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alld
a
Vol. 32, No. 12
den
AADD
-FREESpecial
to Th e Advocate
I
n honor of International Women’s
Day on March 8, Malden
Career Services Coordinator
Kashawna Harling and Malden
Health & Human Services DeSubscribe
to Advocate Online: www.advocatenews.net
CTE
OCAT
AT
www.advocatenews.net
Published Every Friday
Celebrating International
Women’s Day in Malden
617-387-2200
Pictured from left: Mariah Mulcahy, Gladys Rivera Rogers, Renee Kelley, Carol Ann Desiderio, Maria
Luise, Kashawna Harling, Mayor Gary Christenson, Dawna Aiello, Deborah Burke, Anna Tse, Kathleen
Manning Hall, Fiona Nattabi and Joan Ford Mongeau (on screen).
partment Community Communication
and Outreach Specialist
Tamerlie Roc organized an Informational
Panel consisting of
nine career women with ties to
Malden. International Women’s
Day is held each year to honor
women’s economic, political
and cultural achievements and
to promote gender equality.
Following a warm welcome by
Mayor Gary Christenson, panelWOMEN’S
DAY | SEE PAGE 5
Honored by the Malden community,
but may have been wrongly denied
a chance to compete, twice
(Ed. Note: Following is Part One of a two-part series on one of Malden’s most renowned athletes, Louise
May Stokes Fraser. This story originally appeared exclusively in the Malden Advocate in May 2020 and is reprinted
today as part of our Women’s History Month coverage. Part Two will appear in next Friday’s edition.)
By Steve Freker
W
hen she was a young girl,
former U.S. Olympian Louise
Mae Stokes Fraser would
race against boys in her Malden
neighborhood on the B&M Railroad
tracks just outside of Malden
Square. She beat most of
them. In a fi tting bit of touching
irony, part of that historic landmark,
now known as the Northern
Strand Community Trail, a
popular walking, cycling and
running path, has been named
in her honor.
Malden always beams with
pride and excitement as a community
when one of its own is
recognized on a national level
for excellence and achievement.
It is not a common occurrence,
but when it does happen, the
Malden community cherishes
those moments.
M
ayor Gary Christenson and
Senior Center Coordinator
Mikeneil Paul recently wished
longtime North Shore Haitian
E
Friday, March 24, 2023
Celebrating Ms. Joseph's
103rd Birthday!
Mayor Gary Christenson wishes Anilia Joseph a happy birthday!
Adult Day Health participant Anilia
Joseph a very happy 103rd
BIRTHDAY | SEE PAGE 7
Malden IT Director: Cyberattacks
are relentless, growing
City Councillors pledge to continue
support of Malden’s state-of-theart
cyber defense protections
By Steve Freker
T
he sheer numbers surrounding
cyberattacks on
digital technology systems
are stark, even bleak. According
to Malden municipal Information
Technology (IT) Director
Anthony Rodrigues, there
is no expectation that cyberattacks
will diminish or lessen
over time, only the opposite.
Rodrigues addressed the
Malden City Council with information
on a cyberattack
CYBERATTACKS | SEE PAGE 13
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BREAKING THE BARRIER: Shown are Malden’s Louise May Stokes
(left) and Illinois’ Tidye Pickett, who were the fi rst two AfricanAmerican
women to ever be selected to the U.S. Olympic Team –
for the 1932 Games in Los Angeles, Calif. (Courtesy Photo)
One Malden native stands
alone in local lore, however, as
she attained heights of achievement
that have never been
matched by a Malden resident.
Louise May Stokes Fraser was
HONORED | SEE PAGE 8
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THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, March 24, 2023
SSSHHH! Don’t wake them up... they’re doing a project!
Linden STEAM Academy eighth-graders undertake study of sleep
and its effect on Malden Public Schools students
By Steve Freker
J
ust how does sleep aff ect kids,
especially when class is in session
during the school year?
In a fi tting project undertaken
during National Sleep Awareness
Week, a group of Linden
STEAM Academy eighth-graders
oversaw a districtwide survey
regarding sleep habits of
Malden Public Schools students.
Linden educator Peter Rowley
appeared before the Malden
School Committee this past
fall and requested permission
to assist a group of ambitious
Grade 8 students at his school
who were interested in planning
and then overseeing this
sleep study. The School Committee
members enthusiastically
supported the request at
the time and at their most recent
meeting were updated by
Rowley, accompanied by a number
of his Linden students, on
the eve of launching the study.
The study was planned and conducted
during National Sleep
Awareness Week, which fell
from March 12-18.
National Sleep Awareness
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Week is celebrated in March,
which is designated as National
Sleep Awareness Month. Sleep
Awareness Week, which is conducted
by the National Sleep
Foundation (NSF), is celebrating
its 25th Anniversary in 2023.
According to the NSF, “Sleep
Awareness Week provides us
with an opportunity to look
at our own sleep habits and
search for ways to improve on
the quantity and quality of sleep
we get. Eating right and exercising
are used to maintain good
health, but sleep can also aff ect
one’s wellness.”
Linden’s Rowley told the
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School Committee his students
– during Sleep Awareness Week
– were embarking on a districtwide
survey of Malden PubMalden
Public Schools educator Peter Rowley (right) from the
Linden K-8 STEAM Academy (LSA), told the Malden School
Committee that he was mentoring a group of LSA eighth-graders
who were conducting a districtwide survey of students in Grades
6-12 on sleep habits, during National Sleep Awareness Week
(March 12-18). (Advocate Photo)
lic Schools students in Grades
6-12 on their daily sleep habits.
The survey was designed to be
undertaken daily during Sleep
Awareness Week, where the students
who participated were
asked to log in with:
1) What time they went to bed
2) What time they woke up
3) How they felt in the morning
4)
How they felt in the afternoon
At
the end of the week, Rowley
explained, the students
would gather up the data received
and eventually compile
results and issue a report on the
fi ndings.
“The students are excited
about this project and what
they might fi nd out about sleep
and its relationship to students
in our district,” said Rowley,
“We are very pleased to see
our students undertake this
project and we fully support
their work and look forward to a
presentation of the results,” said
Malden Public Schools Superintendent
Dr. Ligia Noriega-Murphy,
in endorsing the project.
School Committee Chair Mayor
Gary Christenson also endorsed
the project. “As long as
it doesn’t include the adults,” he
said, with a smile, adding that
he is eager to hear the results.
Ward 3 School Committee
Member Jennifer Spadafora and
Ward 7 Member Keith Bernard
also expressed support for the
project at the meeting.
After a question from Ward 6
School Committee Member Joseph
Gray regarding any possible
recommendations emanating
from the students and educators
following the survey,
Rowley said that while no recommendations
were anticipated,
“our students are very interested
in coming up with ideas
for future projects or listening to
suggestions from others.”
The Malden Advocate will follow
this project and detail its results
in a future report.
Annual Ecumenical Palm Sunday
Concert – April 2
T
he 35th Annual Ecumenical
Palm Sunday Concert will
be presented on Sunday, April
2 at 3:00 p.m. at First Baptist
Church in Malden. Combined
area church choirs and soloists
are under the direction of Malden
resident Rosalind Mohnsen
at the fi ne E. M. Skinner organ.
Soloists are Judy Doucette, Soprano,
Gabriella Snyder, Alto,
Matthew Arnold, Tenor, and
Richard Freeman, Baritone.
The group will present the
*Annual Percentage Yield (APY) is accurate as of the date posted and is subject to change without notice. APY assumes that interest
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cantata “Olivet to Calvary” by
John Henry Maunder, a British
composer. In addition to choruses
and solos, there are three
hymns for everyone to sing.
Participants include singers
from Freedom Hill Community
Church-Malden, First
Baptist Church-Malden, First
Community United Methodist
Church-Medford, First Lutheran
Church-Malden, First Parish-Malden,
Immaculate Conception
Church-Malden, Maplewood
Baptist Church-Malden, The Paulist
Center-Boston, St. John the
Baptist Ukrainian Greek Catholic
Church-Salem, St. John the
Evangelist Church-Beverly, and
St. Peter’s Community-Malden.
The public is cordially invited.
For further information, contact
First Baptist Church at 781324-2745.
׉	 7cassandra://FZeY9n5rqOtkzUtMIfp4Rh61ettN5aPbeJ-Kb7-B8jY+"`̰ dX&M8׉ErTHE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, March 24, 2023
~ Malden Musings ~
Page 3
Christian Turns 13
By Peter F. Levine
W
e’ve been through thick
and thin together going
on13 years strong (reminds me
of one of his favorite childhood
songs, “you got a friend in me,
we stick together and see it
through, cuz you got a friend
in me.”) From marathon sessions
creating Play-Doh Godzilla
to endless hours on the playgrounds
at Amerige and Devir
Park to countless hours spent
shooting basketballs in the
driveway – each moment recalled
fondly, to say the least.
My amazing grandson Christian
turns 13 in March. Hard to imagine
the concept “teenager.” I am
beyond blessed to have had a
key role during his childhood
and to have shared that wonderfully
imaginative world that
he inhabits.
Peter, Paul and Mary sang “a
dragon lives forever, but not so
little boys.” So, much like the protagonist
in Puff the Magic Dragon,
“one gray night it happened,
Jackie Paper came no more.” Replaced
by NBA2K23, a Fender
Electric Guitar (extra distortion
please), AAU hoop, and (good
grief) – girls. I tell myself that it
is, okay, cycle of life and all that
jazz. I’d have it no other way.
But ya know what? I wouldn’t
mind one bit spending another
night (or ten) with three-yearold
Christian – sitting on my lap,
watching episode after episode
of Chip ’n’ Dale, Donald Duck,
the Wiggles, and Baby Godzilla
v Mothra.
Lately Christian has turned
to prose. An assignment in English
Class piqued his interest.
I’m hoping the creative writing
bug has stung him good and
hard. Proud beyond words of his
first offering, he’s a natural (and
far more talented than Papa was
at his age!). Here he channels his
inner Dr. Seuss using a “simile”
as part of the assignment – not
knowing what a simile was until
I Googled it. Insert smiley face.
“It’s Raining” by Christian J. Falzarano:
“Today is a very nice day.
I think I’ll go outside to play. Oh
no, no way, today there is rain.
That makes me glum. I’m sad,
I wanted to have some fun. It’s
okay, I’ll just find something else
to do. I’ve looked and searched
the halls of the house, boo hoo.
I just can’t find anything that will
not make me a grouch. I have an
idea. It’s silly, but fun. Why don’t
we go outside to run and run?
Oh no, there’s a problem, it’s still
raining. It’s okay, just do it! Let’s
run in the rain today. It will be
fun, and you’ll have a good day.”
Christian has grown into a
wonderful young man. Caring,
up guy Kevin McGlinchy announced
he will let the pros wait
and will opt for Central Florida
Community College.
Meanwhile, the Malden Observer
had their proverbial finger
on the pulse of Maldonians,
featuring a weekly column
called “Speak Out” – a weekly forum
for Malden’s most engaged
citizens (think SeeClickFix but in
print media). Maldonians were
encouraged to anonymously
leave voicemail messages on
a recorded line which the paper
would print, verbatim! It is
laugh out loud funny! Here you
go, Malden 2023, I bring to you
five of the more coherent “Speak
Out” diatribes from 1995, unedited,
for your reading pleasure.
My note: Maldonians liked to
speak anonymously but when
they did, they were very polite.
MUSINGS| SEE PAGE 19
AUTOTECH
Birthday boy Christian J. Falzarano channels his inner Jerry West
with this drive to the basket.
loving, with a great sense of humor
(and head of hair!), and if he
sets his mind to it (and works
on his mid-range-game), capable
of setting the world on fire
– destined for greatness. “Kvelling”
beyond words, he could do
no wrong in my eyes. My only
disappointment: that the first
13 went too damn fast. Here’s
to the next 13, bestie. Love ya,
dude!
It is said in “Malden Musings” ...
One more time with feeling:
Malden, 1995. Twenty-eight
years ago, Malden was on the
cusp of greatness. A few pieces
of the puzzle were still missing,
but the foundation was being
laid and it would be just a couple
of short years away before
we reached our full potential –
Malden 2023. Granted, we’re still
a “work in progress” but darn it
– you’ve come a long way, baby
(goodbye, “Beast That Ate Pleasant
Street!).
Susan Lucey’s dad, Ed, was
mayor in 1995. He was the first
of the “enlightened” corner office
holders we elected and in
’95 was being challenged by a
young whippersnapper named
Riche “Ace” Howard. Real Estate
maven Kristin Gennetti’s
father Henry was running a reelection
campaign for Councilor-At-Large.
And the guy who I
predict will come in first in his
age category at the next Irish
American Labor Day Road Race,
Marty Gately, was topping the
ticket year after year by 1995.
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THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, March 24, 2023
Malden man pleads guilty in 'murderfor-hire'
plot targeting his wife
Faces federal prison term for role in 'setting up the hit' with
undercover federal agent on New Year’s Day, 2021
Advocate Staff Report
A
56-year-old Malden man,
who thought he was hiring a
contract killer to murder his wife
but was actually speaking to an
undercover federal agent, has
pleaded guilty to a murder-forhire
plot. Massimo Marenghi,
pled guilty in U.S. District Court
last Thursday, March 16, to plotting
to have his wife killed, going
so far as to make a cash deposit
to whom he believed was a contract
killer and advising the person
on how to best avoid being
seen at the would-be victim’s
residence.
His plot was undone by someone
who had initially appeared
to be helping Marenghi, an informant
referred to in the probable
cause affi davit as a “confi -
dential source” or “CS.” Marenghi
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had apparently “raised the topic
of killing his wife” with CS, who
would later tell authorities that
he tried to dissuade Marenghi
from doing so.
A series of text messages on
Jan. 1, 2021, convinced the informant
that Marenghi was serious.
According to the court affi
davit, Marenghi told the source
that he was having issues with
his wife and that she had sought
a restraining order against him.
At that time, Marenghi “again
raised the topic of killing his
wife,” the affi davit says.
The informant then apparently
told Marenghi what it would
take to do the job. The affi davit
reads, “CS responded that if
MARENGHI was serious about
having his wife killed, then the
cost would be $10,000 in cash.
“MARENGHI agreed and provided
CS with photographs of
his wife, information regarding
his wife’s employment location
and hours, her home address in
Malden, a description of her vehicle,
and her telephone number.”
After
that conversation, the
affi davit says, the confi dential
source contacted the Northwood
Police Department in
New Hampshire. The local cops
contacted the FBI, who interviewed
CS the next day. After
that, CS agreed to help with the
investigation against Marenghi.
Days later, on Jan. 13, 2021, under
the direction of the FBI, CS
gave Marenghi the name and
contact information for someone
who Marenghi believed
“could be hired to murder his
wife but who, in reality, would
be an undercover FBI agent,” ac“You
want to get rid of her?”
to which Marenghi responded,
“Yeah, I need to … to eliminate
that problem.” UC stated, “I
mean, we can make it look like
an accident … it is your call.”
Marenghi replied, “Yeah, well, I
mean obviously that’s the best
way.”
At one point, Marenghi stated,
Malden resident Massimo
Marenghi pled guilty to a
murder-for-hire plot from 2021,
when he conspired with an FBI
undercover agent posing as a
contract killer, with Marenghi's
wife as the target. (Courtesy Photo)
cording to the affi davit.
The confi dential source also
told Marenghi what coded
words to use in order to convey
his request, “specifi cally that
MARENGHI refer to the person
as ‘Mrs. Smith,’ identify himself
as someone named ‘Boston,’ and
inquire about the ‘construction
job,'” the affi davit says.
