׉?4ׁB!בCט ( (u׉׉	 7cassandra://W4oL03i4XmBtpCJVeXB8aPedy5ive8tFYtm5fgIjLjU 5`)׉	 7cassandra://VDUDZJhzd42yAefNtBF6gUs7A9TmkrzRbROlCpiwiOo͜`J׉	 7cassandra://RDm_ZQX4lGrcmMM8lLs3taxpIjD5fdx-JUSZGdWwtss/`̰ ׉	 7cassandra://eFjJOAhiCRXSWjJFi4ughniLkAPd_dnWpeD9FSvdEXI d͠^A{ט   (u׈         נ^A{ 	فg9ׁHhttp://www.angelosoil.comׁׁЈנ^A{ #L9ׁHhttp://CarpenitoRealEstate.comׁׁЈנ^A{ $̱9ׁHhttp://www.advocatenews.netׁׁЈ׈E^A{׉ESAUGUS Have a Happy & Pr
ADVOCATE
Vol. 23, No. 1
-FREEwww.advocatenews.net
Published
Every Friday
Year in Review: A monthly
breakdown of the top stories in
The Saugus Advocate during 2019
781-233-4446
Friday, January 3, 2020
~ THE ADVOCATE ASKS ~
Board of Selectmen Chair Cogliano
reflects on the most significant town
events in 2019 and looks ahead
CITIZEN HERO: Vietnam War veteran Randy P. Briand receives the 2019 “Person of the Year
Award” at Founders Day, which was held last September in front of Saugus Town Hall. Debra
Dion-Faust, who was not present for the ceremony, was also honored as the woman recipient.
(Saugus Advocate Photo by Mark E. Vogler)
By Mark E. Vogler
January
About 250 people start off
the New Year on the right foot
– with a healthy walk at Breakheart
Reservation. Those participating
in the “First Day Hike”
are treated to sunny, 50-degree
weather. The family learns the
story behind World War II hero
“Pop” Virnelli’s Bronze Star. Saugus
police charge a Revere man
with firing shots at a hotel. Selectmen
vote to reduce speed
limits to 25 mph on Essex and
Main Streets and Lincoln Avenue.
A town-wide speed limit
analysis commissioned by
Town Manager Scott C. Crabtree
could focus on up to nine
primary road corridors in Saugus
where new regulations
could be considered. Saugus
Director of Public Health David
G. Greenbaum resigns to return
to Salem, Mass., the city he
served before coming to Saugus.
Interim Police Chief Ronald
C. Giorgetti recommends additional
funds in the town’s 2020
fiscal year budget so the Police
Department can establish
a traffic enforcement unit. The
YEAR IN REVIEW | SEE PAGE 10
Happy New Year!
Carpenito Real Estate
Would like to wish everyone a
Happy, Healthy & Blessed New Year!
New Year - New Home!
Call us, we’ll help you do what we do best!!
335 Central Street,
Saugus, MA 01906
(781) 233-7300
View all our listings at: CarpenitoRealEstate.com
“LOOKING FORWARD TO A GREAT 2020”: Board of Selectmen
Chair Anthony W. Cogliano, Sr., relaxing after his resounding
election victory in November. Cogliano says the new board
faces a number of challenges in the New Year, but welcomes
them. He is confident the new board’s members “will work well
together.” (Saugus Advocate file photo by Mark E. Vogler)
Editor’s Note: For this week,
we asked Board of Selectmen
Chair Anthony W. Cogliano,
Sr. to share his thoughts as he
looks back on 2019. We also
asked him to share his expectations
for the new year. Fellow
board members elected Cogliano
unanimously to lead them
over his two-year term after he
finished as the top vote-getter
in November’s town elections.
Cogliano, 53, is a fourth generation
Saugonian and has lived
in East Saugus most of his life.
He has been married to Therese
(Meehan) Cogliano for 29 years.
They have four children. He is a
1984 graduate of Saugus High
School. Cogliano has a Bachelor
of Science degree in Business
Administration with a major
in Management. He also attended
Massachusetts School
of Law. He is the owner of A. CoASKS
| SEE PAGE 17
ANGELO’S
FULL SERVICE
"Over 40 Years of Excellence!" 1978-2019
Regular Unleaded
$2.399
Mid Unleaded
$2.839
Super
$2.899
Diesel Fuel
$2.899
KERO
$4.759
Diesel
$2.629
DEF Available
by Pump!
Happy
New Year!
HEATING OI
24-Hour Burner Service
Call for Current Price!
(125—gallon minimum)
Open an account and
order online at:
www.angelosoil.com
(781) 231-3500 (781) 231-3003
367 LINCOLN AVE • SAUGUS • OPEN 7 DAYS
Prices subject to
change
FLEET
׉	 7cassandra://RDm_ZQX4lGrcmMM8lLs3taxpIjD5fdx-JUSZGdWwtss/`̰ ^A{ā^A{Á
PבCט   (u׉׉	 7cassandra://3zqgWT22e3IrMDzKiGQOb_bDEwsEtYM2fs6z5RoVlgQ y`)׉	 7cassandra://aUgZXDC9GoxjDOHnFOqxxjFG_xclLbVR2Ao6J39BXuM͚G`J׉	 7cassandra://BCX3Y3-aWWYMe0SpR47q5IVv2xMUPuFIrJ1m0T5bcXA*`̰ ׉	 7cassandra://eNCB_cBnMq_GFKsh4nxwZRem3HqG7ee-mBzgzuMKUcE P͠^A{ט ( (u׉׉	 7cassandra://O0srIOtkszxP1I8zwC0yA_AOPZsxHNQbhw2Um_QsC2E w`)׉	 7cassandra://yL-PrsRlBDUa-6KsGEEINeK7NZ9Nk8N9EkS7wkh_NYs͑`J׉	 7cassandra://qKphobmoVziyUZzT786HypkHHGa7vmw_lBqpuB0Geug,`̰ ׉	 7cassandra://D1kHi8eDcGe74KEUoHaseUFoAiSt0odxFfIEVJiJrjQ }̌͠^A{נ^A{ R!9ׁHhttp://www.Roller-World.comׁׁЈ׉EPage 2
THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – Friday, January 3, 2020
~ Letter-to-the-Editor ~
Alan’s family appreciates your support
“Thank you for loving our
son, sharing in our grief, and
helping his memory live on.”
(Editor’s Note: The following
letter was submitted by the family
of the late Alan Joseph Silipigni,
a 14-year-old Saugus High
School student who died unexpectedly
in late November.)
To the amazing town of Saugus:
My
wife Pam and I would
like to take the opportunity to
thank you all for the tremendous
amount of love and support
given to us and our family
over the past few weeks.
Losing a child is devastating
and is the hardest thing we will
ever have to endure. However,
the generosity, support, and
devotion of our fellow Saugonians
have helped us begin
to heal. I wish I could extend
a personal thank you to each
Alan was a member of Boy
Scouts Troop 61, led by Kevin
Wildman. After reading the
article he wrote in The Saugus
Advocate this week, I had tears
in my eyes and my heart was
filled with pride. I am so proud
that Alan was part of such a loyal,
dedicated, and honorable
group of young men. They truly
displayed what it means to
be a Scout.
The people in the town of
REMEMBERING ALAN: A Christmas Eve Parade float that pays tribute to the late Saugus High
School student Alan Joseph Silipigni. The second photo shows Alan’s dad, Joseph Silipigni, and
his niece Krista Silipigni in one of the parade floats. (Courtesy photos to The Saugus Advocate)
and every person who reached
out, donated to Toys for Tots,
wore Red Sox clothes, and just
shared their stories and memories
of Alan.
Seeing the World Series trophy
at Alan’s wake was just incredible.
And then seeing the
amount of people attending
the ornament dedication was
so touching. Pam and I are truly
humbled by all of this.
~ Letter to the Editor ~
Some thoughts on Saugus’ future
Dear Editor:
So much land requires careful
thinking for the future.
Among the schools to be converted
or demolished are the
Lynnhurst, Waybright, Oaklandvale,
Ballard, and the Evans.
We should also consider
the playgrounds, Stackpole,
Stocker, and Grandview
Park, along with the cluster
of buildings around the Roby
School.
Starting with the most obSKATING
CENTER
www.Roller-World.com | 781-231-1111
ATM on site
Sunday
Located Adjacent to Rite Aid Pharmacy
in Saugus Plaza, South Bound Route 1
MBTA Bus Route 429
FREE WI-FI - 2 WIDE SCREEN TV’S
FULLY AIR CONDITIONED
WINTER SKATING SCHEDULE ATTENTION!
