements
and preserve and protect
land in Massachusetts.
â€œTeen driver crashes aff ect everybody
on the road. Parents and caregivers
play a critical role in making
sure young drivers learn in a safe environment.â€
---
Mark Schieldrop, spokesman
for AAA Northeast revealing the
number of fatalities in teen driver
crashes in Massachusetts reached
49 -- its highest point in over a decade.
â€œThe
cost of housing is the biggest
challenge facing the people
of Massachusetts. We said from
day one of our administration that
we were going to prioritize building
more housing to make it more
aff ordable across the state. The Affordable
Homes Act delivers on this
promise by unlocking $4 billion to
support the production, preservation
and rehabilitation of more than
65,000 homes statewide. Itâ€™s the
largest housing investment in Massachusetts
history. Together, weâ€™re
going to make our state a place
where people can aff ord to move to
and stay to build their future.â€
---Gov. Maura Healey unveiling a
$4 billion plan to jumpstart the production
of homes and make housing
more aff ordable across the Bay
State.
â€œWe appreciate the work the state
has done to welcome new arrivals
and recognize the obstacles it faces
in trying to address this massive humanitarian
crisis. But itâ€™s now time
for the state to approve more funding
for shelters and for Congress to
get its act together and pass immigration
reform that allows immigrants
to work.â€
--- Elizabeth Sweet, Executive Director
of the Massachusetts Immigrant
and Refugee Advocacy
(MIRA) Coalition responding to the
announcement by Gov. Healey that
shelters are nearing capacity.
â€œAs a former mayor, I understand
how important these grants are to
ensuring safer streets in our neighborhoods.
Every community seeks
to enhance the safety of their roadways,
but each faces unique needs.
This program provides cities and
towns the fl exibility to identify and
invest in the traffi c safety issues that
are most pressing in their own communities.â€
---Lt.
Gov. Kim Driscoll announcing
$5.4 million in grants to 186
Massachusetts towns and cities to
support traffi c safety enforcement
and outreach programming.
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.
During the week of October 1620,
the House met for a total of seven
hours while the Senate met for
a total of one hour and 37 minutes.
Mon. Oct. 16 House 11:01 a.m. to
11:06 a.m.
Senate 11:26 a.m. to 11:34 a.m.
Tues. Oct. 17 No House session
No Senate session
Wed. Oct. 18 House 11:00 a.m. to
5:48 p.m.
No Senate session
Thurs. Oct. 19 House 11:00 a.m.
to 11:07.a.m.
Senate l:00 p.m. to 2:29 p.m.
Fri. Oct. 20 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.
×‰	Ú 7cassandra://gmwOST1Qu4aj7tILRHQOzrwe9HhCetge-E86FwRddnkÍ"þÍ`Ì°Í ×e:×ŸÚXç 6ß*ƒ×‰EÚ"ÖTHE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, OCTOBER 27, 2023
Page 23
Copyrighted material previously published in Banker & Tradesman/The Commercial Record, a weekly trade newspaper. It is reprinted with permission
from the publisher, The Warren Group. For a searchable database of real estate transactions and property information visit: www.thewarrengroup.com
BUYER1
Park, Jungsoon
Xu, Qihong
BUYER2
REAL ESTATE TRANSACTIONS
SELLER1
SELLER2
Roh, Claire H Mosack Michael J Est
Holland Jr, Donald
DEBATE | FROM Page 18
went home,â€ said Keefe, predicting
that Rizzo will lose and disappear
again.
Rizzo repeatedly coupled
Keefe with former Mayor Arrigo,
saying they were responsible for
a residential building boom that
has compromised the quality of
life in Revere with overcrowding
of neighborhoods, roads and
schools.
On the new high school, Keefe
once again said he supports a
school on the Wonderland site.