Marenghi reached out to the
undercover agent, who was referred
to as “UC” in the affi davit,
that same day, calling the number
provided by CS and using
the code words. That call was recorded.
“Using coded language,
the undercover agent indicated
that the job would require
‘blueprints,’ ‘pictures of the site,’
‘what time work could start,’ and
a ‘preliminary invoice,’” the affi
davit says. Marenghi and the
undercover agent scheduled an
in-person meeting for Jan. 20,
2021, about a week later.
The affidavit detailed what
happened during that meeting:
During the meeting, Marenghi
described a “situation” he
needs “taken care of” – that is, his
“soon-to-be” ex-wife. UC asked,
“Well, I just - I just need her out
of the way for now.” UC responded,
“OK, well that’s … that’s totally
diff erent. You either want her
killed or you don’t.” Marenghi
stated, “Um, I need - I need the
problem eliminated," according
to the court affi davit.
Marenghi told the undercover
agent that he may need some
time to “free up some assets” in
order to cover the $10,000 price
tag. He also provided UC with a
picture of his wife’s residence
and explained how a contract
killing could be carried out, documents
show. He “explained in
detail the location of the camera
outside his wife’s house and
described how someone could
stand behind the barrels at the
end of the driveway such that
the person would be hidden
from any cameras and out of
sight from his wife,” the affi davit
says. He “further provided a possible
exit route likely to evade
detection.”
During a meeting nine days
later, Marenghi gave UC $1,500
cash as a deposit for the murder,
the affidavit says, apparently
adding that the sooner
the “demolition job” took place,
the sooner he could pay the
balance.
Marenghi was indicted the following
month, in March 2021.
He faces a potential 10 years
in prison and possible fi nancial
penalties. U.S. District Judge Allison
D. Burroughs scheduled
sentencing for June 8.
For Advertising
with Results,
call The Advocate Newspapers
at 617-387-2200
orInfo@advocatenews.net
Prices subject to
change
DIESEL TRUCK
STOP
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Page 5
Housing Families Inc.’s YSEP
registration is open
D
ear Community,
Registration is open for
the Spring 2023 session of our
Youth Service & Engagement
Program (YSEP)!
YSEP is a free, educational and
volunteer program for students
in grades 7-12.
The program runs for nine
weeks on Zoom, every Sunday
beginning on March 26.
Students in the program complete
a volunteer service project,
where they learn tangible
ways to make a difference in
their community and build skills
they can use in their careers and
future social justice and service
work.
Students will also learn from
Housing Families leaders in
housing and health advocacy,
as well as special guests, and
discuss what they learned. This
is a great opportunity for students
looking to complete volunteer
service hours, or for any
youth looking to give back.
Learn more!
With gratitude,
Everett, MA
617-202-8259
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The YSEP Team
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CAN HELP PAY YOUR
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You may qualify for ABCD’s Fuel Assistance
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towards your heating costs (oil, gas, or electric).
Maximum benefit is $2,200
YSEP Co-Director Katie Byers
WOMEN’S DAY | FROM PAGE 1
ists discussed their current profession
along with their background
and the path that led
them there. Event attendees
heard from Chamber of Commerce
Director Joan Ford Mongeau,
Massachusetts Commission
on the Status of Women’s
2017 Unsung Heroine Anna Tse,
Mayor’s Office Administrative
Offi cer Kathleen Manning Hall,
Offi ce of Strategic Planning and
Community Development Director
Deborah Burke, Malden
Overcoming Addiction Recovery
Coach Supervisor Dawna
Aiello, Special Assistant to the
Mayor Maria Luise, Malden Police
Department Detective Renee
Kelley, North Shore Hispanic
Association President Gladys
Rivera Rogers, Malden City Clerk
Carol Ann Desiderio, East Cambridge
Savings Bank, Malden,
Business Development Manager
Fiona Nattabi and Cataldo
Ambulance’s Manager of Workplace
Experience & Community
Outreach, EMT Mariah Mulcahy.
Assistant City Solicitor Alicia McNeil
was unable to participate
due to an ongoing trial. Many
shared personal experiences
and funny anecdotes they faced
along the way.
Following the speaking portion,
guests enjoyed refreshments
while they networked.
Each participant was presented
with a certifi cate of appreciation
and fl owers.
“I was thrilled to hear about
and celebrate the accomplishments
and contributions of
each of these women,” said Mayor
Gary Christenson. “Our next
generation can learn much from
their example and experiences.”
Household of 1 = $42,411
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Household of 3 = $68,511
Household of 4 = $81,561
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Residents of Boston, Brookline, and Newton:
178 Tremont Street, Boston, MA — 617.357.6012
Residents of Malden, Medford, Everett,
Melrose, Stoneham, Winchester and Woburn:
18 Dartmouth Street, Malden, MA — 781.322.6284
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THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, March 24, 2023
~ Letter to the Editor ~
Touring Malden’s Ferryway School
S
t Patrick’s Day tour of Malden’s
Ferryway School had
some surprises and interesting
encounters. My fi rst tour of the
school. I just know it’s going to
be a good day, when a charming
young student walks by me in a
line, that’s going back to class,
and he asks me if I’m running to
be the next President!
Student: “Are you running for
president?”
Myself: “Are you going to vote
for me?”
Students: “Yes!”
Myself: “Bonus points! Thank
you!”
Maybe it was my green tie, because
another student asked me
if I was her President. I smiled
and did a presidential wave.
The positive friendly atmosphere
from our inspiring students
is infectious and heartwarming.
At least a couple of
students blindsided me with
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• Criminal Defense
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Tel: (617) 387-9809
Cell: (617) 308-8178
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OPEN HOUSE
Saturday, March 25, 11:30-1:00
& Sunday, March 26, 12-1:30
52 Pyburn Rd. Lynnfield
hugs, when I wasn’t looking.
Maybe they thought I was a leprechaun
in a green tie?
Throughout the building, as
we toured, I witnessed the hard
work and dedication, that the
talented teaching staff has been
putting into making the Ferryway
school a go-to destination
within Malden.
It wasn’t all fun and games.
I was briefed on the extensive
maintenance and upgrades
being scheduled for the summer
2023 break. The director
of maintenance updated me
on the trouble spot of the technology
closet and how they are
working to ensure that that central
hub of telephone and technology
in the building is going
to be kept cooled down and operational
for the school’s benefi
t. There’s a hefty price tag for
repair and upgrades to HVAC
equipment in our school buildings,
but it is worth it.
I was there nearly ten years
back, when we parents forced repairs
to the Linden school roof to
deter water leaks. Learning that
the Ferryway school was built using
the same structural design
as the Linden and was also suffering
from leaks, was eye opening
news. I’ll be keeping an eye
out to understand the progress
of any roof repairs, that may be
happening this coming off -season
at the Ferryway school.
In this day of technology, I was
fascinated by the library in the
school. The extensive library resources
were engaging for the
eager young minds as they got
their hands on all manner of
books to read.
One of the classrooms today
got a mini-lecture from me on
the importance of learning the
various world mythologies as
they were learning about Greek
mythology. I lectured so that
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Malden Superintendent Ligia Noriega-Murphy and Ward 6 School
Committee Member Joseph Gray
they can think about the same
background as I did in mythology.
When they looked puzzled,
I asked them who was the most
popular mythological character
right now. They answered correctly,
that it was Thor. It may not be
Greek mythology, but they fi nally
understood that to understand
some of the things happening
and being talked about in modern
society, a well-rounded background
in Greek, Roman, Norse,
Indian, South American, African
and Asian mythologies can be
helpful. When they inquired why,
I explained that it helped me understand
comics and play video
games, when I was younger.
That’s really when the lightbulbs
went on. Study hard. Use the
classroom knowledge. Play hard.
Of course it wouldn’t be a fun
trip without dodge ball in the
Ferryway gym. I couldn’t play
with the students, but at least I
worked defense near the edge
to defl ect any stray balls ricocheting
towards our superintendent’s
back.
From the morning Pledge of
Ward 6 School Committee
Member Joseph Gray meets
with Superintendent NoriegaMurphy
and some of the
talented teaching staff of
Malden’s Ferryway School.
Allegiance to the final bell to
go home, we have a very robust
and wonderful school here at
the Ferryway in Malden.
Sincerely,
Joseph Gray
Ward 6 School Committee
Member
Malden Chamber of Commerce
to host third Asian Business Pitch
Competition on April 27
T
he Malden Chamber of Commerce
announces that Malden
has been selected to host
the third Asian Business Pitch
Competition on April 27 from
5:45 p.m.-8:45 p.m. at the Malden
Public Library (36 Salem
St., Malden). The Pitch Competition
is part of the Asian Business
Training and Mentorship Program
(ABTM), a service off ered
by the Asian American Civic Association
(AACA).
The Competition gives Asian
business owners the opportunity
to “pitch” their business.
Geared to both existing businesses
and those in the idea
phase, participants will have a
coaching session with a judge at
the end of the session, and there
will be cash prizes for those who
excel in different categories.
Funding for the prizes comes
from a generous grant from J.P.
Morgan Chase.
Participants must preregister,
but the contest is free and open
to the public to view. To register
or for more information, visit
https://www.aaca-boston.
org/abtm.
׉	 7cassandra://EVzXdF4XYBgIvUJ0HfPhx6QaD-AmdpY-QNfJmoVl9XM- `̰ dX&M8׉E>THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, March 24, 2023
Page 7
Boston man faces murder
charge in stabbing death
of Malden man, 79
Body was discovered in Kennedy Drive apartment
in city’s fi rst homicide case of 2023
By Steve Freker
A
33-year-old Boston man
sought in connection with
the stabbing death of an elderly
Malden man, whose body
was discovered in late February
in his Kennedy Drive apartment,
is now wanted for murder.
A warrant for murder issued
for Dion Smith, of Boston, was
announced through the offi ce
of Middlesex District Attorney
Marian Ryan, in the case of the
slaying of Ronald Gilbert, who
was found dead in his apartment
by Malden Police on February
22.
A medical examiner ruled
the victim had been stabbed
about 30 times. Malden police
were called to Kennedy Drive
for an odor coming from Gilbert’s
apartment. Once inside,
fi rst responders found Gilbert
dead, with what they said were
The investigation has also revealed
that Smith was not a resident
of the building, and the
suspect and victim did not appear
to have known each other.
The investigation continues
with no known motive at this
time, with earlier speculation
in the case related to possible
robbery.
The case is being investigatDion
Smith, 33, is wanted by the
Middlesex District Attorney’s
office in connection with the
stabbing death of Ronald
Gilbert, 79, of Kennedy Drive,
Malden, in the city's fi rst 2023
murder case.
obvious signs of decomposition.
According to investigators, it
now appears that the victim was
killed in late December 2022.
ed by Malden Police and Mass.
State Police detectives assigned
to the Middlesex DA’s office.
Anyone who may have any information
on the whereabouts
of the suspect, Dion Smith, or
any other knowledge of the
case is encouraged to contact
either the DA's office at 781897-8300
or the Malden Police
Dept. Detectives Division
at 781-397-7171, ext. 1205. Information
may be given by the
public anonymously to both
agencies.
BIRTHDAY | FROM PAGE 1
birthday! A festive celebration
was held that included refreshments
and lots of dancing.
Born on March 20, 1920, in
Croix-des-Bouquets, Haiti, Anilia
moved to the United States
in 1987 to be closer to family.
She is the proud mother of
eight children and 15 grandchildren.
Anilia very much enjoys
spending time with family
and friends.
When the Mayor asked Anilia
what her secret is for living such
a long and healthy life, she responded
that “always being a
good person” has been her key
to longevity.
Advertise in
theADVOCATE
Call now! 617-387-2200
advertise on the web atwww.advocatenews.net
Mackey & Brown
Attorneys at Law
* PERSONAL INJURY * REAL ESTATE
* FAMILY LAW * GENERAL PRACTICE
* PERSONAL BANKRUPTCY * CIVIL LITIGATION
14 Norwood St., Everett, MA 02149
Phone: (617) 387-4900 Fax: (617) 381-1755
WWW.MACKEYBROWNLAW.COM
John Mackey, Esq. * Katherine M. Brown, Esq.
Patricia Ridge, Esq.
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HONORED | FROM PAGE 1
not only a national success story
in the early to mid-1930s, but
also drew international acclaim
in the arena of track and field.
Malden Mayor Gary Christenson
honored her memory once
again in early May of 2020, when
he announced the city was dedicating,
in her name, a running,
walking and cycling Loop connecting
trails that encircle the
Malden River. The Loop was also
dedicated in the name of the late
Malden Court Clerk-Magistrate
Joseph Croken, a longtime bikGerry
D’Ambrosio
Attorney-at-Law
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14 Proctor Avenue, Revere
(781) 284-5657
ing enthusiast before his sudden
passing in 2007.
Stokes Fraser burst onto the
THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, March 24, 2023
al claim to her hometown when
international stage at the age of
just 18, when she tied a world record
in the standing broad jump
event as a member of a women’s
track and field club in December
1931, just a few months
after her senior year at Malden
High School.
First-ever Malden resident
& first Black woman
selected for U.S. Olympics
Just a few months after that,
she brought further internationshe
became the first (and only)
Malden resident, man or woman,
ever to be named to a U.S.
Olympic Team, when she was selected
as a sprinter for the 1932
Olympic Games, which that year
were being hosted in Los Angeles,
Calif. Stokes Fraser also
made history as she and teammate
Tidye Pickett, an exceptional
athlete from Chicago, Ill.,
were the first two Black women
to be selected as U.S. Olympians
that year.
Sadly, neither Stokes Fraser
nor Pickett were able to compete
and represent their country
in the 1932 Olympic Games
– replaced at the last minute in
the 4 x 100 relay event. Since the
two women had appeared to
have earned the right to a spot
on that relay team due to their
performances at pre-Olympics
time trials and the fact their 11th
hour replacements were white
women, race has been cited by
a number of historians as being
a factor in their being denied a
spot to compete in any official
Olympics events in 1932.
Both women again were
picked to compete in the 1936
Olympics, this time the historic
Games being held in Berlin, the
heart of Nazi Germany. These
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developed a love of running and
sports in general at a young age.
According to her son, Wilfred
Fraser Jr., she beat any girls in
town easily, so she began racing
neighborhood boys on the B&M
Railroad tracks that ran along the
city behind Malden Square, now
the site of the Northern Strand
Community Trail/Bike Path.
She went on to become a stuWORLD
RECORD SETTER:
Malden’s Louise May Stokes,
at age 18, is shown holding
the winning James Michael
Curley Mayor’s Cup after tying
a World Record for women
in the standing broad jump.
(Courtesy Photo)
games were forevermore known
as the “Jesse Owens” Olympics,
due to Owens, an African-American
on the men’s team, winning
four Gold Medals. Once again,
Stokes Fraser did not get an opportunity
to compete – left off
the relay team once again.
Pickett did go on to achieve notoriety
as the first African-American
woman in history to compete
for the U.S. Olympic Team,
though an injury ended her
quest for a medal in the semifinals
of the 100 meter sprint.
Though, by the numbers,
Stokes Fraser did not excel in
the pre-competition times as
she had four years earlier, again
it appeared she had earned a
spot in the 4 x 100 relay with the
better performances. But again,
some sports historians claim racism
was ultimately a factor in her
being denied a chance to run.
Louise Mae Stokes Fraser grew
up in Malden and excelled in all
athletics in her formative years,
despite the fact that women’s
participation in sports competition
was extremely limited both
by opportunity and public opinion.