12-8 p.m. $7.50
Monday Private Parties
Tuesday
School & PTO
GROUPS
7:30-10:30 p.m.
Adult Night 18+ only $8.50
Wednesday Private Parties
Thursday Private Parties
3-11 p.m. $7.50
Friday
Saturday
Admission after 6 p.m. $8.50
12-11 p.m. $7.50
Admission after 6 p.m. $8.50
Skates included in price/Blades $3
Bowling Alleys, 2 snack bars, video games.
Ice cream shop, 2 skating floors (group rates call ahead) Private parties every day.
School Vacation Weeks 12-8 p.m. Admission $7.50
Win a trip for 2
to Las Vegas
Bellagio Hotel
Jet Blue Air
5 days / 4 nights
Your school PTO can
raffle the trip to make
substantial money
for your group.
Call for details.
BIRTHDAY PARTIES
$11.50/Person, min. of 10 kids.
Price includes Adm. + Roller Skates. Cake, soda, paper goods, 20 tokens for
birthday person plus 100 Redemption Tickets and a gift from Roller World in
one of our private BP Rooms.
vious, the Oaklandvale would
be demolished and rebuilt
to house the needed fire station
in that part of town. The
Ballard could be reconstructed
as much needed family
housing by the Saugus Housing
Authority without cost to
the town. Otherwise the land
should be used for housing,
either a number of small single
houses or a small developed
apartment facility such
as found on the western end
of Forrest Street.
The Lynnhurst school could
be demolished and single
houses or apartments as listed
in the prior paragraph
could be built on the Walnut
Street side and a park for the
children of the area would remain
at the site.
The Waybright could be
used by the Saugus Housing
Authority to build vitally
needed senior apartments,
the town has reached the limits
of the present facilities.
This would fit nicely because
Heritage Heights borders the
site to provide easy maintenance.
Additionally the Rice
Street buildings are over fifty
years old and will have to
be replaced sometime in the
future.
The Roby building is about
one hundred years old and
inefficient within with high
ceilings and large structured
rooms. The Legion Hall and
the Conservation building
next to the Roby are both inefficient,
and a new building
at the site could encompass
the current uses and additional
town office space.
Now we come to the Town
Manager’s visualization of a
central park at the corner of
Central and Winter streets. He
has suggested in the past of
building a grandstand or pavilion
to house concerts in
the future and a large park
area for families. We now
have new tennis courts and
a new basketball court reestablished
there and a tribute
to veterans at the corner. Demolishing
the Evans school
would improve the park as
would the town purchasing
the three houses along Winter
Street to enhance the
park.
That leaves the play -
grounds, Stackpole, Stocker,
and Grandview Park. Stackpole
could easily include
houses or apartments such as
the ones like those of Forrest
Street and Grandview Park is
too small to be used except
for houses. Stocker could be
developed as a beach area
badly needed by the town.
Although I realize that all
the above could be completed
over time we would have
to produce a ten or twenty
year plan to facilitate all the
needs of the town.
I do like the present efforts
to improve the central park
and the efforts of the Town
Manager to improve streets
throughout town.
Sincerely,
William B. Stewart
Precinct 3 Town Meeting
member
Saugus are one big family; one
who truly cares about each other.
Thank you for loving our son,
sharing in our grief, and helping
his memory live on. For
that, the entire Silipigni family
will be forever grateful.
Sincerely,
Joseph Silipigni
On Behalf of the Silipigni
family
׉	 7cassandra://BCX3Y3-aWWYMe0SpR47q5IVv2xMUPuFIrJ1m0T5bcXA*`̰ ^A{׉ETHE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – Friday, January 3, 2020
Page 3
Privatization sparks public outrage
and a purge of School Committee
Replacement of school custodians was the top Saugus news story of 2019
By Mark E. Vogler
T
he decision to replace 21
school custodians with a
private maintenance company
didn’t get much public discussion
at School Committee
meetings last year. It was a secretive
process that remains
the subject of multiple Open
Meeting Law complaints still
under review more than six
months later by the state Attorney
General’s Division of Open
Government.
After emerging from a threehour
Executive Session meeting
on June 26, the School
Committee took its official 3-2
vote to privatize custodial services.
But the decision was already
a done deal, made behind
closed doors. The committee’s
vote to get rid of the custodians
came 16 days after the
town had signed the contract
with the Lynn company.
School Committee Members
Lisa Morgante and Elizabeth
Marchese called the committee’s
decision to replace school
custodians “illegal” and said
they didn’t support the vote
taken in Executive Session.
Copies of committee members’
emails raise questions about
the process of considering private
companies for custodial
services.
The unpopular decision –
and the way it was done – drew
public outrage and eventually
led to the purge of the entire
School Committee in last November’s
town elections.
“From a political standpoint,
the laying off of our custodians
turned out to be the most
significant event in 2019 in my
opinion,” Board of Selectmen
Chair Anthony W. Cogliano Sr.
told The Saugus Advocate this
were angered by the treatment
of the custodians,” Board of Selectmen
Vice Chair Corinne R.
Riley said.
PUBLIC OUTRAGE | SEE PAGE 5
A RAT AT THE ROBY: Jim Durkin, the legislative director of
Council 93 of the American Federation of State, County &
Municipal Employees (AFSCME), stands by an inflatable rat
that guards the Main Street of the Roby School Administration
Building to show union support for 21 school custodians who
were replaced by a private maintenance company. Privatization
of school custodial services was the top Saugus news story for
2019. (Saugus Advocate file photo by Mark E. Vogler)
week.
“The public hearings on the
subject were nothing short of
embarrassing, and because of
it the citizens of Saugus spoke
and replaced the entire School
Committee,” he said.
Saugus school custodians
losing their jobs and the fallout
that followed was easily
the most-talked-about story
in Saugus over the past year. It
generated more letters to the
editor, was the subject of more
stories and drew more front
page headlines than any other
news event covered by The
Saugus Advocate.
Other major stories for 2019
Rounding out the newspaper’s
list of top 10 stories for
2019:
Payback at the polls
An anti-incumbent climate
prevailed in the fall town elections.
And many candidates
and political observers said
the custodians issue appeared
to resonate strongly with the
voters.
“Walking door-to-door, listening
to the voters, it was crystal
clear to me that the voters
We Now Offer For Your
Eating Pleasure
“UBER EATS”
Convenient Delivery Service
Bianchi’s Pizza and Renzo’s
Full Menu To Go
~ Renzo’s Entertainment Schedule ~
* Thursday: Smokin Joe
* Friday: Joey Canzano
Saturday: Tommy Bahama
* Sunday, 3 p.m. : DJ George
Entertainment Wed. Thru Sat. 7:30 p.m.
381 Revere Beach Blvd., Revere
781-284-5600
׉	 7cassandra://qKphobmoVziyUZzT786HypkHHGa7vmw_lBqpuB0Geug,`̰ ^A{Ɓ^A{Ł
PבCט   (u׉׉	 7cassandra://eix8XWqwwhc85hqjnLXUKuGD15W-VIZsqnaAcT22d5Q 	w`)׉	 7cassandra://IPd6NdwcnwV6Gfu2AnVDzh9Wcpc8txER-gVf7cXLlPU͢`J׉	 7cassandra://AVtyxb69HrM38EAVHlWVpg0nhSgIumaTDDOvQ5vhAgs,`̰ ׉	 7cassandra://_YOxbxYv_b7j9WZDgMF_uRgfahwl_lTFUJ2rwVG7AZQ i͠^A{ט ( (u׉׉	 7cassandra://ZdwN5iJ3lrIPsRoLQ3q36X3lt2w1c1k5Go1iOkGTH9w Yh`)׉	 7cassandra://RSPKwDNBTDoUGU4ql7v_d9HI1qPguLoZk5LrS-mnu0s͟`J׉	 7cassandra://vwGKf6MK5vKlq1UhUGd5Dl0sBzaAUYOdw6tcYdDXHj0.`̰ ׉	 7cassandra://pz3c0_ApN-xPCd6pPverc0ZmP4I3OaKxL5Csk71p-hE =͠^A{נ^A{ /	9ׁHhttp://www.breakawaydanvers.comׁׁЈנ^A{ ̩9ׁHmailto:sam@broadwayRE.comׁׁЈנ^A{ l{9ׁHhttp://www.marinaatthewharf.comׁׁЈ׉E:Page 4
THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – Friday, January 3, 2020
The best
cornerback ever
for the Patriots
By The Old Sachem,
Bill Stewart
H
e played for the Patriots
for 11 seasons, 1995 to
2005, the Jets in 2005 & 2008,
the Chiefs in 2006 & 2007 and
the Broncos in 2009 and is still
the best cornerback I have seen
play the game.