He said it is now clear that building
on the existing site would
cost millions more than anticipated;
athletic fi elds would be
lost until 2030; and the massive
construction site would be
a problem for students and the
neighborhood. He also raised
the specter of eminent domain,
saying if he lived in that neighborhood,
he would want the city
to take his house rather than living
through years of construction.
Rizzo
criticized Keefe for trying
to scare residents about em.............
#
1
inent
domain takings when the
projectâ€™s senior manager has said
there would be no eminent domain
takings in the neighborhood.
Rizzo has usually focused
his opposition to the Wonderland
plan on fi nances, saying the
city needs a fi nancially responsible
plan for the school. However,
during the debate he also
stressed that a school at Wonderland
would mean channeling
thousands of students and parents
into that section of the city
during the morning commute. â€œIt
would be a public safety nightmare
for kids,â€ he said. He also insisted
that the high school was
built where it is because itâ€™s centrally
located and Revere should
keep it that way.
During part of the debate involving
questions from members
of the community, Keefe
and Rizzo were asked what
would be their fi rst priority as
mayor. â€œI would make sure the
police and fi re departments have
the resources needed to do their
jobs,â€ said Rizzo, adding that public
works and ambulance services
also need upgrades.
â€œThe new Point of Pines fire
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Provide the Best Serviceâ€
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The Best Agents
provide the
Best Results!
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walk-up attic, playroom in lower level, garage, fenced yard, great
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bedrooms, eat-in kitchen with granite counters, hardwood
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Mosack, John R
station is a necessity because of
the development Keefe and the
former administration allowed
to happen. They were happy to
sit back and watch the city grow
but they could care less about
the services provided to those of
us who have lived here for a long
time,â€ said Rizzo.
Keefe said his first priority
would be moving forward with
a decision on the high school.
However, he agreed with Rizzo
that something needs to be
done about ambulance service.
Keefe then asked Rizzo if he had
received any donations from Cataldo,
the ambulance company
that services Revere.
When Rizzo answered that he
had, Keefe and his supporters responded
as if it were a direct hit.
But Rizzo quickly shot back, telling
Keefe, â€œYouâ€™re too busy taking
[donations] from developers.â€
The Revere High Speech and
Debate Team questioned the
candidates about their plans to
foster free speech and expression
in Revere. Keefe said he intends
to embrace the cityâ€™s entire
population and have their
collective voice heard. â€œMy oppoADDRESS
495
Revere Beach Blvd #104
383 Revere Beach Blvd #4
nent wishes you would shut up,â€
added Keefe.
Rizzo said he wasnâ€™t sure what
Keefe was talking about. â€œIâ€™m confused
and obviously heâ€™s confused,â€
said Rizzo, who went on
to explain that he values free
speech. He spoke about how he
developed a program for residents
new to Revere during his
administration because he recognized
the city was growing
more diverse. He added that Arrigo
shut down the program when
he won the 2015 election.
Keefe and Rizzo were also
asked about their hiring process
and if it would be open and transparent.
Keefe said his approach
to hiring â€“ he recently added fi ve
employees to the public works
department â€“ already demonstrated
those qualities. He added
that Rizzo tried to stop him
from hiring anyone while he was
the acting mayor. â€œHe was afraid I
would appoint all my buddies because
thatâ€™s what he does; thatâ€™s
what he did and thatâ€™s what heâ€™ll
continue to do for the next four
years,â€ said Keefe.
But Rizzo responded that Keefe
was trying to distract and distort
DATE PRICE
10.02.23 354000
10.05.23 215000
his record. â€œWe built a new stadium,
a new school, new Little
League fi elds. The only thing he
and his predecessor have done is
build new apartments,â€ said Rizzo,
adding that he has a record
of accomplishments while Keefe
has a record of accepting donations
from developers.
The candidates were also
asked for the one word that best
describes Revere. Rizzo, who answered
fi rst, said â€œspecial.â€ He said
the strength of the city is in its
people, who are from all diff erent
social, cultural and economic
backgrounds. â€œI believe in Revere,
unlike my opponent, who
says he believes in Revere. He
believes in whatâ€™s good for him
not what is good for the people.