Added to the limitations was
the fact that in many parts of the
United States segregation according
to race was prevalent
and in effect in many ways and
on a number of levels.
A flat out paucity of available
opportunities for would-be
women athletes in both team
and individual sports was indeed
one major barrier. Add to
that the belief in many circles
that athletic competition was
innately wrong, physically and
mentally, for women to participate
in. From the late 19th century
right up until the 1940s, prominent
scientific minds spoke
against women competing in
athletics, citing adverse effects
anywhere from the child-bearing
process to mental instability.
Who was Louise Mae
Stokes Fraser?
Louise May Stokes grew up
near Malden’s downtown and
dent at the then brand-new Beebe
Junior High School on Pleasant
Street in the late 1920s, before
moving on to Malden High
School. It was there that Louise
Mae began to excel athletically.
She starred on the fledgling Beebe
girls’ basketball team, which
was a very rudimentary, six-onsix
game, with only one dribble
allowed per player at a time and
only three players allowed over
halfcourt of the small court surface
at a time. These girls’ basketball
rules remained essentially
the same for 50 years, into
the 1970s.
She caught the eye of a local
track enthusiast and organizer,
William H. Quaine, who ran the
Onterora Club, a private track
and field club in the area. Quaine
quickly took an interest in Stokes
Fraser and began to guide her
career, entering her in races and
events around the region. This
coincided with her athletic participation
at Malden High School,
where she was a member of
the Class of 1931 who competed
in basketball and girls’ track
and field. She established MHS
school records in nearly every
event offered and balanced her
time by singing in the choir at
Eastern Avenue Baptist Church.
‘The Malden Meteor’ sets
a World Record in 1931
In the spring of her senior year,
at Quaine’s urging, she entered
the Boston-based Women’s Track
Championships held in the Fens
near Fenway Park and adjacent
to where Northeastern University
is now located. Stokes Fraser
wowed the large crowd in attendance
by winning four events
and setting a New England record
in the 100 meter sprint with
a time of 12.9 seconds.
Most remarkably, she also tied
the World Record in the standing
broad jump, with a mark
of 8 feet-5 3/4 inches. She was
awarded the James Michael Curley
Mayor’s Cup as the event’s
Most Outstanding Performer.
Furthermore, as news of her
world record began to spread,
almost immediately, national attention
began to come Stokes
Fraser’s way.
A bright future appeared to
be looming for the young teen
girl who many had started to call
“The Malden Meteor.”
Part Two of a two-part series
on Louise Mae Stokes Fraser,
“The Malden Meteor,” will appear
in next Friday’s Malden Advocate.
׉	 7cassandra://qBemzbkifbcBlxu592YtVC9dQCZftYnIadSBCe6A404-`̰ dX&M8׉ETHE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, March 24, 2023
Page 9
Malden Porchfest Kick-off Fundraiser on March 30
O
n Saturday, June 10, Malden
will host its second annual
Porchfest. Local musicians
and other artists will perform on
porches, in parks and block parties
across the city all afternoon,
providing free music to residents
in family-friendly, convivial
outdoor settings. Porchfest
will be a celebration of local musical
talent and community unity.
It will connect neighbors via
art and music, stimulate the creative
economy and spread joy!
Come to the Kick-off Fundraiser
Party on Thursday, March
30 at 6:00 at 110 Grill (200 Exchange
St. in Malden). Meet
the organizers and learn about
exciting new enhancements to
Porchfest this year. Be sure to
mention Porchfest when you
place your food or drink order,
and 10% of the proceeds will be
donated to Porchfest.
Be prepared to buy raffl e tickets
to win some incredible prizes!
Looking for an unforgettable
night out? Bid on tickets to
the Huntington Theatre or the
brand new Malden-based Mystic
Side Opera. Is rock-climbing
on your bucket list? Enter to
win a family pass to Rock Spot
Climbing. Been meaning to try
the new Mineirão Steakhouse?
It is said... in Malden
hat Monday, March 20 was the fi rst offi cial day of spring, and
it also brought some delightful weather, with sunny skies and
temperatures in the mid-50s.
***
That for all the hullabaloo over Mayor Gary Christenson’s offi -
cial “Winter is Over” declaration in early February, what followed
was that he was essentially correct as we received snow on exactly
two days after his announcement, totaling about 3 1/2 inches.
***
That once again Malden made it to the national news level, as
the Mayor’s “cancellation” of winter was reported nationally on a
CNN news report in recent weeks.
***
That longtime Malden Councillor-at-Large Craig Spadafora, who
will be counted as one of the longest-serving Councillors in municipal
history when his service concludes, will be a candidate for
reelection in this fall’s Malden city election. Right now he is the
longest continuous-serving Councillor at the dais.
***
That Ward 2 School Committee Member Robert McCarthy Jr.
is also seeking reelection to another two-year term, according to
the word on the street.
***
That longtime Malden Public Schools Administrative Assistant
Judie (Spadafora) Sullivan, the popular Malden High School icon
who has served decades at MHS for three principals, brightening
the days of thousands of students with her quick wit and kindness,
will be retiring at about the end of this month.
***
That tryouts are being held this Saturday, March 25 at 2:00
p.m. at Maplewood Park (220 Maplewood St., Malden) for Malden
Youth Baseball players who have not yet been assigned to a
team, and anyone seeking further information should go to the
website: maldenyouthbaseball.org
***
That a line from a 1972 Classic Rock fave by Loudon Wainwright
III, “Dead skunk in the middle of the road,” comes to mind – as the
Malden Dept. of Public Works’ Parks Division was summoned to
Maplewood Park to remove the same from a spot beside the
playing fi eld after the striped critter apparently met its demise.
***
That nearly 300 student-athletes began the Spring Sports season
at Malden High School on Monday – as post-COVID numbers
continue to surge for participants – one of the highest turnouts
for the school year in sports at MHS in the better part of a decade.
***
That Malden Square continues to be a hotspot in both dining
and gaming, as each end of Pleasant Street and Exchange Street
(and in the middle) are jam-packed with patrons – some partaking
of both – with parking space at a premium.
***
That the Golden Tornado Club, the booster club for Malden
High School athletics, is hosting a fundraiser Bowling Tournament,
Changing Lanes, at Town Line Luxury Lanes (Broadway, Malden)
in May, and anyone who would to bowl as an individual or enter
a team should contact Board members Jeanne Marquardo (781397-6007)
or Katie Bowdridge for more information.
T
Enter to win a gift card. Want to
be pampered? Enter to win a
haircut at the new Mystic Valley
Salon or get a massage from Karen
Buck, LMT. This is just a sampling
of the many delightful
prizes that you could win.
Porchfest is entirely organized
and run by volunteers.
Come meet the organizers and
sign up to be a volunteer, host
or performer. Porchfest is fundJ&
•
Reliable Mowing Service
• Spring & Fall Cleanups
• Mulch & Edging
• Sod or Seed Lawns
• Shrub Planting & Trimming
• Water & Sewer Repairs
Joe Pierotti, Jr.
ed in part by the Malden Cultural
Council. For more info see
www.MaldenPorchfest.com.
Find Porchfest on Facebook at
https://www.facebook.com/
porchfestmalden.
S
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• Brick or Block Steps
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THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, March 24, 2023
Seniors 2 Seniors fosters collaborative, intergenerational
relationship between Malden High School seniors and senior citizens
By Tara Vocino
I
t all started with a Linden kid
and an elementary school principal
back in the day, somewhere
in the mid-197’s in Malden.
William T.J. Dempsey, Principal,
taught character at the Linden Elementary
School, with Friday assemblies
and field trips out into
the real world to learn about life.
In sixth grade, students were taken
to places like the Annemark Nursing
Home on the Malden-Saugus-Revere
border to attend a resident’s
100th birthday celebration.
The residents reveled in the lively
presence of the children, and the
sixth graders were impacted by
the visit. A beautiful connection
was sparked between generations,
each group learning and being
energized by the other.
Fast-forward to now. Dempsey
is a senior citizen, getting close to
the 100 years mark himself. Event
Organizer Mary Ellen O’Meara returns
to Malden after many years
away, strikes up a friendship and
begins weekly check-in visits to
her former principal. They discuss
elder life in general and the inability
to get out and do things (especially
during and after Covid)
and the need that seniors have
to cope with loneliness and solitude.
An idea is engendered to
recreate that magical moment of
revelation between generations.
The concept focuses on connecting
high school seniors and senior
citizens; originally to combat
social isolation and loneliness
in a Covid-19 world, but then it
evolved more into an opportunity
to exchange experiences between
two generations, embodying
Malden’s “Strong past, Proud
future” motto.
Seniors to Seniors (S2S) was
born. The program – supported
by Mayor Gary Christenson from
the onset – has been made possible
through a collaboration between
Malden High School and
Forestdale Park Senior Living. Initial
meetings have been held at
Malden High School since the fall,
with close coordination between
Paul Marques, National Honor Society
and Key Club advisor, Arlene
Ceppetelli, a retired-but-still-active
MHS teacher, and Mary Ellen
O’Meara, Project Leader and original
“Linden kid.”
“The students participated in
the first few meetings to hear
about the concept and contribute
their impressions and ideas,”
O’Meara said. “Mr. Marques was
vital to the project, he communicated
energy and enthusiasm to
the students. He really internalized
the idea and enriched it with
his own experiences with elders
growing up.”
The search for a senior living faShown
from left to right: Forestdale Park Community Relations
Director Sarah Starkweather, Mayor Gary Christenson, event
organizer Mary Ellen O’Meara (displaying the S2S logo),
Forestdale Park Senior Living EnrichedLife Director Molly Splinder
and Forestdale Park Executive Director Terri Guenard.
cility partner was not easy, the program
being rejected by the first organization
approached. “Ms. Ceppetelli
contacted Forestdale Park
Senior Living, and we were invited
to a meeting,” O’Meara said.
“The concept was received with
open arms by Executive Director
Terri Guenard and her team, and
they have also helped develop the
project to fit their residents’ needs.”
The project was launched on
Tuesday with a Meet and Greet
event at Forestdale Park. MHS Seniors
encounter the Forestdale
seniors for the first time for some
light snacks and a fun activity to
get to know each other. The visits
are planned to begin in April and
will run through May. The program
is expected to have as many as 25
pairs of “seniors and seniors” participating
in a total of eight visits.
S2S has organized a “Memoirs”
activity, in which the senior citizens
will be invited to talk about
their lives growing up in Malden
and the surrounding area. The students
will be able to structure the
visits with conversation guides,
and they will document the senior’s
memories. In this way, Malden
adolescents will be enriched
by learning about the history of
Malden and its citizens, and elders
will be able to share their valuable
life experiences with youth. At the
end of the program, the senior citizens
will receive a written version
of their conversations, for themselves
and their families. S2S will
keep copies to have an ongoing
record of participants’ stories.
The program is meant to be ongoing,
foreseeably scheduling fall
and spring editions. The activities
will evolve and change based on
the experience and opinions of
the seniors in S2S.
The logo colors are based on
the current Malden logo. The city
name has been added, in a similar
city logo font, to represent our
roots, although the image will be
most often utilized without the
city’s name. The first S is solid, sturSenior
citizens in the front row, pictured from left to right: Ellen Apple, Marion Desmond and Jean
and Joe Luciano with Malden High School Key Club, Y leaders and National Honor Society members
(in back). (Advocate photos by Tara Vocino)
Event Organizer Mary Ellen
O’Meara said she’d like
students to learn from senior
citizens and vice versa.
dy and in a bold, modern font, representing
our MHS seniors. It is
linked to the rest of the image by
the number 2, which at the same
time forms a loosely discernible
heart shape in blue and gold. The
second S is written in cursive; it is
elegant but frailer compared to
the first one and looks a bit worn,
as though a not-so-steady, aged
hand had drawn the letter. The 2
joins the two letters; they are gently
and gracefully balanced on
it, symbolizing mutual support
between our two generations.
Strong Past, Proud Future!
Pictured from left to right Malden High School Jenkins House
Principal Jayson Payeur, Chaimaa Assli, Gabriela Krupka, Malden
High School Brunelli House Principal Ewald Charles, retired
teacher Arlene Ceppetelli, retired Linden School teacher Francis
Brown, former Malden High School Principal Dana Brown and
retired Linden School Principal William Dempsey.
Mayor Gary Christenson
thanked students, especially
seniors who are planning the
next phase of their life, for
volunteering their time.
Forestdale Park Senior Living
Executive Director Terri
Guernard did an “Eye Opener”
for broadcast media.
Shown from left to right: Malden High School students Palgon
Tsering, Gabriela Krupka, Isabella Ivy, Chaimaa Assli, Katelin
Dzuong, Liam Bloom, Nyandeng Yak and Matthew Ren at the Seniors
2 Seniors launch on Tuesday at Forestdale Park Senior Living.
׉	 7cassandra://zzf59phWDzYL4kqxoSAeAf-N4bDTeDDSrJSPQPav5EQ,}`̰ dX&M8׉E>THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, March 24, 2023
Page 11
CDC: Most Middle
and High School students
do not get enough sleep
Report: Students lacking adequate nightly sleep face
higher risk for physical and mental health problems
By Steve Freker
T
he numbers are eye-opening
and revealing when it comes
to the amount of time most
students spend with their eyes
closed. According to the federal
U.S. Centers for Disease Control
and Prevention (CDC), most
students who attend Grades
6–12 are not getting enough
sleep and the problem is getting
worse. Being sleep-deprived
in these age categories
is especially damaging to shortand
long-term overall health
and could put these preteens
and adolescents at much higher
risk for illnesses and mental
health issues.
How much sleep someone
needs depends on their age.
The American Academy of Sleep
Medicine has recommended
that children aged 6–12 years
should regularly sleep 9–12
hours per 24 hours and teenagers
aged 13–18 years should
sleep 8–10 hours per 24 hours.
The recommendation apparently
is not being followed by a
majority of teens and preteens
in middle and high school years.
The CDC tracks sleep habits in
a variety of ways, primarily from
results of the Youth Risk Behavior
Survey (YRBS), which is traditionally
administered to high
schools each spring, traditionally
in March.
Malden High School
ninth-graders also participate
in the national Screening, Brief
Intervention, and Referral to
Treatment (SBIRT) survey. SBIRT
is a comprehensive, integrated,
public health approach to the
delivery of early intervention
and treatment services for persons
with substance use disorders,
as well as those who are at
risk of developing these disorders.
Primary care centers, hospital
emergency rooms, trauma
centers, and other community
settings provide opportunities
for early intervention with at-risk
substance users before more severe
consequences occur. Malden
High School ninth-graders
were administered the SBIRT
Testing in school last week.
Here are the latest findings
from the CDC:
—Among middle school students,
57.8% reported insufficient
sleep (fewer than the recommended
9–11 hours each 24hour
period), with nearly 12%
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Most research and studies show that teens and adolescents in
middle school (Grades 6-8) and high school (Grades 9-12) do not
get the recommended amount of sleep. (Courtesy Photo)
reporting sleeping fewer than
6 hours a night.
—Among high school students,
72.7% reported insufficient
sleep, with about 20% reporting
sleeping fewer than 6
hours a night.
—In both groups studied, females
fared worse than males,
with 59.6% of middle school females
and 75.6% of high school
females reporting insufficient
sleep, compared with 56% of
middle school males and 69.9%
of high school males.
—The percentage of high
school students who reported
getting sufficient sleep dropped
from 30.9% to 27.3% between
2015 and 2018 (2015 was the
first year the YRBS was administered
to middle school children).