Law Offices of
Terrence W.
Kennedy
512 Broadway, Everett
• Criminal Defense
• Personal Injury
• Medical Malpractice
Tel: (617) 387-9809
Cell: (617) 308-8178
twkennedylaw@gmail.com
8 Norwood St.
Everett
(617) 387-9810
www.eight10barandgrille.com
Kitchen Hours:
Mon-Thurs: 12-10pm
Fri-Sat: 12-11pm
Sunday: 1pm-10pm
Come in & Enjoy our Famous...
$12 LUNCH Menu!
Choose from 16 Items!
Served Monday thru Thursday until 3:30 PM
Grilled Rib
Eye Steak!
Only $22.00 includes Two Sides
Every Friday
FRESH HADDOCK DINNER
Prepared Your Way! Includes two sides
Catch the NFL on our 10 TV’s!
Bill Stewart
The Old Sachem
Tajuan E. “Ty” Law was born
February 10, 1974, in Aliquippa,
Pennsylvania, and he followed
his uncle, Tony Dorsett, a Hall
of Fame NFL player, spending
summers in Dallas with Dorsett
while a youngster. He played
football for Aliquippa High
School as a cornerback, safety,
wide receiver and running
back. He was the team MVP in
basketball and also ran track in
the spring.
In 1992 Law began a threeyear
stint at the University of
Michigan, and he was a firstteam
All-American chosen by
the Walter Camp Foundation
during his junior year. He was a
two-time unanimous choice as
an All-Big Ten Conference cornerback
during his sophomore
and junior seasons and made
the cover of Sports Illustrated on
October 3, 1994. Law left Michigan
to enter the 1995 draft due
to financial hardship because
his grandfather declared bankruptcy.
During his years at Michigan
he had 154 tackles, six interceptions
and 17 passes defended.
He was then drafted by
the Patriots in the first-round, as
23rd
player overall.
His first game for the Patriots
was ironically against Bill Belichick,
coach of the Cleveland
Browns at that time. Ty became
a starting cornerback in week
12 when the Patriots released
Maurice Hurst. Law made six
combined tackles, deflected
a pass and made his first professional
interception against
Jim Kelly of the Buffalo Bills. His
week 15 game was even better
as he had eight combined tackles,
a pass deflection and an interception
against “Boomer” Esiason.
Ty had three consecutive
games with an interception after
taking over the starting position.
In week 17 he got his first
sack, drilling Jim Harbaugh for
a six-yard loss. During his rookie
season he had 47 combined
tackles – 40 of them solo shots
– nine pass deflections and a
single sack.
In 1996 Belichick became an
assistant head coach of the Patriots.
In week 15, Law intercepted
a pass from Jets quarterback
Glenn Foley and returned
it for a 38-yard touchdown, his
first as a pro. He intercepted two
passes off Troy Aikman of the
Dallas Cowboys during a 12-6
loss. As a rookie, Ty Law had
62 combined tackles – 56 were
solo tackles – nine pass deflections,
three interceptions and a
touchdown for a glorious start.
The Patriots finished first in the
AFC East, and Ty had three combined
tackles in a win over the
Pittsburgh Steelers in the second
round of the playoffs, as
the Pats had a bye week to start.
He recorded four tackles as the
Patriots defeated the Jacksonville
Jaguars, and he had three
combined tackles in a losing
battle with the Green Bay Packers
in Super Bowl XXXI.
In 1997 head coach Bill Parcells
resigned and Pete Carroll
became the head coach. Ty
started all 16 games and made
77 combined tackles – 69 solo
– one pass deflection and three
interceptions and was credited
with a half-sack.
In 1998 he had 70 tackles –
60 solo – 32 pass deflections,
nine interceptions and a single
touchdown. Law became the
first Patriot to lead the league
in interceptions and was voted
to the Pro Bowl for the first time.
In 1999 he signed a six-year,
$50 million contract extension
that included a $14 million signing
bonus. Against Dan Marino,
Law intercepted a pass and
raced 27 yards for a TD. His season
totals were 57 combined
tackles – 48 solo – nine pass
deflections, two forced fumbles,
two interceptions and a
touchdown.
In 2000 the Pats fired Pete
Carroll after an 8-8 season and
made Bill Belichick the head
coach. On December 18, Law
was stopped by U.S. Customs
officials while returning to New
York after a trip to Canada with
teammates Terry Glenn and
Troy Brown. Law was suspended
by Belichick after it was disclosed
that he had three whole
ecstasy pills and four more
crushed pills in his possession.
Because of the small amount
he was not prosecuted; the officials
seized the pills and fined
him $700 for the violations.
Belichick suspended Law for
the final game of the season.
Law’s season totals were 74
combined tackles – 58 solo –
11 pass deflections and two interceptions.
In
2001 he earned his first Super-Bowl
ring (XXXVI) intercepting
a Kurt Warner pass dashing
47 yards for the first touchdown
of the game. The Patriots went
on to win 20-17.
In 2003 Law was selected for
the Pro-Bowl for the second
consecutive year, and for the
fourth time in his career. In the
AFC Championship game, he
intercepted three passes from
the Colts quarterback, helping
the Pats to a 24-14 win. The
team went on to win the Super
Bowl over the Carolina Panthers,
32-29. In 2094 he earned
his third Super Bowl ring with
the Pats, but missed the final
nine games due to a foot injury.
The Patriots released Law in
February – due to his $12.5 million
contract – to save money.
Law signed to the New York
Jets as a free agent for $28 million
over three years and had
options for $50 million over
seven years. He had one of his
best years there with a careerhigh
of 10 interceptions. He was
the only Jet selected to the Pro
Bowl that year. He was released
on February 22, 2006, because
the Jets were projected to be
$26 million over the salary cap
for the year and had to cut salaries.
He
signed with the Kansas
City Chiefs on July 25, 2006,
on a five-year deal worth $30
million. Released in 2008, he
signed with the Jets again on
November 10, 2006, on a oneyear
contract. He was released
in February of 2009 and signed
with the Denver Broncos on November
7, 2009. He finished the
season with 10 tackles and one
interception. He was released
on February 24, 2010.
Ty Law had professional career
totals of 203 games, 839
combined tackles of which 703
were solos, five sacks, 53 interceptions
and seven touchdowns.
After
retiring from football,
he founded Launch Trampoline
Park, a chain of entertainment
facilities with large areas
of connected trampolines. The
company has franchised facilities
around New England and a
park in Delaware. He often visits
the Rhode Island facility to participate
in games of trampoline
dodgeball with customers.
Ty Law was inducted into the
Patriots Hall of Fame in 2014
and into the NFL Hall of Fame
in 2019.
Also among the honors he received
were three Super Bowl
rings, five Pro Bowl selections,
two NFL First-team All-Pro selections,
twice the NFL interception
leader, NFL 2000s AllDecade
Team. You can look up
the statistics of Ty Law and other
NFL players on www.nfl.com/
players.
After retiring from football, he
declared “I am a Patriot for life”
and I remember him that way.
Advocate Newspapers
Free Every Week
Everett, Malden,
Revere and Saugus
Call for Great
Advertising Rates
781-233-4446
׉	 7cassandra://AVtyxb69HrM38EAVHlWVpg0nhSgIumaTDDOvQ5vhAgs,`̰ ^A{׉ETHE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – Friday, January 3, 2020
Page 5
PUBLIC OUTRAGE | from page 3
“Moreover, when the whole
town made their case to the
School Committee, they were
ignored. We all need to remember
that in our Democracy, the
power rests with the people
more than the government or
its employees,” she said.
The three incumbent School
Committee members who
were in the majority of the split
3-2 vote to privatize – Committee
Chair Jeanette E. Meredith
and members Linda N. Gaieski
and Marc Charles Magliozzi –
were all defeated convincingly
in their reelection bids.
Meredith, the most veteran
member of the committee
and its longtime chair, had
topped the field two years earlier
with 2,252 votes. But this
time, she finished a distant seventh
with 1,455 votes. Gaieski
finished ninth among 10 candidates,
plummeting from 2,124
in 2017 to 1,224. Magliozzi finished
dead last at 1,122 – 799
votes less than when he was
first elected two years earlier.