Iâ€™ve always been on the side of
the people.â€
Keefeâ€™s one word to describe
Revere was â€œbeautiful.â€ He listed
some of the cityâ€™s natural resources
and stressed the diverse population.
â€œRevere is beautiful and
we should welcome everybody
in with a big hug. I love Revere, I
believe in Revere and thank you,
Mr. Rizzo, for believing in Revere
as well,â€ said Keefe.
View our website from
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335 Central St., Saugus, MA
781-233-7300
Revere
SAUGUS - 8 room, 3-bedroom Bungalow, spacious living room, granite
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Saugusâ€™s newest condo complex featuring 2 bedrooms, bright and
sunny, fully appliance, eat-in kitchen with granite counters and ceramic
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freshly painted, off street parking, coin-op laundryâ€¦...$329,900
A Great agent gets you the
results you deserve!
Call Lisa 617-240-2448
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THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, OCTOBER 27, 2023
38 Main St. Saugus
(781) 558-1091
20 Railroad Ave. Rockport
(978)-999-5408
mangorealtyteam.com
COMMERCIAL LISTINGS
Saugus - for sale
14 Norwood St. Everett
(781)-558-1091
just listed! Saugus
tOWNHOUSE FOR sale
The market is changing, and a lot of property owners are
interested in learning the value of their assets and listing
their homes while conditions are favorable. Would you
like to discover the advantages of Mango Realty's
"Coming Soon" and "Concierge Programs"? Don't hesitate
to get in touch with Sue to find out more.
Reach out now by calling/texting Sue at 617-877-4553
34 Eustis St, Saugus
Saugus
Sat, Oct 28
Sun, Oct 29
12-1:30pm
12-1:30pm
tOWNHOUSE FOR RENT
Incredible opportunity for investors and
developers. This long standing confirmed preexisting
licensed commercial fishing
pier/residential property abuts the Saugus
Waterfront Mixed Use Overlay District
(WMOD). Current owner is now petitioning the
Town of Saugus to have this prime waterfront
location entered into the WMOD. Please read
Article 18 in the Saugus Zoning Bylaws, found
on the web, to learn about the array of
potential land use and mixed use possibilities
under this overlay. The owners recognize that
any sale will include this zoning contingency.
All rights and title to licensed pier will be
conveyed via deed transfer .The current use of
the property includes boat storage and
residential use with a permitted accessory
dwelling unit. Property utilities include
electricity & water to pier area as well as
natural gas to dwelling...$1,455.000
CALL/TEXT Sue 617-877-4553
Saugus Ctr
Are you ready to move into this newly remodeled 5 bedroom
Colonial. Beautiful hardwood floors throughout. Stainless steel
appliances, a farmers sink and granite counter tops glisten under
recessed first floor lighting. State of the art programable heat
pump provides energy efficient year-round temperature control.
All new bathrooms with first floor laundry hookup. New
plumbing, wiring, and newly recent vinyl clad windows.
Spacious basement, with storage. Fully electrified 10' x 20'
custom built shed. $749,000
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Unique 5 Year old four level townhouse
that offers a perfect blend of modern
amenities. Step inside and discover a
large garage that leads to a quaint level
patio for entertainment. The second floor
hosts a spacious living and dining room
open concept that flows into a fabulous
chef kitchen that offers quartz
countertops and stainless steel
appliances and a 1/2 bath. It boasts
hardwood floors, energy efficient
systems, central air, tankless water
heater along with Harvey windows.
Third floor offers two comfortable
bedrooms and a full bath. Large
penthouse suite with en-suite bathroom
andwalkincloset.Youwillnotrunof
storage. This property is designed to
cater to all of your lifestyle needs and
and offers rich history right outside your
doorstep. Transportation close by and
also minutes from Airport and Boston.