—Among states, Connecticut
recorded the highest prevalence
of high school students
reporting insufficient sleep,
at 80.1%. Massachusetts high
school students reporting less
than 8 hours sleep was ranked
the 20th highest in the United
States at 78.7%. At the middle
school level, the highest prevalence
was recorded in Kentucky,
at 64.7%.
—Boston high school–aged
students reported the highest
percentage of insufficient sleep
with 84% reporting not getting
8 or more hours of sleep nightly.
In assisting caregivers in coming
up with ways to help students
get enough sleep, the
CDC advises the following strategies:
—Stick
to a consistent sleep
schedule during the school
week and weekends. This means
going to bed at the same time
each night and getting up at the
same time each morning.
—Adolescents whose parents
set bedtimes are more likely to
get enough sleep.
—Limit light exposure and
technology use in the evenings.
—Parents can limit when their
children may use electronic devices
– referred to as a “media
curfew.”
With regard to teen and adolescent
sleep during the height
of the COVID-19 pandemic in
2020 and 2021, studies showed
the following:
—While poor sleep was linked
to higher levels of stress during
the COVID-19 pandemic, more
teens actually obtained the recommended
amount of sleep
compared to pre-pandemic
sleep patterns, according to
a new study from McGill University.
—Changes
to daily routines
triggered by lockdowns allowed
teenagers to follow a biological
impulse to wake up and sleep
later, reducing daytime sleepiness.
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Tuesday
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Read The Advocate online:
www.advocatenews.net
׉	 7cassandra://ItRM8BnyUK604uvWukN3-HDUnhqpHm8tv0wvoV86DFw+`̰ dX&M8dX&M8
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THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, March 24, 2023
Let's be Cool Together: Malden’s Wicked Cool Survey,
Climate Action Plan, Earth Day at Pine Banks Park
Summers are getting hotter
survey in Arabic
W
icked Cool Mystic is our
community project (Malden
and Everett) to design projects
to help people in Malden
and Everett stay cool during
our hotter summers – you can
find more information about
the project at https://mysticriver.org/climate-resilience
Concerned
about how hot
our summers are getting? Don’t
know how you can help? Take a
survey community survey (below)
to help our community fi nd
the best solutions for us!
• Arabic: https://bostonu.qualtrics.com/jfe/form/SV_78NPsQMhnq5Uke2
•
English: https://bostonu.
qualtrics.com/jfe/form/SV_erDwrhJ8NqHVTTw
Summers
are getting hotter
survey in English
• Simplifi ed Chinese: https://
bostonu.qualtrics.com/jfe/form/
SV_bQxqfE2xhPfpSJ0
• Spanish: https://bostonu.qualtrics.com/jfe/form/
SV_24qHiug8Q0mvyui
•
Vietnamese: https://bostonu.qualtrics.com/jfe/form/
SV_839WYrGDVgRyaSa
Join
the Friends of the Malden
River and the Resilient Mystic
Collaborative to share this
knowledge and surveys. Please
let them know when you send
it out! If you have any questions,
please feel free to contact Malden’s
Wicked Cool Ambassador,
Lisa Sulda, at lisasulda@gmail.
com or Friends of the Malden
River (FoMR).
In addition to this, Malden’s
Malden Public Library
hosts networking
program for people
50 years and older.
Summers are getting hotter
survey in Simplifi ed Chinese
Climate Action Plan is gearing
up for a spring kickoff at
Malden’s Environmental Fair.
This will be held at Pine Banks
Park on April 15 from 1:00-4:00
p.m. There will be information
booths on available resources
for saving money and saving the
planet, paper shredding, Blue
Bike Promotions, Bike to the
Sea’s Bike Kitchen demos, shrub
seedlings giveaways and more!
• You can watch the recording
of the Energy Efficiency
and Sustainability Commission
meeting, including the
extended presentation on
the Greenhouse Gas Audit, at
https://cityofmalden.zoom.
us/rec/play/BK6Y8DFXWIjZswHxk9nb56RWYkJ7Uqtx-_
Summers
are getting hotter
survey in Spanish
R6nvx6l5tDF6LpUbovzT4CgtsxKcUkbVgWJQDM3s_
wC0v6.5Bad2V-GJwGKaKsS?continueMode=true&_x_zm_
rtaid=uK7J53qYQCS0q-nmAHo4Pg.1679499796559.
bfade9f0ffb1767598aca29297b99926&_x_zm_rhtaid=868
•
You can also access the information
on the Green Malden
page: https://www.cityofmalden.org/952/Climate-Action-Plan
•
This is the step-by-step
guide to the tool on the Metropolitan
Area Planning Council’s
website of the methodology
for the GreenHouse
Gas Inventory: https://www.
mapc.org/wp-content/upSummers
are getting hotter
survey in Vietnamese
loads/2020/03/04102020_
MAPC-Step-by-Step-GHG-Inventory-Guide.pdf
•
Support the Massachusetts
Waterways with a Mass
Environmental Trust license
plate: https://www.mass.gov/
guides/a-guide-to-purchasing-a-specialty-environmental-license-plate
Mission
of The Friends of Malden
River: FoMR seeks to promote
awareness of and interest
in the Malden River, improve its
water quality and increase access
for public enjoyment. Check
out our facebook page (https://
www.facebook.com/FriendsoftheMaldenRiver)
and website
(https://maldenriver.wordpress.
com/) for more information!
50+ Job Seekers Networking Group info
׉	 7cassandra://pVlaGHlvcNp01qf2ipMCY3k8RKhnd_H2rLb7Uw3M-SE/`̰ dX&M8׉EdTHE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, March 24, 2023
Page 13
CYBERATTACKS | FROM PAGE 1
in Malden in January. All of
the City Council members at
the meeting held earlier this
month pledged to strongly
support the IT director and
department to maintain and
improve city cyber defense
systems with upcoming and
future budgetary attention.
As the world moves at lightning
pace to more and more
digitalization of information,
so comes a dramatic increase
in cyberattacks – small and
large – seeking to compromise
information, primarily for financial
gain. According to Rodrigues,
experts expect cyberattacks
to continue to increase
in both quantity and, unfortunately,
strength and quality of
attacks against established cyber-defense
systems.
“In the past four years alone,
about 442 million people have
been victims of cyberattacks,
and there have been 5,221,000
verified attacks in the U.S.
alone in the past 12 months,”
Rodriques told the Malden
City Council is a recent presentation
that was both informational
and educational in
its content. The presentation
was centered on the cause, response
and aftermath of the
“Despite everyone’s best efforts,
this [cyberattacks] is a
huge problem for every community
in every state, and we
will continue to fight it as best
we can,” Rodrigues told the
Councillors. “We will continue
to make sure all of the holes
are plugged, even though
sometimes it is like a game of
‘whack-a-mole” – you address
one issue and another pops
Barbara Murphy
City Council President
cyberattack on Malden city informational
systems on January
25 of this year.
The main impetus of governmental
systems is an expected
“ransomware” attack,
where cybercriminals take
over, or “hijack” city records,
files and operating systems
and hold them for monetary
ransoms, by encrypting it all,
not releasing them unless a
ransom is paid.
“There have been about
77,000 attacks or penetrations
of systems just here in Massachusetts
in the past three
months,” Rodrigues explained.
“It is happening every day,
somewhere; it is 24/7.”
The Malden IT director said
Craig Spadafora
Councillor-at-Large
that while the systems were invaded
– briefly – and detected
right away, some City of Malden
employees’ personal information
was compromised.
All appropriate steps were taken
and there have been no reports
of any recurring thefts
or cyber activity against those
Malden employees. Rodrigues
said Malden was fortunate, as
city investment into cyber defense
programs has put this
community near the top of
the list in terms of cyber protection,
statewide.
“We are continuously evaluating
our [cyber defense] looking
for ways we can achieve
system hardening,” Rodrigues
said.
right up.
“These attacks are wellplanned
and very well-funded,”
Rodrigues said, though
he did note that the Malden
cyberattack did not originate
from a foreign country or
state; that was ruled out right
away, he said.
Rodrigues said the Malden
cyber defense program has
many facets and many levels,
including email “spam” filters,
internet web filters, virus
detection and Artificial Intelligence
(AI) tracking – all of
this is in place and working 24
hours a day, every day.
“The AI is a gamechanger.
It is like a really intelligent
five-year-old with an
IQ of 2000,” Rodrigues said.
“Without [some of the technology
we have in place],
some of these system penetrations
could go undetected
for months,” he added.
City Council President Barbara
Murphy (Ward 5) told
Rodrigues that “I always felt
we had not invested enough
in our IT department [and defense
systems], before the
past few years when we have
done so.”
“You have our attention
now. This is time to tell us
what you need,” Murphy said
in reference to budget deliberations,
which will be coming
up soon. “We have to do everything
in our power to ensure
your department has the most
up-to-date systems to protect
ourselves.”
“I have descriptions of what
you and our other city staff,
public safety and others did
as a Super Bowl you never
wished you were in... and you
scored a touchdown,” Murphy
added.
“We are ready to assist you
in any way. This is a top priority
situation and this is the year
to ask [for assistance],” Ward
4 Councillor Ryan O'Malley
said.
“It is time we get serious
about this, even more than
we have been,” said Councillor-at-Large
Craig Spadafora.
“We are here to assist and support
in any way possible.”
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THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, March 24, 2023
Chinese Herbs Store
Hosts Grand opening
MSO Warrant Apprehension Unit
participated in over 200 arrests in 2022
Unit worked with Middlesex DA to return
19 wanted fugitives to Massachusetts
M
embers of the Warrant Apprehension
Unit (WAU) of
the Middlesex Sheriff’s Office
(MSO) made or assisted in nearly
215 arrests in 2022, officials announced
recently.
WAU is comprised of three deputy
sheriffs and a member of the
Lowell Police Department. The
unit works in partnership with the
MSO’s intelligence analysts and
Inner Perimeter Security Unit, as
well as the Massachusetts State
Police Violent Fugitive Apprehension
Section (VFAS) and other local
and national law enforcement
partners.
“Whether it’s through innoThe
Chinese Herbs Store hosted their recent ribbon-cutting and grand opening last week at 37
Pleasant Street location. Pictured from left to right, are; co-owner Amy Wu, Cindy Yu, Peter Caso,
Mayor Gary Christenson, co-owner LiLy Wu and Jason Law.
Malden offers outpatient mental
health referral service to residents
and public school students
vative treatment programming
we provide within our facility or
through the work of our Warrant
Apprehension Unit, members of
the MSO work tirelessly to maintain
and enhance public safety,”
said Middlesex County Sheriff
Peter J. Koutoujian. “But we cannot
do this important work alone.
That’s why our collaboration with
our local, state and federal partners
is so crucial.”
Among those taken into custody
by the Warrant Apprehension
Unit in 2022 was a 58-year-old
Lowell woman, who was wanted
in Maine in connection with a
1985 cold case that involved the
death of an unidentified newborn
baby.
“The Warrant Apprehension
Unit’s success is the direct result
of the collaboration and partnerships
between MSO, MSP, and
LPD,” said Lowell Police Superintendent
Barry Golner. “A unit like
this could not exist if it were not
for the teamwork of all involved.
The LPD would like to express our
gratitude to the sheriff, the colonel,
and their teams.”
WAU also worked with VFAS
and the Lawrence Police Department
to arrest a 30-year-old Lawrence
man charged with attempted
murder, assault with a dangerous
weapon and assault & battery
with a dangerous weapon in connection
with a case out of Marlborough
District Court.
In addition, WAU members also
worked with the Middlesex District
Attorney’s Office to safely return
19 wanted fugitives to Massachusetts
from other states. Included
among those 19 was a
40-year-old Florida man wanted
on nine warrants charging him
with 37 felonies and 27 misdemeanors
across seven different
district courts in Middlesex, Suffolk
and Franklin Counties.
“When individuals are able to
deliberately evade law enforcement,
public safety and confidence
in law enforcement is compromised.
Our work with the Middlesex
Sheriff’s Warrant Apprehension
Unit ensures that individuals
who flee while facing charges
in Massachusetts are returned to
appear in court. I am very grateful
to all of the agencies who partner
to accomplish this important
goal,” said Middlesex District Attorney
Marian Ryan.
Melrose Arts & Crafts Society
announces monthly meeting
William James College INTERFACE Referral Service
M
ayor Gary Christenson and
the City of Malden Health
Department led by Director Chris
Webb are collaborating with William
James College’s INTERFACE
Referral Service to bring a free
outpatient mental health referral
service to Malden. The initiative
was launched in February
and provides access to an outpatient
mental health resource and
referral helpline to help residents
and/or public school students
become connected with outpatient
mental health providers.
“There is no doubt that
COVID-19 has affected the mental
health and well-being of
many individuals and families,”
said Mayor Christenson. “Unfortunately,
in the aftermath of
the pandemic, it has become
especially difficult to access
outpatient mental health services.
This helpline will hopefully
take down some of the barriers
that exist and assist callers so
that they can secure the mental
health resources that they need.”
The referral service process
consists of an intake with a resource
and referral counselor
who will match the caller with
a provider who accommodates
their needs. There is also a follow-up
once the referral is made.
This service is available to Malden
residents and/or public
school students only, though
nonresidents might be able to
take advantage of the service
if their community is one of the
over 60 communities contracted
to offer the service. Please
check out the website to see the
other communities that are eligible:
https://interface.williamjames.edu/communities
The
service is available Monday,
Wednesday and Friday, 9
a.m.-5 p.m. and Tuesdays and
Thursdays, 8 a.m.-6 p.m. and
can be accessed by calling 888244-6843.
Visit https://interface.
williamjames.edu/community/
malden to view a helpful flyer
about the process or view other
resources available in our region.
Please note that the referral
service is not a mental health
hotline. Anyone in need of immediate
assistance should call
911.
he monthly meeting of the
Melrose Arts & Crafts Society
will be held on Monday, March
27 at First Baptist Church at 561
Main St. in Melrose from 9:00
a.m. to approximately 12:30
p.m. This month there will be
two classes. Pat Boyer and Dotty
Iudice will teach two different
flower arrangements. Kris Rodolico,
Executive Director of Follow
Your Art Community Studios,
will give an overall view
of what they offer and answer
any questions members might
have. After the lecture, there
will be a short business meeting
followed by dessert and refreshments.
Last
month, the society held
its monthly meeting on February
27 at the same time and
place as above. Stacey Dinarello
taught an African style of
painting, which was very popular,
and members produced
some delightful paintings. Judi
T
Lamentea taught a class on
bracelet-making, which produced
some lovely bracelets
that members wore home. After
the classes, members not only
listened to a quilling demonstration
but also participated
in making a quilling card they
could take home.
Quilling is an ancient art that
originated in China or Egypt and
was popular in the 18th century.
More recently, quilling has been
used to decorate postcards,
cards, notebooks and pictures.
The Society meets on the
fourth Monday of each month,
and the members meet, talk and
exchange advice and ideas. The
Society has members from over
eight surrounding communities
and welcomes anyone – no matter
where they come from. If you
are interested in learning more
or have any questions, please
contact Dorothy Iudice at 781662-2099.
Hope to see you soon.
׉	 7cassandra://gGL70OdhjD0Yi2DVgmAS2C2Q6Rz2tK-68bpNywcoWMc+`̰ dX&M8׉ErTHE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, March 24, 2023
Page 15
MTEC Camping Field Trip a Fun Success
O
ver February vacation
19 teens from the Malden
Teen Enrichment Center
(MTEC) traveled on a threeday
excursion to Cardigan
Lodge in Alexandria, New
Hampshire. Cardigan Lodge is
next to the 5,000-acre Mount
Cardigan State Forest and
is located on a 1,200-acre
reservation owned by the
Appalachian Mountain Club
(AMC).