Incumbent office holders became
casualties in the other
town political races.
The Board of Selectmen –
which had ridden a popular
tide since engineering the
successful 2015 recall of the
four selectmen responsible
for firing Town Manager Scott
C. Crabtree, and then rehiring
Crabtree – lost two incumbents.
Selectmen Jennifer E.
D’Eon and Scott Albert Brazis,
who finished third and fourth,
respectively, when the entire
board was reelected two years
earlier, both lost badly. D’Eon’s
vote total slipped from 1,935
in 2017 to 1,447, a disappointing
eighth place finish. Brazis
went from 1,905 two years earlier
to 1,385.
In addition, 10 incumbent
Town Meeting members – 20
percent of the 50-member
body – were kicked out of office.
Newly
elected Town Meeting
Member Peter Z. Manoogian,
Sr. of Precinct 10 said he believes
the election defeat of so
many incumbent candidates in
several town-wide offices is unprecedented
during his threeplus
decades of involvement in
town government. “In the 10 atlarge
seats, you had an opportunity
to reelect seven incumbents.
But instead, only two returned.
It was like a revolution,”
he said.
“An anti-incumbent wave
swept over the town. It’s very
hard to knock out an incumbent
Town Meeting member.
But you had 10 in this case. The
custodian thing really resonated
with people,” he said.
Room for improving
Saugus Public Schools
Two major stories involving
the town’s public education
system provided a reminder
that it will take more than
a brand-new Saugus MiddleHigh
School – which is due to
open this year – to improve the
quality of local education.
There was some encouraging
news for parents who send
their children to Lynnhurst Elementary
School. That school
was one of 67 on the “School
of Recognition” list for remarkable
results in the state’s 2019
MCAS test.
But students at two other
schools in the district didn’t
score as well. Saugus High and
Belmonte were among the 132
schools classified “among the
lowest 10 percent of schools
in the state” that were determined
to be “in need of focused/targeted
support.” The
two schools were also classified
as “requiring assistance or
intervention” by the state Department
of Elementary and
Secondary Education (DESE).
In November, there was more
cause for concern among Saugus
educators. Despite spending
millions of dollars to build
a new Middle-High School
and to renovate other buildings,
there is no guarantee that
the quality of Saugus Public
Schools will improve when the
new facilities open, according
to a report released by DESE.
“Buildings are important, but
no matter how fine they are,
they cannot ensure student
success,” states the executive
summary of the District Review
Report of Saugus Public
Schools.
The 90-page report compiled
by a team of consultants that
visited the school district for a
four-day period back in March
noted “the urgent need for a series
of change.” It cited a long
list of deficiencies which need
to be corrected to improve Saugus
Public Schools.
The District Review – a process
that every school district
undergoes periodically (Saugus
Public Schools had its last
one in 2010) – is used to assess
a school district’s strengths and
weaknesses and offer recommendations
that can be used
to make significant improvements
in a school system.
Tackling traffic
safety concerns
Traffic and pedestrian safety
issues dominated the headlines
during 2018 when events
leading up to the rise of “Citizens
for a Safer Saugus” was the
PUBLIC OUTRAGE | SEE PAGE 6
BACK BY POPULAR DEMAND!
Saturday, January 11 at 9 PM
LEAVING EDEN
Friday, January 17 at 9 PM
BLACKED OUT
Start Your Weekend at the Marina Dance Party!
Friday, January 3 at 9 PM
Dance to the Hits with
DJ BIG RICK
Saturday, January 4 at 9 PM
Singer & Musician
BILLY PEZZULO
MONDAY'S
SHUCK!
$1.00 Oysters
Book your next
Function with us!
Free Parking • Water Views
Call 781-629-3798
SUNDAY BRUNCH BUFFET
Only $19.95 / 11am-2pm
Featuring Al Whitney Jazz Band
BOOK YOUR NEXT FUNCTION WITH US * GIFT CARDS
AMPLE
FREE
www.marinaatthewharf.com
543 North Shore Rd.
Revere
781-629-3798
PARKING
dine
drink
gather
TONIGHT
Friday, January 3 at 9 PM
FREDDIE G
AMAZING
WATER
VIEWS
enjo
y
Saturday, January 4 at 7 PM
DOS MELONS
with GUNS OF BRIGHTON
Saturday, January 18 at 9PM
New England's #1 Party Band...
A FULL SERVICE REAL ESTATE GROUP
Commercial Sales and Leasing
Residential Home Sales
Real Estate Consulting
Apartment Rentals
Real Estate Auctions
Business Brokerage
Personal Property Appraisals
Mass Licensed Auctioneer
BACK BY POPULAR DEMAND!
Saturday, January 25 at 9 PM
FOREIGNERS JOURNEY
WILDFIRE
Tribute to The Scorpions
RADIO ROULETTE
Friday, January 24 at 9 PM
560 Broadway, Everett, MA 02149 | 617-512-5712 | sam@broadwayRE.com
ADRIANA RESNICK DOMENICA RIGGIO
SAM RESNICK
221 Newbury Street, Danvers
For Tickets call (978) 774-7270
or www.breakawaydanvers.com
׉	 7cassandra://vwGKf6MK5vKlq1UhUGd5Dl0sBzaAUYOdw6tcYdDXHj0.`̰ ^A{ȁ^A{ǁ
PבCט   (u׉׉	 7cassandra://Rbw-nA7GmMpemebqnKhfYvHePfPsIiiaCYP3CHtZbc4 `)׉	 7cassandra://TVcmd8tJT_KdqFxzFsBulK2IzTnslq_H6L1_pIdR44U͖`J׉	 7cassandra://2DLkViOkvPrFSMpGIVELlXrD3uAXSWshV2mmenK4_bE+`̰ ׉	 7cassandra://IuMcS7XrYMsGdGGah2XLYYjijvI9IH0zHWJ_GY5jWwU ̆͠^A{ט ( (u׉׉	 7cassandra://Tu13ufORFMPOHH0Iq4ejZOqx-8lFZ2QvWAT18zOOltQ v` )׉	 7cassandra://9a5ToAbLadw3IWZAdidloLA_rwHbj7oPSfm6mJ_uINw͞s`J׉	 7cassandra://2wu2X1D_7EoXTN_VSbJAuTWMuQDIjzIaqsQpw22GDGg*`̰ ׉	 7cassandra://5zQUaeW4IzFh1WZYoAT0BhAy_hKbFMyw2w-JFEGKLKM Q|͠^A{נ^A{ 9ׁHhttp://EddiesAutotech.comׁׁЈ׉EiPage 6
THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – Friday, January 3, 2020
A portrait of Breakheart in winter
Local artist Kelly Slater begins 2020 with artist residency, free workshop and exhibit at DCR Breakheart
A
forest of ice-gilded maples,
hickories and oaks;
a pond glazed in the thinnest
coating of black ice; a hillside of
streamlets and tiny waterfalls
on a warm winter’s day; a sharp
blue sky glimpsed through
the boughs of towering white
pines. This is the enchanted
landscape of DCR Breakheart
Reservation in winter.
Throughout the month of
$3.39
$2.45
GALLON
GALLON
We accept: MasterCard * Visa *
& Discover
Price Subject to Change
without notice
100 Gal. Min.
24 Hr. Service
781-286-2602
* Corporate Litigation
* Criminal/Civil
* MCAD
* Zoning/Land Court
* Wetlands Litigation
* Workmen’s Compensation
* Landlord/Tenant Litigation
January, local painter and printmaker
Kelly Slater will be depicting
DCR Breakheart’s wintry
beauty as an artist-in-residence.
Her project – “A Portrait
of Breakheart in Winter” – will
center on creating two to three
large-scale paintings and numerous
preparatory works of
the Reservation. In addition,
the residency will culminate
in a free all-ages printmaking
workshop at the Christopher
Dunne Visitor Center on Saturday,
Feb. 1, from 1 to 4 p.m. On
Sunday, Feb. 2, from 1 to 4 p.m.,
there will also be a pop-up exhibit
of Slater’s depictions of
Breakheart – also at the Dunne
Visitor Center – with light refreshments
and, at 3 p.m., an
artist talk on enhancing creativity
in daily life.