$699,000
CALL/TEXT Sue 617-877-4553
MOVE RIGHT IN. This Spectacular sun-filled
home with exceptional flow. Details
matter & this lovely home is brimming
with great potential and character. Walk
into a screened in porch & read your
favorite book or just have your favorite
drink w/ a friend or family member. The
kitchen leads and flows into the living &
dining room that offers gleaming
hardwood floors & a full bath on the first
floor. The second floor has 3 generous
bedrooms that have hardwood floors with
an additional new full bath. The roof is
approximately 2 years old. The Driveway
can park 3-4 cars tandem, Easy access to
public transportation, 20 minutes from
Boston, close to shopping malls &
restaurants. Saugus is an energetic town
featuring new schools, low property tax
rate. Something this sweet will not
last..$559,000
CALL/TEXT Sue 617-877-4553
You will be stunned the very moment you
enter into this townhouse. This spacious
townhouse has a kitchen that has been
ate
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ccably maintain d
d with
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appliances, granite countertops. The open
concept floor plan is perfect for
entertaining. 2 assigned parking with ample
visitor parking are just a few more perks to
mention. Easy and low maintenance living. 2
cats ok. No Smoking, This will not last.
Great credit score and references required....
$2,900
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CALL/TEXT Sue 617-877-4553
Business Opportunity
LYNN
MANGO Realty is offering a great opportunity to acquire
a long established active restaurant/bar with common
victualer/all alcohol license in a prime down town Lynn
location. The owner of this business is retiring after 29
years of success at this location. Loyal customer base.
Kitchen facilities updated. Two rest rooms. Seats 92/
Plenty of off-street parking. Documented revenue for
both food, liquor and lottery allows you to have a quick
return on your investment. Favorable lease terms for
this corner location. $200,000.
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tastefully renovated with the past 5 years
and impeccably maintained since. The large
eat in kitchen offers stainless steel
e
COMING SOON
COMING SOONBRAND
NEW CONSTRUCTION
COLONIAL LOCATED ON A NICE SIDE
STREET NOT FAR FROM ELEMENTARY
SCHOOLS AND THE CENTER OF
TOWN. 4 BEDROOM, 3.5 BATH WITH
HARDWOOD THROUGH-OUT.
BEAUTIFUL KITCHEN AND BATHS.
EXQUISITE DETAIL AND QUALITY
BUILD. GARAGE UNDER.
SAUGUS
CALL KEITH FOR MORE DETAILS
781-389-0791
COMING SOON
COMING SOON- 4 BEDROOM, 2
BATHROOM RENOVATED CAPE
LOCATED ON A NICE SIDE STREET.
THIS HOME FEATURES A NEW
KITCHEN WITH STAINLESS
APPLIANCES & QUARTZ COUNTERS,
NEW BATHROOMS, HARDWOOD
FLOORS AND FRESH PAINT
THROUGH. GARAGE UNDER.
MAINTENANCE FREE VINYL SIDING.
SAUGUS CALL KEITH FOR MORE
DETAILS 781-389-0791
SOLD
FOR SALE- 3+ BED, 2 BATH SPLIT
ENTRY HOME ON NICE CUL-DE-SAC
LOCATION. THIS HOME FEATURES A
LARGE LIVING ROOM OPEN TO
FORMAL DINING ROOM AND EAT-IN
KITCHEN. 3 BEDS AND FULL BATH UP.
LOWER LEVEL OFFERS A FIREPLACE
FAMILY, ADDITIONAL BEDROOM,
OFFICE AND ANOTHER FULL BATH.