MTEC has gone on many
trips in the past – enjoying
camping in the summer and
hiking during the spring and
fall. MTEC can provide teens
the opportunity to have these
experiences through its ties
with the AMC, which helps
provide them with training
and outdoor gear for use on
the trips. AMC provides Outdoor
Leadership Training to
MTEC teens to equip them
with the tools and skills necessary
to lead students out
in nature, including activities
like snowshoe training. They
then have access to the specific
gear and equipment necessary
for the activities.
MTEC staffer Jacob Mullin-Bernstein
said, “This is a
great partnership and gives
kids an opportunity free of
charge, and at a discounted
rate for MTEC, to take part in
activities that would otherwise
be costly.”
As the trip began, MTEC Coordinator
Cathy MacMullin
announced that the students
would be learning Malden
High’s “Fight Song” during the
trip. Mayor Gary Christenson
also stopped by to wish the
students a successful and safe
journey as they headed 100
miles North into the mountains
of rural New Hampshire.
The students thoroughly enjoyed
their experiences, which
included hikes by the river,
snowshoeing, sledding, playing
lots of games and sitting
by the outdoor fireplace. They
look forward to more outdoor
experiences and collaborations
with AMC.
Malden Reads and author Steve Kluger talk baseball
I
t’s spring in New England,
and that means mud, occasionally
snow, and baseball.
To talk all things baseball, including
his efforts to restore
the baseball field at Manzanar
Internment Camp, Malden
Reads is pleased to host a
best-selling author and baseball
enthusiast, Steve Kluger.
Kluger, the author of several
books, including “Last Days
of Summer” and “Changing
Pitches,” will visit the Malden
Public Library on Thursday,
April 6, 2023, at 7 p.m. to
discuss baseball, the Red Sox
and his involvement in lobbying
the U.S. government to
restore the baseball field at
Manzanar Internment Camp
in Manzanar, Calif.
In the aftermath of Japan’s
bombing of Pearl Harbor,
the U.S. government ordered
120,000 Japanese Americans
to be imprisoned in hastily
built camps. They were
given 48 hours to sell their
homes, businesses and possessions
and could take only
what they could carry – typically
two suitcases per adult.
These camps were surrounded
by barbed wire, equipped
with search lights and patrolled
by armed guards. JapSteve
Kluger
Author
anese-American citizens’ draft
eligibility was reassigned as
4C (enemy alien status) in the
process.
“They Called Us Enemy” by
actor/author/activist George
Takei, the Malden Reads selection
for our 13th season, takes
place during those years. This
book is a memoir of Takei’s
youth while incarcerated
during World War II in an internment
camp, and tells not
only his personal story, but
chronicles a difficult time in
American history.
Life in the camps was hard,
and people were looking for
This shows a baseball field at the Manzanar Internment Camp in Manzanar, Calif., in the 1940s.
(Photo credit: Ansel Adams)
distractions to keep their spirits
up. Baseball had been introduced
in Japan in the 1870s
and was very popular there
as in America. Baseball teams
were formed within seven
of these camps, and four of
the teams were able to travel
to play each other. “Without
baseball, camp life would have
been miserable,” said George
Omachi, a prisoner who later
became a scout for Major
League Baseball.
In 2000, although the Department
of the Interior began
restoring Manzanar as a
historic landmark, this project
did not include the renovation
of the baseball field.
Kluger joined a group lobbying
the U.S. government to
begin that restoration process,
which was approved in
2022. To quote Mr. Kluger, “A
memorial to Manzanar without
its baseball diamond is like
the Pledge of Allegiance without
the flag...baseball was perhaps
one of the few aspects of
the lives they’d led prior to incarceration
that they were allowed
to keep with them after
everything else had been
taken away. The inclusion of a
diamond might achieve what
reparations alone couldn’t facilitate:
healing.”
This talk is free to the public
and will be held at the
Malden Public Library’s Converse
Art Galleries from 7-8
p.m. with a Q&A following.
Light refreshments will be
served.
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THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, March 24, 2023
Eagles Conclude Historic Season at State Championships
By Emily Brennan
T
he Mystic Valley Regional
Charter School girls swim
team recently concluded their
season at the MIAA Division 2
State Championships. The meet
was a success for the young
team across the board – finishing
15th overall – and continues
to show that the girls’ team
is becoming a mainstay as a top
15 program in the state with 52
points. The meet was punctuated
by many top 20 finishes.
In the first event of the meet,
the medley relay team of Lana
Albuquerque and Sydney Cao,
paired with Britney Nayiga and
Lucia Antonucci, came in 10th
place with a time of 1:57.17. Nayiga’s
split of 32.32 in the breaststroke
leg is one of the fastest in
team history.
Following the relay in the
200 Individual Medley, where
a swimmer swims two lengths
of each stroke – butterfly, backstroke,
breaststroke and freestyle
– freshman Isabella Cirame
finished in 20th place at 2:20.35.
Only one freshman finished
ahead of Cirame in the event.
In the 50 Freestyle, freshman
Nayiga sprinted to an 18th
overall finish in a lifetime best
of 25.83.
Cao, an outstanding sophomore,
placed 11th in the 100
Freestyle, scoring six points
while putting herself at number
four in the Eagle swim record
book in the process, with a
time of 56.79.
In the 200 Freestyle Relay, the
Eagles placed in the top eight
with a seventh overall finish.
Their time of 1:43.63 is the second
fastest Eagle relay in history.
What is most exciting is that
the relay consisted of only one
sophomore, Lana Albuquerque,
and three freshmen: Britney
Nayiga, Isabella Cirame and
Lucia Antonucci.
Head Coach Andrew DiGiacomo
was proud of the team’s
performance, stating that he
“couldn’t ask for a better ending
to a historic girl’s season.
We have asked a lot of this very
young group of swimmers, and
they responded as I knew they
would. What is most exciting is
just how young this team is, and
the sky really is the limit for them
over the next couple of years!”
This concludes the season for
Pictured from left to right: Khloe Co, Isabella Cirame, Lucia
Antonucci and Isabelle Pennachio.
the Mystic Valley Eagles girls’
swim team. For complete coverage
of MV athletics, follow along
on Twitter (@MVAthletics), Instagram
(@mysticvalleyrcs) and
Facebook (Mystic Valley Regional
Charter School).
~ Malden Neighborhood Basketball League ‘Big Dance’ Weekend ~
dozen – but Joe did lead all players
with a game-high of 33. Fun
Fact … Only five of the 10 coaches
got on the scoreboard in this
one. Six of the seven players
scored, but it was A. Martino of
the Sixers who led the All-Stars
with 17. The Coaches with this
Victory now hold a 22-14 advantage
in the face-to-face battles.
Game 2 – Celtics 73, Bullets
55
As Predicted 1 vs 2 came to
Fruition and the Emerald kept
their Momentum from the last
time they played the Boys in
Blue. And it didn’t hurt that they
were shooting at a high percentage
this game as well. At some
point during the game, it looked
like they couldn’t miss?
The Bullets who all but ran
away from the pack at the start
of the season, seemed to have
struggled the last few weeks at
times & it came back to haunt
them in the Big Dance. A Great
season for both squads… The
Bullets, who usually have a lead
at the end of each quarter, did
not have a lead in any quarter
in this game, even with 24 from
L. Guertin & 21 from C. Mijar. It
just wasn’t enough firepower.
And O. Ruan did it again with
his amazing shooting, ending
with a game-high of 34, and J.
Pomare dropped 16 for the second-straight
game; T. Melton
went for 14. That helped the
Celts break their 11-year curse
& take home the Bling & The Ball.
Mayor Gary Christenson holds the 2023 MNBL Trophy with the champions - The Celtics.
Saturday, March 18, 2023
Hot Shot Contest
Timmy Melton (Celtics) takes
home the Title this year …
Game 1 – Bullets 74, Lakers
32
Bullets jumped out to a 20+
point deficit by the half. That is
a tough amount to come back
from, for any team, let alone
just four guys for the Lakers. But
the Purple have never given up
all season long & did not once
again. Their top scorers were R.
Laughton (11) and R. Correale
(10). On the other side, the Bullets
got a huge game from C. Mijar
– going 8-8 from the line and
ending with 34 total – as well as
L. Guertin with 22 big points for
the blue. Team 1, Day 1 – Moving
on to the Dance.
Game 2 – Celtics 71, Kings 40
Celts took full advantage of
the undermanned Kings squad,
as they should. And they took
care of business to advance
to the Dance on Sunday. They
jumped to a 12-point lead after
one and they scored 24 points
just from three-pointers in the
game – behind 27 from O. Ruan,
16 from J. Pomare & 15 from T.
Melton. The Kings’ Z. Pierre led
his team with 16, and all seven
players did score, but just not
at the volume of the high-powered
shooting from the green.
Sunday, March 19, 2023
Three-Point Contest
Oscar Ruan (Celtics) for the
second-straight season takes
home Back2Back Titles …
Game 1 – Coaches 55, AllStars
38
Celts Coach Joe Young played
the whole game, in hopes of
breaking a record but fell short.
“Cliff Williams still remains the
Coaches Legend” with three
The Broadcast team of Lakers Coach Bernard Stroud aka Unc &
Nester Dudley
׉	 7cassandra://AlzctffUCjTIdXLl0Wd6fkn2mURCaAStbdq9YNt-7Y0+`̰ dX&M8׉E"THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, March 24, 2023
Page 17
Malden High School sprinter Johnny Emmanuel
finishes #4 in the nation in 400 meter dash
Tornado sprinter also placed 5th in 200 meter event at
Virginia adidas National Indoor Track Championships
By Steve Freker
M
alden High School senior
sprinter Johnny Emmanuel
achieved national recognition when
he earned two national-level medals
for Top Five finishes in a pair of
speed events over this past weekend.
Emmanuel finished #4 in the
nation with a 48.57 seconds finish in
the 400 meter dash at the 2023 Virginia
adidas Nationals Indoor Track
Championships.
The competition was held in Virginia
Beach, Va., over this past weekend,
March 17-19. This is a private
meet unaffiliated with the national
high school championships.
Emmanuel competed as an unattached
runner with no club affiliations.
Customarily, club-affiliated
runners appear at these events in
various parts of the country with the
club assisting participants with travel
expenses and event entry fees.
Emmanuel, who has competed
for four years in Malden High indoor
and outdoor track, just began
the outdoor track season for MHS
this week.
In addition to appearing on the
podium for his 4th-place finish in
the 400, Emmanuel also placed 5th
at the adidas Nationals in the 200
meter dash, with a time of 21.99
seconds.
Malden High School senior Johnny
Emmanuel (shown above, at
right) placed 4th in the nation in
the 400 meter dash at the 2023
Virginia adidas National Indoor
Track Championship, a private, nonschool-related
event that was held
this past week in Virginia Beach, Va.
(Courtesy Photo)
Beacon Hill
Roll Call
By Bob Katzen
GET A FREE SUBSCRIPTION
TO MASSTERLIST – Join more
than 25,000 people, from movers
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politics, policy, media and influence.
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constantcontactpages.com/su/
aPTLucK
THE HOUSE AND SENATE:
There were no roll calls in the
House and Senate last week.
This week, Beacon Hill Roll Call
examines the salaries and other
benefits received by local state
senators.
$73,655 BASE SALARY FOR
ALL 40 SENATORS – The new
base salary for the 2023-2024
session for senators is $73,655—
up $3,119 (4.4 percent) from the
$70,536 base salary in the 20212022
session.
Senators’ salaries are up for
adjustment in January every
two years, either up or down,
under a 1998 constitutional
amendment approved by a better
than two-to-one margin by
voters. It requires that every two
years the salaries of the governor,
the other five constitutional
statewide officers and all representatives
and senators be increased
or decreased based on
data from the Bureau of Economic
Analysis (BEA) that measures
the quarterly change in
salaries and wages.
Senators’ base salaries were
increased by $2,515 for the
2021-2022 legislative session;
$3,709 for the 2019-2020 session;
and $2,515 for the 20172018
legislative session. Those
hikes came on the heels of a salary
freeze for the 2015-2016 legislative
session, a $1,100 pay cut
for the 2013-2014 session and a
$306 pay cut for the 2011-2012
session. Prior to 2011, legislators'
salaries had been raised every
two years since the $46,410
base pay was first raised under
the constitutional amendment
in 2001.
The new $73,655 base salary
means senators’ base salaries
have been raised $27,245, or 58
percent, since 2011 when the
mandated salary adjustment
became part of the state constitution
and senators were earning
$46,410.
EXTRA PAY FOR ALL 40 SENATORS
– All 40 senators receive
an additional stipend, above the
$73,655 base salary, for their positions
in the Democratic and
Republican leadership, as committee
chairs, vice chairs and the
ranking Republican on some
committees. The stipend is increased
or decreased every two
years based on data from the
BEA that measures the quarterly
change in salaries and wages.
Senate President Karen Spilka
(D-Ashland), the top Democrat,
earns the highest stipend of
any senator: $109,163. Senate
Minority Leader Sen. Bruce Tarr
(R-Gloucester), the top Republican,
earns an $81,872 stipend.
The other 38 senators’ stipends
range from $27,564 to $102,430.
Supporters say legislators
in these important positions
should be appropriately compensated
for their many added
responsibilities and hard work.
Critics say the base salary is
sufficient and is eligible to be increased
every two years.
$20,468 OR $27,291 FOR GENERAL
EXPENSES – Each senator
also receives an annual general
expense pay allowance of
$20,468 for members who live
within a 50-mile radius of the
Statehouse and $27,291 for
those who are located outside
of that radius.
This separate, flat rate expense
allowance is taxable as
income. It is designed to pay
for some of the costs of senators’
district offices and other
expenses including contributions
to local civic groups
and the printing and mailing of
newsletters.Senators are not required
to submit an accounting
of how they spend the money.
But they are allowed to deduct
any expenses, permitted under
federal law, from their gross income
on their federal and state
tax return.
SOME SENATORS WHO LIVE
50 MILES FROM THE STATEHOUSE
ARE ELIGIBLE TO PAY
A REDUCED OR NO FEDERAL
INCOME TAX ON THEIR LEGISLATIVE
SALARY – Senators who
live more than 50 miles from the
Statehouse are eligible for a special
federal tax break. A 1981 federal
law allows them to write off
a daily expense allowance when
filing their federal income tax return.
The complicated system
determines a daily amount, ostensibly
for meals, lodging and
other expenses incurred in the
course of their jobs, which can
be deducted for every “legislative
day.”
Under the Massachusetts
Legislature’s system and schedule,
every day of the year qualifies
as a legislative day. The
Legislature does not formally
“prorogue” (end an annual session)
until the next annual session
begins. This allows legislators
to take the deduction for all
365 days regardless of whether
the Legislature is actually meeting
or not. Legislators do not
even have to travel to the Statehouse
to qualify for the daily deduction.
The
amount of the deduction
is based on the federal per diem
for Massachusetts. It varies from
year to year. The daily per diem
for legislators for fiscal year 2023
varies in different parts of the
state and is seasonal. It ranges
from $98 per day to $459 per
day or between $35,770 and
$167,535 annually.
Beacon Hill Roll Call’s research
indicates that 11 of the state’s
40 legislators live more than 50
miles from the Statehouse, qualify
for this deduction and are eligible
to pay a reduced or no federal
income tax on their legislative
salaries.
PARKING SPACE – Senators
are entitled to a parking space
inside the Statehouse garage or
at the nearby McCormack State
Office Building. The first $300
in monthly value of the space is
a tax-free benefit under federal
and state guidelines that apply
to all public and private employees,
not just state senators.