Slater, a longtime Saugus
resident, is a self-taught artist
who specializes in figurative
abstracts of landscapes and
trees. Her work has been described
as resting “tenderly in a
realm that explores the boundary
between figurative and abstract
responses.” Slater’s maLawrence
A. Simeone Jr.
Attorney-at-Law
~ Since 1989 ~
* Real Estate Law
* Construction Litigation
* Tax Lein
* Personal Injury
* Bankruptcy
* Wrongful Death
* Zoning/Permitting Litigation
300 Broadway, Suite 1, Revere * 781-286-1560
Lsimeonejr@simeonelaw.net
PLANT LIFE DEPICTED: Here is one of Kelly Slater’s colorful monotypes of water lily leaves at
Silver Lake in Breakheart Reservation. (Courtesy photo to The Saugus Advocate)
jor bodies of work depict the
ocean-side trees of East Orleans,
Mass.; the trees and water
lilies of DCR Breakheart Reservation;
the aged apple trees
and mountain-framed meadows
of the Trustees of Reservations’
Field Farm property
in Williamstown, Mass.; and
505 Broadway
Everett, MA 02149
Tel: 617-387-1120
www.gkdental.com
• Family Dentistry
• Crowns
• Bridges
• Veneers/Lumineers
• Dental Implants
• All on 4 Dental Implants
• Emergency Dentist
• Kid Friendly Dentist
• Root Canals
• Dentures
• Invisalign Braces
• Snap On Smile
• Teeth Whitening
We are the smile care experts
for your entire family
the mountaintop plants surrounding
Bascom Lodge on
top of Mount Greylock in Adams,
Mass.
To reserve your space at the
free workshop, please contact
Slater at kellyslaterart@hotmail.
com. To accommodate as many
participants as possible, there
will be three one-hour sessions
in the workshop: from 1 to 2
p.m., from 2 to 3 p.m. and from
3 to 4 p.m. All supplies will be
provided. The workshop will
be appropriate for all skill levbiggest
story.
Safety concerns raised by the
In House Dental Plan for $399
(Cleanings, X-Rays, Exams twice a year and 20% OFF Dental work)
Schedule your FREE Consultations today
small, local group Citizens for a
Safer Saugus over pedestrians
being injured by speeding cars
while crossing the street influenced
selectmen to vote in January
to reduce the speed limit
to 25 mph on three major Saugus
streets – for Essex Street,
Main Street and Lincoln Avenue.
Later in the month, selectmen
voted to reduce the
speed limit on Central Street
to 25 mph.
But in March, the state Department
of Transportation
(MassDOT) denied the town’s
request to reduce the speed
limit to 25 mph on three maels
and ages; however, children
under the age of 16 must be
accompanied by an adult. The
workshop and accompanying
supplies, the exhibit and the
artist talk are all free of charge.
This program is supported in
part by a grant from the Saugus
Cultural Council, a local agency
which is supported by the Mass
Cultural Council, a state agency.
Select art supplies are provided
by your local Artist & Craftsman
Supply (751 Broadway [Rte. 1 S]
in Saugus).
PUBLIC OUTRAGE | from page 5
jor town roads. Proper documentation
and data are lacking
and the town needs to
conduct speed studies to determine
whether the speed reductions
are necessary, MassDOT
advised.
Meanwhile, the town was already
proceeding with a townwide
speed limit analysis commissioned
by Town Manager
Scott C. Crabtree, which could
focus on up to nine primary
road corridors in Saugus where
new regulations could be considered.
Crabtree
also announced
that getting money to fund a
PUBLIC OUTRAGE | SEE PAGE 15
ARTIST AT WORK: Kelly Slater works on a painting of Rumney
Marsh in her Saugus art studio. This month she will be
creating wintry landscapes of Breakheart Reservation as
an artist-in-residence. Next month she will be offering free
workshops. Breakheart is managed by the state Department of
Conservation & Recreation (DCR). (Saugus Advocate file photo by Mark E. Vogler)
BREAKHEART ART: This is a
drypoint print by Kelly Slater
titled “White Pine in Winter,
Pierce Lake.” (Courtesy photo to The
Saugus Advocate)
׉	 7cassandra://2DLkViOkvPrFSMpGIVELlXrD3uAXSWshV2mmenK4_bE+`̰ ^A{׉E THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – Friday, January 3, 2020
Page 7
The District Review Report
Questions persist over whether Saugus Public School resources are being allocated adequately and effectively
By Mark E. Vogler
and areas for growth:”
The district’s budget docu(Editor’s
Note: This is part of an
ongoing series of stories about
The District Review Report of
Saugus Public Schools recently
issued by the state Department
of Elementary and Secondary
Education. Today’s article
looks at shortcomings in the
area of Financial and Asset Management.)
N
et
school spending by Saugus
Public Schools has
consistently exceeded the required
level over the past decade
by margins ranging from
17.3 percent to 49.3 percent.
Yet, questions have been
raised whether the school district’s
resources are being allocated
adequately and effectively.
“Many
principals, teachers,
and students expressed concern
and frustration with the
history of allocation of financial
resources, which they stated
has led to an inadequate
deployment of staff, both at
the leadership level and in key
school-based roles, and insufficient
provision of learning
materials, textbooks, and supplies,”
the state Department
of Elementary and Secondary
Education (DESE) notes in 90page
document titled the “District
Review Report of Saugus
Public Schools.
“Whether accurate or not,
the widespread perception
that the allocation of resources
is inadequate and ineffective
may be creating the impression
that the district is not
fully supporting the needs of
staff and students,” the report
suggests.
“The current allocation of resources
may not be sufficient
to improve students’ performance,
opportunities and outcomes.”
Those
are the observations
of a team of educational consultants
that visited the school
district for a four-day period
back in March as part of its research
for the report.
The District Review -- a process
that every school district
undergoes periodically (Saugus
Public Schools had its last
one in 2010) is used to assess a
school district’s strengths and
weaknesses and offer recommendations
that can be used
to make significant improvements
in a school system.
The category of “Financial
and Asset Management” -- one
of several major components
to an effective school system -was
identified in the report as
a critical area which needed to
be addressed. The report identified
these major “challenges
ments for fiscal year 2019 and
fiscal year 2020 do not include
key information that connects
improvement planning and
student performance to the
allocation of resources, nor do
they include all available resources,
such as grants and revolving
accounts. In addition,
the district and the town do
not have an up-to-date and
signed written agreement on
municipal expenditures in support
of the district.
The district and the town
do not have a comprehensive
plan to improve and maintain
its buildings and to ensure the
effective use of buildings and
operational systems. Staffing
of facilities is incomplete.
Some students and teachers
do not have current textbooks,
or do not have access to classroom
materials that are available
in sufficient quantities.
Teachers and students said
they were using outdated textbooks,
some of which were falling
apart. Other teachers said
they had no textbooks at all.
Teachers sometimes find it
necessary to purchase their
own classroom materials or
ask parents to contribute materials.
Although
the fiscal year 2019
and fiscal year 2020 budget
documents include some important
financial data, neither
document includes student
performance data, the goals
and priorities of the district to
improve performance, and detail
on all sources of funds that
can be used to meet goals.
The district and the town do
not have a current and signed
written agreement on municipal
expenditures in support of
the schools.
The district and the town do
not have an up-to-date, written
agreement on a method
for determining the cost of municipal
services that are provided
to the district by the town,
as required by state regulation
CMR 10.05.
District leaders and town officials
reported that it has been
many years since there has
been an agreement. However,
a town official said town officials
were drafting the agreement
and would meet with district
leaders to discuss it.
This document did not exist
at the time of the last district
review in 2010, at which
time the district and town
were urged to reach agreement
through improved communication.
The
district and the town
do not have a comprehensive
plan to improve and maintain
its buildings and to ensure the
effective use of buildings and
operational systems. Staffing
of facilities is incomplete.
A comprehensive review of
available documents by the review
team indicated that neither
a long-term capital improvement
plan nor a preventive
maintenance manual was
available or public.
Upon inquiry, district leaders
and town officials told the
review team that the district
did not have a comprehensive
capital improvement plan
for its buildings and systems,
or a preventive maintenance
manual.
A town official stated that
the district had only a short,
informal informational document
for capital improvements.
The town plans to hire
an engineer who will serve as
town wide maintenance officer
and have responsibility for
compiling a comprehensive
capital plan.
The district had a head custodian
who retired recently
and has not been replaced. The
head custodian’s only districtwide
responsibility was for accepting
supply deliveries to a
central location and monitoring
inventory.