GREAT LOCATION. SAUGUS $565,000
CALL DEBBIE 617-678-9710
PRICE
IMPROVEMENT
FOR SALE-NEW CONSTRUCTION
ONE OF A KIND CONTEMPORARY
MODERN HOME WITH AMAZING
VIEWS OF PILLINGS POND, 4590
SQFT. OPEN CONCEPT, 3 LEVELS,
4 BEDS, 6 BATHS, TOP OF THE LINE
MATERIALS AND FINISHES, HOME
THEATER, WORK-OUT ROOM AND SO
MUCH MORE! LYNNFIELD $1,750,000
CALL DANIELLE 978-987-9535
LOOKING FOR EXPERIENCED
AGENTS WHO WANT A
NO HASSLE, NO NONSENSE
OFFICE.
WE ARE LOOKING FOR AGENTS WHO
WANT TO MAKE A DECENT PAY WITHOUT
PAYING HIGH FEES. ARE YOU A
GO GETTER? PERHAPS BI-LINGUAL?
WILLING TO GO ABOVE AND BEYOND?
CALL US TODAY!
KEITH
781-389-0791
UNDER
CONTRACT
FOR SALE
BATH WITH SPACIOUS
LIVING ROOM, DINING
ROOM AND
BEDROOMS. HOME HAS
OFFICE. YARD WITH
WORKSHOP WITH
ELECTRICITY GREAT
FOR STORAGE. CLOSE
TO AREA SCHOOLS,
SHOPS, MAJOR
ROUTES. AND
RESTAURANTS. QUICK
TO POINTS NORTH OR
SOUTH.
METHUEN $374,900
JULIEANNE
781-953-7870
HUGE DOUBLE WIDE UNIT WITH 3 - 4 BEDROOMS AND MANY UPDATES APPROX
1250 SQUARE FEET, NEW HEATING SYSTEM ,PINE FLOORS THROUGHOUT,
NEW ROTH OIL TANK, MANY NEW WINDOWS, CATHEDRAL CEILINGS,
PITCHED ROOF, AND LARGE DRIVEWAY. THIS HOME IS LOCATED IN OAK LEDGE
HEIGHTS COOP PARK. MOST DESIRABLE PARK. COOP FEE INCLUDES A SHARE
OF THE LAND AS WELL AS TAXES, WATER AND SEWER, RUBBSH REMOVAL,
SNOW PLOWING AND COMMN AREA MAINTENANCE. PEABODY $229,900
CALL ERIC 781-223-0289
MOBILE HOMES
YOUNG ONE BEDROOM IN GOOD CONDITION IN A DESIRABLE PARK WITH 2
PARKING SPOTS. SOLD AS IS. SUBJECT TO PROBATE DANVERS $109,900
UPDATED 2 BEDROOM WITH NEWER KITCHEN, BATH, RUBBER ROOF,
WINDOWS, SIDING AND APPLIANCES. FULL SIZE LAUNDRY. DANVERS $119,900
REMODELED 3 BEDROOM WITH GLEAMING HARDWOOD FLOORS, C/A, AND
FULL SIZE LAUNDRY. LOW PARK FEE. PLENTY OF PARKING. LOTS OF UPDATES.
PEABODY $209,900
LOOKING TO
BUY OR SELL?
JULIEANNE CIPRIANO
781-953-7870
CALL HER
FOR ALL YOUR
REAL ESTATE NEEDS
RENTAL
1 BEDROOM IN OWNER OCCUPIED HOME. GOOD SIZE LIVING ROOM, LARGE
BEDROOM CAN FIT QUEEN BED, EAT-IN KITCHEN WITH PLENTY OF CABINETS.
SLIDER TO PATIO. HEAT AND HOT WATER INCLUDED. NO PETS OR SMOKING.
OFF STREET PARKING. GOOD CREDIT AND REFERENCES. SAUGUS $1,800
CALL RHONDA 781-706-0842
UNDER
C NTRA
O
UNDER
UNDER
UND R
CONTRACT
CONT ACT
CONTRACT
UN ER
UNDER
C NTRACT
CONTRACT
CONTRACT
UNDER
UNDER
UNDER
CONTRACT
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