Any value of the space above
this amount is treated as taxable
income.
The value of the parking spaces
in 2023 was determined by
the Division of Capital Asset
Management and Maintenance
to be $449 per month. Based on
that figure, legislators would
be taxed on the excess $149
monthly by the Internal Revenue
Service and the state.
HEALTH INSURANCE – Senators
are eligible to choose from
nine health insurance plans offered
by the state’s Group Insurance
Commission, which manages
the plans for over 137,000
individuals—current and retired
state workers, as well as certain
municipal workers, and their dependents.
Senators
elected on or before
July 1, 2003, pay 20 percent
of the total premium and
the state pays 80 percent. Those
elected to their first term on or
after July 1, 2003 pay 25 percent
while the state picks up only 75
percent. State and federal privacy
regulations protect this information
and it is not possible
to obtain records about which
plans individual legislators have
purchased. The out-of-pocket
monthly premiums paid by senators
for family plans range from
$311.02 to $788.43. For individual
plans, they pay from $125.66
to $354.68 each month.
LIFE INSURANCE – Legislators
who purchase a health inBHRC
| SEE PAGE 18
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THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, March 24, 2023
BHRC | FROM PAGE 17
surance policy from the state are
also required to buy the state’s
basic $5,000 life insurance policy.
This costs employees $1.27 to
$1.59 per month, depending on
the date of hire. The same 20/80
25/75 formula used for health
insurance also applies to this life
insurance. Senators also have
the option to buy additional life
insurance with a value of up to
eight times their salary. The entire
premium for the optional insurance
is paid by the senator.
LONG-TERM DISABILITY
AND HEALTH CARE SPENDING
ACCOUNT – Legislators
also have the option to open a
Health Care Spending Account
(HCSA) and Dependent Care Assistance
Program (DCAP), and
to buy long-term disability insurance.
The HCSA allows legislators
to set aside funds to pay
for out-of-pocket health care expenses
with before-tax dollars
while the DCAP allows them to
set aside funds to pay for certain
dependent care expenses with
before-tax dollars. This participation
reduces their federal and
state income taxes. The entire
premium for long-term disability
is paid by legislators.
AND VISION INSURANCE –
Senators are eligible to choose
one of two dental/vision insurance
plans. Current monthly
employee premium costs paid
by senators for family plans
range from $14.32 to $19.36,
while individual plans range
from $4.64 to $6.26. All senators
pay 15 percent of the premium
and the state pays 85 percent.
CATEGORY #1 – LOCAL SENATORS’
BASE SALARIES
Here are local senators’ base
salaries. They are the same for
all senators.
Sen. Jason Lewis $73,655
CATEGORY #2 - LOCAL SENATORS’
STIPENDS
Here are local senators’ stipends
for their positions in the
Democratic and Republican
leadership, as committee chairs,
vice chairs and the ranking Republican
on some committees.
Sen. Jason Lewis $61,404
CATEGORY #3 - LOCAL SENATORS’
GENERAL EXPENSE
PAY ALLOWANCE
Here are local senators' pay
for general office expenses. The
amount is $20,468 for members
who live within a 50-mile radius
of the Statehouse and $27,291
for those who are located outside
of that radius.
Sen. Jason Lewis $20,468
GRAND TOTAL OF LOCAL
SENATORS’ SALARIES
Here are the top ten senators
who are paid the highest salaries
including the three categories of
base pay, stipends and general
expense pay allowance.
Karen Spilka (D-Ashland)
$ 203,286
Michael Rodrigues (D-Westport)
$ 196,736
Cynthia Stone Creem (D-Newton)
ton)
$
196,463
Michael Barrett (D-Lexing$
182,818
Sal DiDomenico (D-Everett)
$ 182,818
Joan Lovely (D-Salem) $
182,818
William Brownsberger (D-Belmont)
$ 182,818
Cindy Friedman (D-Arlington)
$
175,995
Bruce Tarr (R-Gloucester)
$ 175,995
Julian Cyr (D-Truro)
$
169,173
Here are local senators’ current
total annual salary including
the three categories of base
pay, stipends and general expense
pay allowance.
Sen. Jason Lewis $155,527
ALSO UP ON BEACON HILL
BAN SALE OF FUR PRODUCTS
(S 590) – A bill before the
Environment and Natural Resources
Committee would make
it illegal to sell a new manufactured
fur product in Massachusetts
and impose a fine between
$500 and $5,000 per fur product
for anyone convicted of the sale.
The measure exempts used
fur products and fur products
used for traditional tribal, cultural
or spiritual purposes by a
member of a federally recognized
or state-recognized Native
American tribe.
Supporters say that more
than 100 million undomesticated
animals like foxes, raccoon,
dogs and mink are confined to
small wire cages and then subjected
to cruel killing methods
that are not regulated by federal
humane slaughter laws. They
say that animal protection organizations
have documented animals
being gassed, electrocuted,
bludgeoned to death and
skinned alive. They noted that
there are many fur alternatives
available and urged Massachusetts
to end its complicity in this
truly horrible industry.
“Our commonwealth has long
been a world leader in animal
welfare,” said co-sponsorRep.
Jack Lewis (D-Framingham).
“With evidence of inhumane
practices in the fur industry, the
risks fur production has to our
public health, and the availability
of so many different options
for warm and fashionable fabrics,
I look forward to ongoing
conversations on this and other
animal welfare bills this session.”
BURY PETS WITH OWNERS
(S 1310) – A proposal before
the Municipalities and Regional
Government Committee would
give cities and towns the right to
give cemeteries the authority to
allow the burial of people and
their pets in the same location.
Supporters say people often
consider their pets as members
of their families and the current
law prohibiting joint burial
is unfair.
Opponents say that joint burial
presents sanitary, environmental
and religious concerns.
Sponsor Sen. Mark Montigny
(D-New Bedford) did not respond
to repeated requests by
Beacon Hill Roll Call to comment
on his proposal.
BAN DOXING (S 1116) –
Legislation before the Judiciary
Committee would ban doxing
which is the knowing release of
private personal identifying information
of a person, without
their consent, with the intent
to intimidate, harass or cause
stalking, physical harm or serious
property damage. Currently
there is no state law that makes
doxing a crime.
“Doxing is a hateful act that
goes far beyond violating one’s
privacy,” said sponsor Sen. Becca
Rausch (D-Needham). “It is
used to intimidate, harass and
jeopardize one’s safety. Online
harassment has real-life implications
and can no longer be tolerated.
We need legislation to
address this continual trend of
online doxing and harassment,
and protect citizens from experiencing
such egregious behavior
within the commonwealth.”
RIGHT TO DIE/ASSISTED
SUICIDE/END OF LIFE OPTIONS
(S 1331) – This bill,
known by many names, would
give a terminally ill, mentally capable
adult with a prognosis of
six months or less to live the option
to request, obtain and ingest
medication—to die in their
sleep if their suffering becomes
unbearable. It is currently before
the Judiciary Committee.
Supporters say the bill is modeled
after the Oregon Death
with Dignity Act, which has
been in practice for 25 years
without a single instance of
abuse or coercion. They note the
bill includes several core safeguards
including requiring the
terminal illness and six-month
prognosis to be confirmed by
REAL ESTATE TRANSACTIONS
BUYER1
PACHECO, JONATHAN A
BUYER2
PACHECO, JOAO
SELLER1
SELLER2
OBRIEN-ELLISTON, FLORENCE MURPHY, PATRICIA A
two doctors; requiring the attending
physician to inform
the individual about all of their
end-of-life care options, including
hospice and pain or symptom
management; and allowing
the terminally ill person to
withdraw their request for medication,
not take the medication
once they have it or otherwise
change their mind at any point.
Sponsor Sen. Jo Comerford
(D-Northampton)said she is
working side-by-side with her
co-sponsors and other supporters
to get this bill through
the Legislature this session. “Individuals
with terminal diagnoses
should have access to safe
options,” said Comerford.
QUOTABLE QUOTES
“As we continue to experience
the aftermath and trauma
of senseless gun violence in our
communities, we must utilize
all available resources to stop
these tragedies. My colleagues
and I urge these credit companies
not to cave to political pressure
and to move forward with
what will be an important resource
in detecting, identifying
and stopping potential threats
to public safety.”
---Attorney General Andrea
Campbell urging Visa,
American Express, Mastercard
and Discover to honor
their commitment made in
September to implement
a new merchant code for
gun sales. The companies
recently announced they
were no longer planning on
implementing the code, citing
legislation in several states
seeking to bar or limit the
use of the voluntary code.
“The bill … would impose a
fee on the largest emitters of
greenhouse gasses in Massachusetts,
that would go into a
climate resiliency superfund.
These would be polluters like
Shell Oil whose profits doubled
in 2022 to $42 billion or ExxonMobile
which reported a record
$56 billion in profits.”
---Rep. Steve Owens
(D-Watertown) on his bill to
hold top polluters financially
responsible for climate change.
“Cocktails to-go were allowed
during the pandemic to support
struggling hospitality businesses
which represent thousands of
jobs across Massachusetts. Since
then, cocktails to-go have become
a regular part of takeout
dining for adult consumers and
a stable source of revenue for
hospitality businesses as they
continue to recover from the
lasting impacts of COVID-19.”
---Andy Deloney, senior vice
president at the Distilled
Spirits Council of the United
States, urging the Legislature
to extend for one year the
law allowing restaurants to
sell beer, wine and cocktails
with takeout orders. The law
is set to expire on April 1.
HOW LONG WAS LAST
WEEK’S SESSION? Beacon Hill
Roll Call tracks the length of time
that the House and Senate were
in session each week. Many legislators
say that legislative sessions
are only one aspect of the
Legislature’s job and that a lot of
important work is done outside
of the House and Senate chambers.
They note that their jobs
also involve 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 filed. They
note that the infrequency and
brieflength of sessions are misguided
and lead to irresponsible
late-night sessions and a mad
rush to act on dozens of bills in
the days immediately preceding
the end of an annual session.
During the week of March
13-17, the House met for a total
of 23 minutes while the Senate
met for a total of 18 minutes.
Mon. March 13
House11:00 a.m. to11:02 a.m.
Senate 11:05 a.m. to11:18
a.m.
Tues.March 14
No House session
No Senate session
Wed. March 15
No House session
No Senate session
Thurs. March 16
House11:06 a.m. to11:27 a.m.
Senate 11:13 a.m. to11:18 a.m.
Fri. March 17
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.
Copyrighted material previously published in Banker & Tradesman/The Commercial
Record, a weekly trade newspaper. It is reprinted with permission from the publisher,
The Warren Group. For a searchable database of real estate transactions and property
information visit: www.thewarrengroup.com.
ADDRESS
48 TAYLOR ST
CITY
MALDEN
DATE
03.03.23
PRICE
420000
׉	 7cassandra://hfHtAwM2qDjX031QBOe2YknfOmM_7tkaQ-3b53O3DxI&`̰ dX&M8׉E"THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, March 24, 2023
Page 19
OBITUARIES
Ermelinda “Mimi”
Callahan
Of Malden.
Passed away
March 15, 2023.
Mimi was born
in Everett on January
26th 1934.
She was the
daughter of Michael and Theresa
(Hill) Russo. She was raised
in Everett until she married Edward
Callahan and settled in
Malden together with their children
Edward J. and Deborah. Edward
Callahan passed in 1963 in
the line of duty as a Malden Police
Offi cer. Later in life, she met
Paul Bentley and the two shared
26 years together blending their
families. In her younger years
she was a part of the junior aide,
and worked as a hostess. She enjoyed
spending time with her
family and friends.
Ermelinda is survived by her
longtime partner Paul Bentley,
her grandson Joshua Redmond,
his wife Kelly and their
children, her sister Ann Hughes
of Somerville, as well as many
other family members and longtime
friends such as Ronnie and
Ester Adamian who will miss her
dearly. Ermelinda was predeceased
by her fi rst husband Edward
Callahan, her children Edward
J. Callahan and Deborah
Placetos, her sisters Joan Tracy,
Roberta Reilly,Theresa Dingivan
and Constance Murphy
Visitation was held at the
Weir- MacCuish Golden Rule Funeral
Home, Malden, on Monday,
March 20. Funeral Services
were held on Tuesday, followed
by a Mass of Christian Burial in
the Immaculate Conception
Church in Malden. Interment
followed in Forest Dale Cemetery,
Malden.
MUSINGS | FROM PAGE 3
Insert smiley face. Enjoy:
• Leash Up
“Whatever happened to that
leash law?! I was walking down
the street and was nearly attacked
by a dog! Thank you.”
• Let the Buyer Beware
“I’m calling about the caller in
today’s Malden Observer (‘Why
Gloria J. (Iacobacci)
Pasciuto
Of Malden. A
longtime resident
of Malden,
passed away on
Monday, March
20th, after a brief
illness.
Gloria
was born in Cambridge in 1932,
the daughter of Peter and Flavia
Iacobacci. She was raised and
educated in Medford, graduating
from Medford High School
with the Class of 1950. In 1954,
Gloria married her sweetheart,
Cosmo J. Pasciuto. They moved
to Malden in 1960 where they
raised their family.
Gloria and
Cosmo spent nearly 45 years
together until Cosmo’s passing
in 1998.
Gloria worked for years as
a secretary at many locations,
most notably the John Hancock
Life Insurance Company. She
retired in 2008 at the age of 76.
She was a longtime communicant
of the Immaculate Conception
Church in Malden. Gloria
enjoyed reading, solving puzzles,
cooking, and taking care of
her family.
She is survived by her children,
Stephen and Carla Pasciuto
of Saugus, Jimmy and
Meredith Pasciuto of Dedham,
and Cathy and Paul Ruggiero
III of Peabody, her sister Rose
and Vincent Sabella of Hopkinton,
her grandchildren, Michael,
Stephen, Gregory, Deanna, Nicole,
Gina, and Daniel, and her
great-grandchildren Stella, Sophie,
Calia, and Theo.
Visitation was held at the
Weir-MacCuish Golden Rule Funeral
Home, 144 Salem ST, Malden
funeral home on Thursday,
March 23rd. Funeral Services
will be held from on Friday,
couldn’t the Glenwood residents
cross the road,’ Speak Out,
Aug. 31) I don’t understand why
she would write about the traffi
c on Glenwood St. Didn’t she
know what the traffi c was like
when she bought the house?
Wake up! Look at the street before
you buy it!” Thank you.”
• Keep up Saint Rocco’s
“This is in regard to the letter
March 24th, at 9 AM followed
by a Mass of Christian Burial in
the Immaculate Conception
Church, Malden, at 10 AM. Interment
to follow in Puritan
Lawn Cemetery, Peabody, MA.
In lieu of fl owers, donations in
Gloria’s memory may be made
to St. Judes Childrens Hospital,
501 St. Jude Place, Memphis,
TN 38105 https://www.stjude.
org/give/memorials-and-dedications.html
Mary
G. (Cocco)
Smeglin
Of Malden.
Passed away on
March 17, 2023.
She was 94 years
old. Mary was a
lifelong resident
of Malden and
loved providing for her children
and grandchildren. Mary was
the wife of the late Ferdinand
Smeglin. She was the daughter
of the late Augustine and Amelia
(Constantine) Cocco. Mary
was the beloved mother of
Fred Smeglin of Revere, William
Smeglin and his wife Barbara of
Wakefi eld, and Maryann Smeglin
of Malden. She was the sister
of the late Morris Cocco, Vincent
Cocco, and Emilio Cocco. Mary
was the cherished grandmother
of William M. Smeglin, Shaina
Smeglin, and Shawn Smeglin.