The district does not have a
buildings or facilities manager.
The superintendent is responsible
for buildings and
grounds, including areas such
as appropriate use of pesticides
and water testing for the
presence of lead, while the executive
director of finance and
administration is responsible
for the financial costs associated
with buildings and grounds.
Given the depth and complexity
of the superintendent’s other
responsibilities, the review
team found the idea that he
bore responsibility for pesticide
and lead testing to be a
concrete example of the consequence
of a hollowed out
central office staffing pattern.
There is no preventative
maintenance manual at either
the district or the town level.
The absence of a capital improvement
plan and a preventative
maintenance manual
were noted in the 2010 district
review.
The District Review Report
noted potential impacts from
the limitations in financial and
asset management.
“A budget document that
is only marginally connected
to district and school goals,
and with limited student performance
data, does not give
stakeholders a clear picture of
how resources are allocated to
support the district’s priorities,”
the report concluded.
“Without a current and
signed written agreement on
a methodology for calculating
the cost of municipal services
that are provided to the district
by the town, the district cannot
effectively monitor and internally
audit costs for education-related
services and ensure
the accuracy of these expenditures,”
it warned..
The report also noted the
problems of not properly maintaining
the buildings.
staff and a coherent plan for
consistent and proactive maintenance,
the district cannot reliably
provide safe, secure, and
well-maintained teaching and
learning environments that
are conducive to teaching and
learning,” it said.
“Awareness of issues and
planning for near and longterm
building and systems
needs is essential in the effective
and high-quality management
of facilities.”
But the report also notes the
“Without the appropriate REVIEW REPORT | SEE PAGE 20
SNOW BLOWER
SALES, SERVICE &
REPAIRS
Pickup/Delivery
Available
781-289-6466
AUTOTECH
1989
SINCE
Get Your Vehicle Winter Ready!
OIL CHANGE SPECIAL
Up to 5 Quarts of Oil (Most Vehicles)
Includes FREE Brake Inspection
& Safety Check
Only $24.95
DRIVE IT - PUSH IT - TOW IT!
CASH FOR YOUR CAR, TRUCK OR SUV!
2011 FORD F-150 CREW CAB
Platinum Package, 4X4, Loaded, Every Option,
Clean Title, Only 99K Miles,
Trades Welcome!
PRICE REDUCED!
$18,500
Easy
Financing
Available!
781-321-8841
'13 DODGE DURANGO SXT
1236 Eastern Ave • Malden
EddiesAutotech.com
Vehicle!
4X4, Most Power; includes Moon Roof,
Premium Sound System, Back-up Camera,
3rd Row Seating,
Tow Pkg., Clean Title,
Only 92K Miles!
TRADES WELCOME!
$14,500
We Pay Cash
For Your
׉	 7cassandra://2wu2X1D_7EoXTN_VSbJAuTWMuQDIjzIaqsQpw22GDGg*`̰ ^A{ʁ^A{Ɂ
PבCט   (u׉׉	 7cassandra://WMNNdnaUdQaP5204bGKzyKQSCdkYWgnnbJY8KJs5bQA S`)׉	 7cassandra://i9i6mfDsPWgd5rLdW1a7JuOTBAnGYJ-tWFC58VIxHC4͒`J׉	 7cassandra://rFecV02vyJEttn9F2ElgwGHT4eSQErlkGfySZ-LqSjQ.&`̰ ׉	 7cassandra://8HehKm8DoqFKRothpka2N1Hh38f-SEYNfjPTq0WcBuw O͕͠^A{ט ( (u׉׉	 7cassandra://xSJ7OxJfPletWnnQjo7vNpBtQ30eDjAf4NQNAh_erCA ?`)׉	 7cassandra://UqqBP9J8hjqNqrn_353_RvNoUZU09wQNopjtMYDOpr4͒`J׉	 7cassandra://LYmLdoUWW8P55ILoJf3rzAO2dkC02ayBQ12LqrCMSss/3`̰ ׉	 7cassandra://c8Lg6wQvMNPJyIj2wZQWPPtW2WUGjSkMpWikJe4sKJA `͙͠^A{נ^A{ (9ׁHhttp://www.AtlasAutobody.comׁׁЈ׉EPage 8
THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – Friday, January 3, 2020
Santa parades through Saugus center
W
By Tara Vocino
ith the largest crowd to
date, approximately 400
people anxiously awaited Santa’s
arrival on the town common
during the three-hour
Christmas Eve parade.
Families took photos by the
floats, which were in memory
of Alan Silipigni, 14, and
police dog Bruin, who passed
away this year. Santa took photos
with every child in front of
Town Hall, wishing them a Merry
Christmas.
Tara Vocino may be reached
at printjournalist1@gmail.com.
Lazreg, Rosana, Zaki, Elias, Rosangela and Emaran Belkheira
with Santa
Father Edwin and mother Shelby Suarez
with their children – Aliyah Suarez, 9,
and Damien Suarez, 7 – are patiently
awaiting Santa’s arrival at Town Hall with
their faces illuminated by the Christmas
lights. They are wearing a blinking light
necklace, a Jingle All the Way sweater
and a Snoopy T-shirt. (Advocate Photos by Tara
Vocino)
Shown in the bottom row are Ridita Chowdhury and
Zahraa and Sarrinah Ahmed. Shown in the top row
are Tareque Chowdhury, Anita Shirah, Sarwath Jan,
Adrita Chowdhury and Sylvia Jan Ahmed.
Vincent Panzini, Matthew Bell, Angela Panzini, Andrea Bell
and Santa
SABATINO
INSURANCE AGENCY
Call for a Quote
617-387-7466
Or email
Rocco@sabatino-ins.com
We cover:
* Auto * Home * Boat * Renter * Condo * Life
* Multi-Policy Discounts * Commercial 10% Discounts
* Registry Service Also Available
Inez Firth, former School Committee
Chair Jeanette Meredith and her
husband, Shane.
Selectman Debra Panetta with her husband, Mark,
and their children: Mark, Jr. and Sabrina.
Shown in the bottom row are siblings Zoey, 7, Bentley, 4, and Jordyn Ripley, 10. Shown in the
top row are Sharon, Melissa and Craig Ripley and Diane Deminski in Cliftondale Square.
http://www.sabatino-ins.com
SABATINO
564 Broadway
Everett, MA 02149
617-387-7466
Hours of Operation are:
Mondays - Fridays 9am to 5pm
Saturdays by appointment only
Midway through the parade route, guests wave at the floats traveling on Lincoln Avenue.
׉	 7cassandra://rFecV02vyJEttn9F2ElgwGHT4eSQErlkGfySZ-LqSjQ.&`̰ ^A{׉ETHE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – Friday, January 3, 2020
Page 9
Mrs. Claus and Santa wave in the sleigh as they arrive on the
common.
Members of TrueVine Church in Saugus sang biblical Christmas Carols while walking down
Cliftondale Square. Back row: Enzo Liebl, Lydia Luk, Justus Ramirez and Vinson Liebl. Front row:
Castine Ramirez, Charis Allison, Selena Garcia, Mercedes Ramirez, Maria Garcia and Alitheia
Allison – celebrating her first Christmas.
Mickey Mouse and a minion were balloons on the floats.
Marcella Bertoli, 3, tells Santa what she wants
for Christmas.
Santa and Mrs. Claus travel through
Cliftondale Square.
Family and friends took photographs with the illuminated
floats behind them.
WE WORK FOR YOU!
* Have your car repaired by
Real Manufacturer Certiified Technicians
* An I-CAR GOLD CLASS SHOP
Highest Certificate in the Repair Industry
* Premier Insurance Co. Collision Repair Shop for
Geico, Liberty Mutual, Metlife, Progressive and more!
* Over 30 Years of putting families
back on the Road Safe & Fast!
* ATLAS Stands Behind All Repairs
with a Limited Lifetime Warranty
1605 North Shore Road, Revere * 781-284-1200
Visit us at:
www.AtlasAutobody.com or call (781) 284-1200
to schedule your appointment today!
׉	 7cassandra://LYmLdoUWW8P55ILoJf3rzAO2dkC02ayBQ12LqrCMSss/3`̰ ^A{́^A{ˁ
PבCט   (u׉׉	 7cassandra://MUm6zbeniWW2jKo8F3-pfxPYxQTZmDvRnYRHIE2AR5w V`)׉	 7cassandra://k3SgVMJE348Y1FdQUPM9Nqw9HIZGAl5voQ3DEuMhrEM͊`J׉	 7cassandra://7CWgW_ztXr-1IfJvUEUvzyhxZ_Ccv7GIQITZLQmU1iY&`̰ ׉	 7cassandra://1wq722jSKMwEPT_WjLjVdvF__QXv5YYEUNZt-vkIKEY &w͠^A{ט ( (u׉׉	 7cassandra://DxL-uJKXg_D37gjpYpnVdWbTVZGTnIdE-tDaOkf4NIc 	l`)׉	 7cassandra://Lxlsoj-13JFwvaCVlCZpsSQ-FcBS_UWeNP8HlJ0fFsM͑`J׉	 7cassandra://0YW5Sii6z0BfQhV7L5IriyurrKy_guDdzRf1McpYp_0'5`̰ ׉	 7cassandra://ETL4l_hiS0MnfGvCJ487NDDLmQ_60ap4ga6uoCliQ1I \͠^A{ ׉ElPage 10
THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – Friday, January 3, 2020
YEAR IN REVIEW | from page 1
Santoro brothers reflect on four
decades of running the family
sub shop, which closes next
month after more than 65 years
as a Saugus family business
along Route 1. Quick response
by the Saugus Fire Department
saves a Cleveland Street home
from total destruction; property
damage is estimated at
$200,000. Caitlin Lopez’s essay
wins a national grant to fund
a handwriting improvement
project for her kindergarten
class at Oaklandvale Elementary
School. Selectmen vote to
reduce the speed limit on Central
Street to 25 mph. Stephen
“Steve” G. Rauseo, 74, dies in
a freak accident when his car
crashes through a garage and
down an embankment at his
Hammersmith Drive home; his
family believes a heart attack or
medical emergency caused the
crash. Chief Giorgetti credits
three members of the Saugus
Police Department with helping
to save a newborn baby
boy’s life after he was born unresponsive
in his parents’ minivan;
a dispatcher helps the dad
deliver the baby.
February
From Southern New Hampshire
to Cape Cod, New England
Patriots fans come to Saugus
to get their hair cut and colored
in red, white and blue at
George’s Barber Shop. Interim
Police Chief Ronald Giorgetti
says a special traffic enforcement
unit staffed by three fulltime
police officers would go
a long way toward improving
traffic safety. Square One Mall
and Wheelabrator rank first and
second in 2019 property taxes
in Saugus. Walkers and bicyclists
at risk: emergency crews
respond to 30 accidents over
the past two years, Fire Department
records show. Absenteeism
alert: School Committee
targets major changes
in student attendance policy
as a top priority. Sidewalk improvements:
A multiyear project
has replaced 7,490 feet
since 2014, according to town
manager. Vacant for three decades:
A five-unit townhouse
on Vine Street near Pennybrook
Gardens apartments is still nobody’s
home 30 years after it
was built. Kelly’s Saugus celebrates
25 years on Route 1.
State Representative Donald
Wong (R-Saugus) introduces
several bills to help reduce
congestion on Route 1. Saugus
town officials urge residents
to complain about proposed
MBTA bus route changes. Fran
Carlino and Alan Thibeault join
the Saugus Lions Club. Selectmen
approve Kane’s Donuts’s
application for a license to
open a shop on Route 1. The
state Department of Environmental
Protection gives Wheelabrator
a four-month extension
to answer concerns about
the emission control plan it
submitted last year. Brazilian
national admits to skimming
ATMs in several towns north of
Boston, including in Saugus.
Saugus Snow Angels: Volunteers
offer to shovel driveways
and sidewalks for snowbound
seniors and the disabled. Revere
and Saugus collaborate on
Route 1 and Route 99 improvements
as the Everett casino
nears completion. Town Manager
Scott C. Crabtree wants
the town to benefit from the
Everett casino set to open in
June; he seeks a $50,000 grant
“to undertake some marketing
and to spread some awareness”
about a video he said the
town government would make
highlighting Saugus attractions
and hospitality options.
Half a century of hometown
drama: The Theatre Company
of Saugus (TCS) opens the second
half of its 50th anniversary
season; TCS President Amanda
Allen discusses the group and
its history.
March
The state Department of
Transportation denies the
town’s request to reduce the
speed limit to 25 mph on three
major town roads – proper documentation
and data lacking;
the town government needs
A CLEAN SWEEP: Saugus voters elected a brand-new School Committee to replace the one that
eliminated the jobs of 21 school custodians. Pictured from left to right are Joseph “Dennis”
Gould, Thomas Whittredge, former School Committee Member Arthur Grabowski, Ryan Fischer
and former School Committee Member John Hatch. (Saugus Advocate file photos by Mark E. Vogler)
to conduct speed studies, the
state says. Officials say the failure
of electrical wiring in an attic
caused a two-alarm blaze on
Bennett Avenue with an estimated
$200,000 in property
damage. Grown-ups love the
pinewood derby, too. Town
Manager Scott C. Crabtree says
getting money to fund a new
unit staffed by three police officers
is a top priority in the town
budget he is recommending
for the 2020 fiscal year that beROOM
FOR IMPROVEMENT: Saugus Public Schools
Superintendent Dr. David DeRuosi, Jr. faces the challenge of
correcting a host of deficiencies found by the “District Review
Report” and turning around MCAS scores at two different
schools.
gins July 1. The town manager
and chief of police announce
the appointment of new Police
Officers Jenna Loverme and
Vince Johnston. World Series
Park looks forward to its 15th
season this year. State Representative
Donald Wong withdraws
his support from proposed
legislation that would
ban children in the seventh
grade or lower from playing
tackle football; Wong says he
was unaware of the civil fines
being part of the bill and opposes
them. The selectmen say
lower speed limits will have to
wait until a consultant completes
a town-wide study. Saugus
and Lynn Area Chambers
of Commerce boards consolidate
as one. The state Seaport
Economic Council awards Saugus
an additional $1 million
for the final design and construction
of the first phase of
the Ballard Street RiverWalk,
a local development project
along the river aimed at providing
direct access to the waterfront
and economic opportunities
in the area. Town Manager
Scott C. Crabtree is having
problems hiring replacements
for two key Planning and Development
Department jobs. A
Vietnam War Era veteran dedicates
his birthday present to
the Veterans Relief Fund. Saugus
Police and Fire Department
officials help Oaklandvale Elementary
School celebrate Dr.
Seuss and “Read Across America
Day.” Town Manager Crabtree
makes public safety the
top priority in the budget he
has crafted for the 2020 fiscal
year, which begins July 1; he
includes funds for three new
police officers and two new
firefighters. The Police Department’s
beloved German Shepherd
dog, “K9 Bruin,” gets an
emotional public tribute during
his final ride through the
streets of Saugus before being
taken to the vet to be put
to sleep. Former Saugus Health
Director Frank Giacalone returns
to Saugus for temporary,
part-time duty as the town government
seeks to fill the health
director’s vacancy. Lawyers
for the development of a proposed
residential and commercial
project located on Central
Street claim approval of its site
plan on a technicality because
the Planning Board failed to
file paperwork on time, but
the town’s special counsel disputes
the claim. Four Precinct 3
Town Meeting members elect
Saugus Youth & Recreation Director
Gregory Nickolas to fill
a vacant seat created by the
departure of member Steven
W. Murphy, who resigned after
moving out of town with
nine months remaining to his
two-year term. Local concerns
about Airbnbs prompt Town
Manager Crabtree to call for
a special Town Meeting next
month. Selectmen celebrate 25
Saugus Pop Warner players as
All-American Scholar Athletes.
Saugus native Kristin Kelly receives
a gubernatorial appointment
to the Massachusetts Fire
Safety Commission’s Automatic
Sprinkler Appeals Board. Saugus
Police Lt. Anthony LoPresti
talks about his plans to run in
this year’s Boston Marathon on
Patriots Day, April 15. Finance
Committee member Stephen
M. Horlick says he has some
concerns about the possible financial
impact that a proposed
two-year moratorium on multifamily
dwellings could have
on the town’s revenues. Town
Manager Crabtree calls the neglected
and deteriorating playground
at the center of town
behind Veterans Park an eyesore.
Fixing up Evans Park is
YEAR IN REVIEW| SEE PAGE 11
׉	 7cassandra://7CWgW_ztXr-1IfJvUEUvzyhxZ_Ccv7GIQITZLQmU1iY&`̰ ^A{׉EhTHE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – Friday, January 3, 2020
Page 11
YEAR IN REVIEW | from page 10
more than half of $840,000 in
projects Crabtree will be requesting
at the upcoming special
town meeting. The town
manager credits security cameras
with protecting the town’s
capital improvement projects
from vandals.