Visitation was held at the A.
J. Spadafora Funeral Home, in
Malden on Tuesday March 21st
followed by a Mass of Christian
Burial celebrating Mary’s life at
the Immaculate Conception
Church. Interment was in Holy
Cross Cemetery, Malden. In lieu
of fl owers donations in Mary’s
memory may be made to Saint
Jude Children’s Research Hospital
at stjude.org
concerning Saint Rocco’s (‘Caller
should know better than to
rap Saint Rocco’s Festival,’ Aug
31). I think it is one of the best
churches in the city and I think
the Saint Rocco’s Festival was
great. Let’s keep up the good
work. Thank you.”
• Some Thoughts on St. RocMUSINGS|
SEE PAGE 20
aavvyvy S
avy
avvy S oiorenniioor
nior
by Jim Miller
How to Appeal Medicare
Surcharges When Your
Income Changes
Dear Savvy Senior,
Is there anything I can do to reduce my high Medicare premium
surcharges? Because of my past income, I pay $329.70 per month
for my Part B premium and $64.50/month for Part D, but my income
has dropped since I retired. Do I have any options?
Overcharged Andy
Dear Andy,
If you’re getting hit with a higher premium for Medicare Part
B and Part D and you think it’s unjustifi ed, you can ask Social Security
to revisit its decision and perhaps reduce your cost. Here’s
what you should know.
Medicare Surcharges
Many retirees don’t realize that monthly premiums for Medicare
Part B (coverage for doctor’s services and outpatient care)
and Part D (prescription drug coverage) are based on your modifi
ed adjusted gross income from two years earlier. So, to determine
your 2023 Medicare premium, Social Security uses your
2021 tax return. In those two years, however, your life can change
in ways your 2021 tax return and current Medicare premium
don’t refl ect. Sometimes, those changes are enough to convince
Social Security that your Medicare premium should be reduced.
Part B’s standard monthly premium in 2023 is $164.90 for individuals
earning $97,000 or less; it’s $194,000 or less for joint
fi lers. Anyone whose income exceeds those thresholds pays a
higher premium, also known as an Income-Related Monthly Adjustment
Amount (IRMAA), or surcharge.
The higher monthly premiums rise steadily from $230.80 to
$560.50 through fi ve income tiers. The same tiers apply to IRMAAs
for Medicare Part D, with enrollees paying an extra $12.20
to $76.40 per month depending on their income.
About 7 percent, or 4.4 million higher-income Medicare benefi
ciaries pay a surcharge on their monthly Part B and/or Part
D premiums.
Reasons for Appealing
In certain situations, Social Security will recalculate your premiums
– known as a redetermination – for Part B and Part D,
particularly if the agency based the cost on a tax return that
was later amended.
Otherwise, there are seven life-changing events that qualify
for a redetermination if they hurt your income: marriage, death
of a spouse, divorce or annulment, reduced work hours or retirement,
involuntary loss of income-producing property, the
loss or reduction of some types of pension income, and an employer
settlement payment because the company went bankrupt
or reorganized.
How to File a Claim
To ask Social Security for a redetermination, you’ll need to
complete Form SSA-44 (SSA.gov/forms/ssa-44-ext.pdf) and include
supporting documents, such as the death certifi cate for
a spouse or a letter from a former employer stating that you’re
now retired. If you fi led your federal income tax return for the
year that your income was reduced, you will also need to provide
a signed copy.
A decision usually takes a few weeks, but if you had one of the
events that Social Security considers life-changing, you should
win the appeal. In that case, Social Security will reimburse you
for the additional premiums by adding it to your benefi t one
month. If you are on Medicare but haven’t started collecting Social
Security, you should see a credit on a future invoice.
If your request for a redetermination is denied, there are three
additional levels of appeals you could try: to the Offi ce of Medicare
Hearings and Appeals, to the Medicare Appeals Council and
fi nally to the federal district court where you live.
For more information on the premium rules for high-income
benefi ciaries see SSA.gov/benefi ts/medicare/medicare-premiums.html.
Send
your senior questions to: Savvy Senior, P.O. Box 5443, Norman,
OK 73070, or visit SavvySenior.org. Jim Miller is a contributor to
the NBC Today show and author of “The Savvy Senior” book.
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THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, March 24, 2023
MUSINGS | FROM PAGE 19
co’s
“I am writing about the ‘Put
an End to St. Rocco’s Speak Out,’
Aug 24). First of all, every year
that I have been to this festival
there were no kids drink-
LEGAL NOTICE -
City of Malden, Massachusetts
INSPECTIONAL SERVICES
215 PLEASANT STREET, ROOM 330
MALDEN, MASSACHUSETTS 02148
(781) 397-7000 ext. 2044
MALDEN PLANNING BOARD
PUBLIC HEARING
The Malden Planning Board will hold a public hearing
in the Herbert L. Jackson Council Chamber, Malden
City Hall, 215 Pleasant Street, Malden, MA at 7:00 P.M.
on Wednesday, April 12, 2023 on the petition of James
Motzkin, Trustee of the Saratoga Trust and the Malden Realty
Trust (Permit Application #CMID 051372-2022) seeking a
special permit under Title 12, Chapter 28, Section 010(D)
(1) of the Code of the City of Malden, to reconstruct,
extend and structurally change a preexisting nonconforming
property and use in
the Residence A zoning district,
namely, to demolish the existing dwelling and construct
a new building for continued use as a four-family dwelling,
at a proposed development site to be comprised of two
existing parcels to be combined, the property known
as and numbered, 76 Granville Avenue, Malden, MA
and by City Assessor’s Parcel ID# 104 712 208 and the
property known as Granville
Place
(no
number),
Malden, MA and by City Assessor’s Parcel ID #104 712 206.
Petition and plans are available for public review in the
Inspectional Services Department, City Hall, 215 Pleasant
Street, Room 330, Malden, MA and on the City website
under Permit Application # CMID 051372-2022 at
https://maldenmaenergovweb.tylerhost.net/apps/SelfService#/
home
By: Diane Chuha
Clerk
March 24, 31, 2023
Evans Painting
No Hassle. No Fuss. Call Amy and Russ
Interior/Exterior
Amy Evans
Tel: 781-820-8189
~ HELP WANTED ~
FULL TIME DRIVER WANTED
MONDAY – FRIDAY; 8:00 AM – 4:00 PM
SCRUBBING BOARD
104 HANCOCK ST
EVERETT * 617-387-4838
RESIDENT REQUEST
Address Street
136 FRANKLIN ST. (NEWTON SIDE)
LEGAL NOTICE
CITY OF MALDEN
PUBLIC TREE HEARING
In accordance with the provisions of Massachusetts General Law, Chapter 87,
Section 3, notice is herewith given that a public hearing will be held at 6:00 P.M. on
Monday, the 27th day of March 2023 at Malden City Hall Conference Room 105,
215 Pleasant Street, Malden, Massachusetts for the purpose of determining if the
six (6) public shade trees shall be removed or remain per the Tree Warden of the City
of Malden. The trees are located at or around the address identified below:
DBH (IN)
29
ADA SIDEWALK COMPLIANCE (ENGINEERING)
Address Street
104 BOWDOIN ST.
107 BOWDOIN ST.
127 BOWDOIN ST.
6 HOLLOWAY ST. (BOWDOIN SIDE)
6 HOLLOWAY ST.
DBH (IN)
17
16
25
21
18
Common Name
HONEYLOCUST
ing and this year was no different.
Second, according to
the people I know, the festival
was a success. Third, the putting
money on the statue thing
has been going on for years.
It is not sacrilegious. The people
like doing it. If they didn’t it
wouldn’t be done. Lastly, if you
do not like St. Rocco’s, stay the
hell away! Thank you.”
• Rude Police Offi cer
“On Wednesday, Aug 30, I
was driving down Salem Street
in heavy traffi c and I noticed
one police offi cer who swore
at me and gave me the fi nger
while he was conducting traffi
c. Now they wonder why people
have attitudes towards the
police offi cers in Malden, especially
when small children are
involved. Something should
be done! Thank you.”
• Leash your Dogs
“I just want to say dog owners
should keep their dogs on
a leash. One time a dog was
chasing me, and the owner
called its name, and it didn’t
even listen. Please, keep your
dogs on the leash! Thank you.”
As Peter Falk’s iconic TV character
‘Columbo’ would say, “Just
one more thing, sir” – in 1986
I took public transportation
into Harvard Square and purchased,
at the Harvard Book
Store, a fi rst edition hardcover
copy of “A Testament of
Hope: The Essential Writings
and Speeches of Martin Luther
King, Jr.” It’s been devoured
cover to cover over the years
and is somewhat dog-eared
at this point, but is still on the
top shelf of my bookcase. I revisit
it from time to time but
always on that special day in
January, MLK’s birthday. I go
directly to page 289 on that
date and have another go at
his epic 1963 essay “Letter from
Birmingham Jail.” His “open letter”
to eight “liberal” clergymen
from Alabama who disagreed
with his methods is a wonder
(pleasure) to behold. Inspiring,
breathtaking prose culminating
in this dagger of a closing
paragraph: “Let us hope that
the dark clouds of racial prejudice
will pass away, and the
deep fog of misunderstanding
will be lifted from our feardrenched
communities and in
some not too distant tomorrow
the radiant stars of love and
brotherhood will shine over
our great nation with all their
scintillating beauty. Yours for
the cause of Peace and Brotherhood,
Martin Luther King Jr.”
Postscript 1: All hail the greatest
actress/entertainer of her
time, the late, great Raquel
Welch! From “One Million Years
B.C.” to “Kansas City Bomber”
to “Mother, Jugs & Speed”
– Raquel could do it all! From
her 1965 album, “I’m Ready
to Groove” to her 1978 “Muppet
Show” appearance – she
proved time and again her versatility
as an entertainer – like
nobody before her (or after)!
Postscript 2: My father, Solomon,
aka Zulick, wore his Star
of David proudly right up until
his last day on mother earth. A
voracious reader, he had a saying
after scanning the obituaries;
noting the passing of yet
another landsman, he’d say to
nobody in particular, “We lost
another friend today.”
Zulick, we lost another friend
today.... rest in peace, “Adolfo
Kaminsky, 97, forger who saved
thousands of Jews in France.”
—Peter is a longtime
Malden resident and a
regular contributor to The
Malden Advocate. He can
be reached at PeteL39@
aol.com for comments,
compliments or criticisms.
Common Name
CRIMSON KING MAPLE
CALLERY PEAR
NORWAY MAPLE
LITTLELEAF LINDEN
CRIMSON KING MAPLE
OBJECTIONS TO THE REMOVAL OF ANY TREE(S) MUST BE RECEIVED IN
WRITING BY THE TREE WARDEN AT THE ABOVE LISTED ADDRESS PRIOR
TO OR AT THE TREE HEARING.
AAA Service • Lockouts
Trespass Towing • Roadside Service
Junk Car Removal
617-387-6877
26 Garvey St., Everett
MDPU 28003 ICCMC 251976
Christopher Rosa
City of Malden Tree Warden
March 17, 24, 2023
׉	 7cassandra://ZbaYpm1wdLZxNNz89mf6cupWBGIJu9uefm0Kv8JF9n4%`̰ dX&M8׉E	THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, March 24, 2023
Page 21
RON’S OIL
Call
For
PRICE
MELROSE, MA
02176
NEW
CUSTOMER’S
WELCOME
ACCEPTING VISA, MASTERCARD & DISCOVER
(781) 397-1930 OR (781) 662-8884
100 GALLON MINIMUM
~ Help Wanted ~
VENDING MACHINE MOVER
$500.00 Signing Bonus for All New Hires
Driver with clean driving record for the greater Boston
area to move and service vending equipment. Must
have valid driver’s license. Any Electronics experience is
helpful but not necessary. Our company was established
in 1961. We offer competitive wages, salary commensrate
with job experience. A 401k and profit-sharing plan,
health & dental benefits, paid holidays and paid vactions
and many other benefits. Full time, plus OT available.
Random drug testing and background checks are
performed. Must be able to speak English fluently. Apply
in person Monday thru Friday, 9am to 4pm @ 83 Broadway,
Malden, MA – Or send your resume to
msheehan@actionjacksonusa.com. No phone calls please.
We follow Social Distancing Guidelines!
Frank Berardino
MA License 31811
J.F & Son Contracting
Snow Plowing
No Job too small! Free Estimates!
Commercial & Residential
781-656-2078
- Property management & maintenance
Shoveling & removal
Landscaping, Electrical, Plumbing, Painting, Roofing, Carpentry, Framing,
Decks, Fencing, Masonry, Demolition, Gut-outs, Junk Removal & Dispersal,
Clean Ups: Yards, Garages, Attics & Basements. Truck for Hire, Bobcat Services.
● 24-Hour Service
● Emergency Repairs
BERARDINO
Plumbing & Heating
Gas Fitting ● Drain Service
Residential & Commercial Service
617.699.9383
Senior Citizen Discount
WASTE REMOVAL &
BUILDING MAINTENANCE
• Landscaping, Lawn Care, Mulching
• Yard Waste & Rubbish Removal
• Interior & Exterior Demolition (Old
Decks, Fences, Pools, Sheds, etc.)
• Appliance and Metal Pick-up
• Construction and Estate Cleanouts
• Pick-up Truck Load of Trash
starting at $169
• Carpentry
LICENSED & INSURED
Call for FREE ESTIMATES!
Office: (781) 233-2244
FIRE • SOOT • WATER
Homeowner’s Insurance Loss Specialists
FREE CONSULTATION
1-877-SAL-SOOT
Sal Barresi, Jr. - Your fi rst call
617-212-9050
SPADAFORA
AUTO PARTS
JUNK CARS
WANTED
SAME DAY PICK UP
781-324-1929
Quality Used Tires
Mounted & Installed
Used Auto Parts & Batteries
Family owned & operated since 1946
For Advertising with Results,
call The Advocate Newspapers
at 617-387-2200 or Info@advocatenews.net
Advocate
Call now!
617-387-2200
advertise on the web at
www.advocatenews.net
$
$
$
$
Classifieds
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PבCט   (u׉׉	 7cassandra://k7_7TrL44m77k2OtjA-T2aL5lRMfoK70pfrlTioH1Oc `)׉	 7cassandra://gwyfPaAcpCU6thL2vIhY4uk65EluhzCk2Aw3O2GJlLU͐l`J׉	 7cassandra://9TrFAPfIuENnVBE1iuYZRa0Ic-W-TDNoRBKMiub2eKE*`̰ ׉	 7cassandra://TaW188MtLc_j8syU_EVFO_D0syVIFLiu-U1gMap80gE .͠dc&M8Iט ( (u׉׉	 7cassandra://4EadfV32vRu1_KpI1L15b319vG6HRfvzLi_5Xz7FC0g !`)׉	 7cassandra://jOl9YODvzDb8sf0ziyzJ5JOFB7xjySKhfhCjmh8i5SM͘`J׉	 7cassandra://Py2-f3bYTPpGA9NbX5qkvGYvYq0quN_WIGsTksrJ9Ew-`̰ ׉	 7cassandra://pgANiWvBt6uFRCJjgQo9fueYjyHBtXBEpswfGAU9WAA a͑F͠de&M8Jנde&M8S s&9ׁHmailto:Info@advocatenews.netׁׁЈנde&M8R q,̰9ׁHmailto:ListwithLea@yahoo.comׁׁЈנde&M8Q xX9ׁHhttp://mangorealtyteam.comׁׁЈ׉E8Page 22
THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, March 24, 2023
For Advertising with Results, call The Advocate Newspapers
at 617-387-2200 or Info@advocatenews.net
- LEGAL NOTICE -
City of Malden, Massachusetts
INSPECTIONAL SERVICES
1. On March 24, 1692, Rebecca Nurse was arrested in Danvers,
Mass., on what charge?
2. In 1851 at the Women’s Rights Convention in Akron, Ohio,
Isabella Baumfree gave the “Ain’t I A Woman?” speech; what
did she change her name to?
3. March 25 is International Waffl e Day; in the 1780s, per
legend, what U.S. president brought the fi rst waffl e iron to
the country?
4. What Concord author wrote, “Friendship should be a great
promise, a perennial springtime”?
5. What Doors album and song have the same name, but the
song is not on the album?
6. On March 26, 1931, what actor (in “Star Trek” and “Mission
Impossible”) was born in Boston?
7. What book originated the four horsemen of the apocalypse
(Conquest, Death, Famine and Slaughter)?
8. “It Might as Well Be Spring” from the 1945 fi lm “State Fair”
is by what songwriting duo?
9. On March 27, 1912, two Yoshino cherry trees were planted
by First Lady Helen Taft and the wife of the Japanese
ambassador, Viscountess Chinda, on what river in
Washington, D.C.?
10. How are “Stars and Stripes Forever,” “The Thunderer” and
“El Capitan” similar?
11. What well-known female chemist died of leukemia cased
by radiation exposure?
12. On March 28, 1920, what American silent fi lm stars were
wed?
13. Who was the fi rst female American to win three Olympic
gold medals in track & fi eld (in 1960)?
14. In March 2023, at over 20 years old, Peanut was confi rmed
by Guinness World Records as the world’s oldest what: cat,
chicken or gorilla?
15. Which U.S. president proclaimed the fi rst Women’s History
Month?
16. Which of these countries exports less coff ee: Brazil, Ethiopia
or Viet Nam?
17. On March 29, 1880, who was the fi rst female to register to
vote in Concord, Mass.?
18. What is the largest LEGO set: Art World Map, Star Wars UCS
Millennium Falcon or Titanic?
19. What helps fi sh breathe underwater?
20. On March 30, 1820, what author of “Black Beauty” was born?
ANSWERS
Sandy Juliano
Broker/President
Listed by
Sandy Single
family,
81 Florence St.,
Everett
$649,900
UNDER AGREEMENT!
New Listing by
Norma
UNDER AGREEMENT!
Everett 2 family,
$729,900.
Call Norma for
details!
617-590-9143
REVERE Rental - 2 bedroom - $2,000 /mo with utilities
Call Sandy for details at: 617-448-0854
Open Daily From 10:00 A.M. - 5:00 P.M.
433 Broadway, Suite B, Everett, MA 02149
www.jrs-properties.com
Denise Matarazzo
617-953-3023
617-294-1041
Norma Capuano Parziale
617-590-9143
HAPPY
SPRING!
Follow Us On:
215 PLEASANT STREET, ROOM 330
MALDEN, MASSACHUSETTS 02148
(781) 397-7000 ext. 2044
MALDEN PLANNING BOARD
PUBLIC HEARING
The Malden Planning Board will hold a public hearing in
the Herbert L. Jackson Council Chamber, Malden City
Hall, 215 Pleasant Street, Malden, MA at 7:00 P.M.
on Wednesday, April 12, 2023 on the petition of Ronie
Teixeira of Ronie Construction Inc. (Permit Application #
RES-054907-2023) seeking a special permit under Title
12, Chapter 28, Section 010(D)(1) of the Code of the City
of Malden, to alter, structurally change, extend and change
use of a preexisting nonconforming property in the
Residence A zoning district, namely, to construct a dormer
and addition to the third floor, reconstruct and extend the
two -story porch/deck, renovate and convert the existing
building from medical laboratory use to a two-family
dwelling, at the property known as and numbered,
410 Ferry Street, Malden and by City Assessor’s Parcel
ID# 084 403 301. Petition and plans are available for
public review in the Inspectional Services Department,
City Hall, 215 Pleasant Street, Room 330, Malden, MA
and on the City website under Permit Application # RES054907-2023
at https://maldenmaenergovweb.tylerhost.
net/apps/SelfService#/home
By: Diane Chuha
Clerk
March 24, 31, 2023
Advocate
Call now!
617-387-2200
advertise on the web at
www.advocatenews.net
COMMERCIAL & RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY SALES & RENTALS
Rosemarie Ciampi
617-957-9222
Joe DiNuzzo
617-680-7610
Classifieds
1. Witchcraft
2. Sojourner Truth
3. Thomas Jeff erson
4. Henry David Thoreau
5. “Waiting for the Sun”
6. Leonard Nimoy
7. Bible (Revelation 6:1-8)
8. Richard Rodgers and Oscar Hammerstein II
9. Potomac
10. They are marches by John Philip Sousa.
11. Marie Curie
12. Douglas Fairbanks and Mary Pickford
13. Wilma Rudolph
14. Chicken (from Michigan)
15. Jimmy Carter
16. Ethiopia
17. Louisa May Alcott
18. Art World Map (11,695 pieces)
19. Gills
20. Anna Sewell
׉	 7cassandra://9TrFAPfIuENnVBE1iuYZRa0Ic-W-TDNoRBKMiub2eKE*`̰ dX&M8׉ETHE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, March 24, 2023
Page 23
Your Hometown News Delivered!
EVERETT ADVOCATE
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REVERE ADVOCATE
SAUGUS ADVOCATE
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PO Box 490407, Everett, MA 02149
4 Rogers Lane
Saugus, MA
Thursday 3/23 4:30 PM-6:30 PM
Saturday 3/25 12:00 PM- 2:00 PM
Sunday 3/26 12:00 PM- 2:00 PM
mangorealtyteam.com
38 Main St. Saugus
(781) 558-1091
20 Railroad Ave. Rockport
(978)-999-5408
14 Norwood St, Everett
(781)-558-1091
Saugus
This nicely located,
spacious townhome offers
2-3 bedrooms, 1.5 baths
and attached garage. Main
level features large picture
windows with plenty of
natural light, eat in kitchen,
half bath, and exterior
access. The next level
features two nice sized
bedrooms with large closets and a full bath.
Third level features heated loft area with
skylights and additional storage. Could be used
as 3rd bedroom, office, or fun bonus room. In
unit aundry, brand new heating and cooling
system, brand new water heater. This 8 unit
complex with ample parking is Located just
outside of Saugus Center. Close proximity to
the Northern Strand Trail and Breakheart
Reservation, shopping, restaurants, highways
and bus routes. Offered at $399,000
Listing agent Lea Doherty 617-594-9164
ListwithLea@yahoo.com
Mango Realty is excited to introduce buyers to new luxury
townhouses located in a beautiful North Shore Community just
minutes away from major highways. Boasting 2100 square feet or
more, each unit features six large rooms, 3.5 bathrooms, granite
countertops, stainless steel appliances, generous walk-in closets, 3
zone gas heat with central air, 200 amp service with recessed lighting
throughout, deck and third floor balcony, one car garage and plenty
of parking. Two units will have elevators. Get in early to help pick
your colors and personalize your townhouse and be ready for
occupancy by the end of May. Prices starting at $799,900. Schedule
an appointment now by calling Peter 781-820-5690
Rental-Saugus
Clean, convenient, and private best describes this "must see" 1
bedroom apartment in an owner-occupied home. Plenty of electrical
outlets in each room, modern appliances including refrigerator with ice
maker, microwave, garbage disposal and dishwasher. Open concept
living space can be easily decorated to suit tenant taste. Tenant will
have their own washer and dryer, provided by landlord, in a common
area that also provides a small space for storage. Landlord will provide
two window air conditioners. Tenant will have their own paved
driveway sufficient for two vehicles. The I-95 walking trail is within 1/2
mile as is the very popular Northern Strand Rail Trail. Located just
minutes from the 426 bus line and abutting conservation land this is a
very attractive location away from traffic and a busy street. Tenant
must provide full credit and background report along with at least two
references. $1900.00 Call Peter 781-820-5690
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Just in time to enjoy the spring. This immaculate brick front home has
been loved by the original owner since 1958. Pride of ownership
shines throughout. This lovely home opens up to a cozy enclosed
front porch through a large eat in kitchen. Entertain friends and
family in the open concept of dining room and living room. So much
space. The yard is nestled with a fenced in yard, Oversized 2 car
garage ideal for the hobbyist, driveway, patio and more. Convenient
access to major routes, Boston and Logan Airport. You will love this
home just as the previous owner did........$ 599,000
Lawrence
For Advertising with Results,
call The Advocate Newspapers
at 617-387-2200 or Info@advocatenews.net
Opportunity Knocks. This 4 bedroom home offers tons of
potential for someone looking for an affordable home with
great yard. Did I mention large rooms? Enter the home from
the driveway and on deck leading to kitchen. Lots of storage
including walk up attic. Enjoy by sitting on your front porch..
The fenced in yard is perfect for outdoor activities and
entertainment. Easy access to major routes, restaurants, and
more. Hurry will not last. $379,000
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Prime downtown Rockport Rental
Commercially zoned, 630 square
feet. Elegant granite walls and
floors. Perfect retail/office space
with plenty of foot traffic on Main
Street. Heat included $1200.00
1 year lease First/Last/1 month Fee
for rental agent.
Call Jeanine Moulden 617-312-2491
or Rosa Rescigno 781-820-0096
Everett
Location! Would you like to own in Everett? This 4 family offers
an inviting foyer on the first floor apartment along with 3
bedrooms. Patio out back, fenced in yard, driveway and more.
Convenient location to bus line, orange line, shopping,
restaurants and minutes from Encore and Boston. Everett is
booming! Are you ready to buy? Hurry will not last! 1,300,000
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Rentals Available
Saugus, 6 rooms, 3 bedroom $2900.00, washer & dryer
hookup and plenty of parking. Call Christine 603-670-3353
Store front commercial property in Everett
Everett, 6 room3 bedroom, withwasher &dryer hookup
$2500.00 Call Sue now 617-877-4553
Townhouse Rental- Peabody
3 bedroom in Peabody $3600.00, washer &
dryer hookup and plenty of parking.
Call Christine 603-670-3353
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THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, March 24, 2023
.............
#
1
Listing & Selling
Office in Saugus
“Experience and knowledge
Provide the Best Service”
Free Market Evaluations CRE
OPEN HOUSE
LYNNFIELD - OPEN HOUSE,
Sat., March 25 11:30-1:00 and
Sun., March 26 12-1:30.
52 Pyburn Road, Lynnfield
CAREFREE LIVING AT ITS BEST!
This wonderful townhouse offers
6 rooms, 3 bedrooms and 2 1/2
baths. Spacious first floor offers
great open floor plan. Nine ft.
ceilings, recessed lighting,
livingrm w/ceiling fan, kitchen
w/ granite counters, breakfast bar
with seating plus center
island with wine cooler, Bosch
stainless steel appliances, Fisher
double dishwasher, large dining
room offers slider with custom
Duette window treatments leading
to deck, two car garage, central
air, hardwood…$689,520.
CarpenitoRealEstate.com
Tom Amero
NORTH OF BOSTON - Well established,
immaculate Pilates Studio offers top-ofthe-line
equipment 950+sq ft of perfectly
laid out space, can be easily suited to
your schedule to make this a perfect
investment! $50,000.
Tom is experienced and
committed to all his buyers and
sellers. He is well appreciated
by his peers and his clients. You
will find the same satisfaction
when working with Tom
~ from beginning to end.
His management and sales
skills are a true asset to his
profession.
Call Tom today at 781-608-8698
View our website from
your mobile phone!
335 Central St., Saugus, MA
781-233-7300
SAUGUS - 5 room Colonial offers
2 spacious bedrooms, 2 full baths,
eat-in kitchen with granite counters,
office, wrap-around, enclosed
porch, updated heat, nice yard,
close to Saugus Center..$469,900.
FOR SALE- DUPLEX STYLE SINGLE
FAMILY ATTACHED HOME. SPACIOUS
LIVING AREA. 1ST FLOOR LAUNDRY, 3
BED, 3 BATH, WALK UP ATTIC,
LOWER LEVEL FAMILY ROOM WITH
WET BAR, LARGE, FENCED IN YARD
WITH ABOVE GROUND POOL. GAS
HEAT. SAUGUS $659,900
LOOKING TO
BUY OR SELL ?
CALL
ANTHONY
COGLIANO
CALL BRANDI~617-462-5886
FOR RENT
FOR RENT - SINGLE FAMILY HOME
OFFERING LIVING, DINING, & SUN
ROOM, AND AN EAT-IN KITCHEN. 2
BEDROOMS AND AN OFFICE ON 2ND
FLOOR ALONG WITH FULL BATH.
WALK-UP ATTIC & BASEMENT FOR
STORAGE. LAUNDRY IN BASEMENT.
PLENTY OF PARKING. GOOD CREDIT &
REFERENCES. 3 MONTHS RENT TO
MOVE IN SAUGUS $3,500
RHONDA 781-706-0842
FOR SALE-SPACIOUS, 2 BED, 2
BATH, DOUBLE SIDED FIREPLACE,
HISTORIC BROWNSTONE CONDO
IN WATERFRONT DISTRICT OF
CHELSEA WITH AMAZING CITY
AND WATER VIEWS!
CHELSEA $599,999
CALL DANIELLE 978-987-9535
FOR SALE -DESIRABLE WARD 1
LOCATION! 13 ROOM CENTER ENTRANCE
COLONIAL, 5 BEDS, 3.5
BATHS. FRESHLY PAINTED EXTERIOR.
NEW ROOF. LARGE FENCED
YARD LYNN $899,999
CALL JUSTIN 978-815-2610
SOLD
CALL ANTHONY
FOR ALL YOUR
REAL ESTATE
NEEDS.
857-246-1305
WE ARE HIRING!
WE ARE LOOKING FOR
FULL - TIME AGENTS IN
OUR SAUGUS OFFICE.
OFFERING A SIGN ON
BONUS TO QUALIFIED
AGENTS! CALL KEITH
781-389-0791
FOR RENT
FOR RENT - 3 ROOM, 1 BED, 1
BATH, 2ND FLOOR UNIT, COIN
LAUNDRY IN BMNT, NO
SMOKING. STORAGE. 2 OFF
STREET PARKING
SAUGUS $2,000
CALL RHONDA 781-706-0842
MOBILE HOMES
FOR SALE- 3 ROOM, 1 BED, 1 BATH NICELY UPDATED HOME WITH NEW
PITCHED ROOF, ELECTRIC, HOT WATER AND MORE.
SAUGUS $119,900
FOR SALE-4 ROOMS, 2 BED, 1 BATH, NEW ROOF AND FURNACE.
DESIRABLE PARK. NEEDS SOME UPDATES. PEABODY $119,900
CALL ERIC 781-223-0289
MOBILE HOME
FOR SALE-BRAND NEW 14 X
52 UNITS. ONLY 2 LEFT!
STAINLESS APPLIANCES AND
FULL SIZE LAUNDRY. 2BED 1
BATH. FINANCING AVAILABLE
WITH 10% DOWN
DANVERS $199,900
CALL ERIC 781-223-0289
UNDER
CONTRACT
SOLD
THINKING OF BUYING OR SELLING SOON? CONFUSED ABOUT THE CURRENT MARKET AND WHAT IS
GOING ON WITH INTEREST RATES AND INVENTORY? WE ARE HERE TO HELP! GIVE US A CALL TODAY!
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P,Malden Advocate  03/24/2023Malden Advocate  03/24/2023dD@16ˁ