April
Michelle Branciforte begins
work as town’s new deputy assessor,
replacing Ronald J. Keohan,
Jr., who will retire in late
June; Keohan will stay on as a
consultant to assist the transition.
Two veteran Fire Department
members are promoted:
Lt. Damian Drella and Acting
Lieutenant Paul Eaves. Aison
Cooper and Jean Carlos Giraldo
begin careers as Saugus police
officers. Saugus Action Volunteers
for the Environment
(SAVE) wants to greatly reduce
the use of plastic checkout
bags and polystyrene food containers
– with the submission
of two articles for next month’s
Annual Town Meeting. A twoyear
moratorium on building
multifamily homes of three
units or more passes at special
town meeting; members
also pass $840,000 in funding
– including $500,000 for recreational
improvements and additions
at Evans Park. Former
Saugonian Ed Fallon discusses
his book and mission to enlighten
Americans about climate
change. Saugus Town
Manager Scott C. Crabtree estimates
the town could be paying
$25 million as its share for
building a new Northeast Metropolitan
Regional Vocational
School. The Boston Center
for Adult Education alleges in
a court complaint that Saugus
Selectman Mark Mitchell
“misappropriated” at least
$515,000 during his time as
controller of the Boston-based
nonprofit school. Saugus native
Peter Decareau receives
an honorary diploma 77 years
after dropping out of Saugus
High School to join the Navy
and serve his country during
World War II. The Stop & Shop
strike enters a second week as
employees picket outside the
Main Street store in Saugus.
The community gathers for a
“topping off” ceremony at the
site of the new Saugus MiddleHigh
School where the final
piece of steel is installed in the
building, marking a new milestone
in the project. Saugus is
paying less in Northeast Metro
Tech assessments this year, but
still $1 million more than anyone
else. Brenda Harris tops a
field of 17 Saugus runners in
the Boston Marathon. The Saugus
Faith Community invites
the town to join in National Day
of Prayer observances to help
heal and unify the country. The
Saugus Public Schools custodians
speak out on school administration
efforts to eliminate
their jobs by privatizing custodial
services. Corinne Riley,
a political challenger who lost
by a narrow margin to Selectman
Mark Mitchell in the 2017
town elections, says Mitchell
should resign in the wake of
allegations that he misappropriated
more than a half million
dollars while working as
controller for a Boston-based
nonprofit organization. During
Mitchell’s days as controller,
the Boston Center for Adult
ing privatization of the Saugus
Public Schools maintenance
department. Two Saugus High
School seniors say replacing
the custodians is a mistake.
A state trooper says a dead
TACKLING TRAFFIC SAFETY CONCERNS: More than a dozen of
these solar radar speed signs have been installed around town
in an effort to get drivers to slow down.
Education didn’t file timely reports
with the IRS or Attorney
General, The Saugus Advocate
reports. The Finance Committee
isn’t supporting two environmental
articles introduced
by SAVE on the warrant for the
Annual Town Meeting; the articles
would greatly reduce the
use of checkout bags and foam
polystyrene food containers in
Saugus. The town is one of 27
communities receiving climate
change grants from the state.
Kowloon owners hope to draw
customers away from the casino
with new outdoor dining
and entertainment. An Easter
Sunrise Service is celebrated indoors
because of rainy weather.
May
A Special Town Meeting will
spotlight the town manager’s
request to fund capital needs/
master plan. Saugus challenges
a Lynn zoning decision to
allow a pot shop on the town
line. Residents of many communities
clean up Saugus’s
portion of the Northern Strand
Community Trail. The Plastic
Bag Reduction Bylaw of the
Saugus Action Volunteers for
the Environment (SAVE) passes
without Finance Committee
endorsement; the committee
maintained it is best to allow
the state to adopt regulations
that would apply to all communities.
A Special Town Meeting
approves eight articles totaling
several million dollars, including
$150,000 for upgrading
and completion of a townwide
Master Plan.
Town Meeting Member RonWHEELABRATOR
ISSUES: Saugus Town Meeting Member Martin Costello of Precinct 10 wears a
respirator to dramatize the plight of Saugus residents affected by the Wheelabrator trash-toenergy
plant and also shows his support for the Saugus Board of Health during a rally on the
front lawn of Town Hall just before the board held a show cause hearing asking Wheelabrator
to explain the plant problems that led to a spate of resident complaints about noise during
June and July.
ald M. Wallace is blocked from
introducing a nonbinding resolution
supporting school custodians.
Saugus High School
students show support for the
school custodians, who could
lose their jobs. The Town Meeting
Moderator silences Town
Meeting Member Ronald Wallace
on another attempt to
read a nonbinding resolution
supporting school custodians.
Citizen support grows for
the school custodians. Former
School Committee Member
Corinne Riley instigates a petition
drive seeking a special
town meeting for a nonbinding
resolution to support the
school custodians while opposSaugus
man’s license was being
used in “fraudulent” auto
purchases and sales. The annual
sewer bill for the average
residential user will increase by
$22 to $328 – a 7 percent increase,
according to new rates
approved by selectmen; the average
commercial user will pay
$3,050 – an increase of $200 a
year. A car crashes into a Central
Street home. Selectmen
on 3-2 vote schedule a site
plan visit to a Hamilton Street
auto dealership that appears
to lack board support. Another
SAVE victory: Town Meeting
votes to support an article that
would reduce the use of food
container products made of
polystyrene; the Finance Committee
had recommended the
article be postponed indefinitely
because members preferred
to see the state Legislature
adopt comprehensive regulations
for Massachusetts instead
of the town adopting local
regulations that might conflict
with state policies. Workers
vote to organize a strike at
the Saugus Care and Rehabilitation
Center. Massachusetts
Department of Veterans Services
Secretary Francisco Ureña
participates in Saugus’s annual
Memorial Day Parade. Town
officials visit Saugus Auto Repairs,
Inc. to view the business,
which is plagued by problems.
A 38-year-old Saugus man suffers
life-threatening injuries in
a head-on collision between
his car and a tow truck. Five
area fire departments assist
Saugus in the knockdown of a
two-alarm Memorial Day fire at
Riverside Court that resulted in
$100,000 in property damage
and damaged contents within
the house.
June
The Annual Town Meeting
passes a budget, but the superintendent
sends mixed
messages on $1 million–plus
in funds for custodians for the
2020 fiscal year that begins
in July. Saugus Public Schools
Superintendent Dr. David DeRuosi,
Jr. won’t say whether
the money for custodial
services will be used to balance
the $188,000 shortfall between
what he requested and
what Saugus Public Schools
will receive. School Committee
Members Lisa Morgante
and Elizabeth Marchese call
the School Committee’s decision
to replace the school custodians
“illegal.” Copies of committee
members’ emails raise
questions about the process
of considering private compaYEAR
IN REVIEW| SEE PAGE 12
׉	 7cassandra://0YW5Sii6z0BfQhV7L5IriyurrKy_guDdzRf1McpYp_0'5`̰ ^A{΁^A{́
PבCט   (u׉׉	 7cassandra://7Nw9gCjRFsbeGTdxZHNCR76NdAuya2dpqKVWc6GqWds 
D`)׉	 7cassandra://jBTEAkZiewpRgQExT0HIGxqD8khDj04nWtAGjm8qmN8͋`J׉	 7cassandra://73nEq7oLStzjCAidEaXgq15ne4zWuDObffkN6sHBMBE#`̰ ׉	 7cassandra://2bfeUa1llYiB56uvvqwYUjgPyK_SWH-JdcxoGPAoP88k͠^A{ט ( (u׉׉	 7cassandra://GWPMjlwZdMcaB7eVFlCFxWF_CvZQ0GcjomtQbKdcTGk `)׉	 7cassandra://dZBXPCxX-QLewVjFI_9ZjJemKBw1TC3FnzpJfWwgYps|%`J׉	 7cassandra://3XrwQVt_hwbvLOflqUvsd9w7iS9Pdcza9dTftrFQAmc"`̰ ׉	 7cassandra://M8V-97nLTXXuYk5lRmVXWUgTVPmrODaMtAto7LIXbRQ Y͠^A{׉E&Page 12
THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – Friday, January 3, 2020
YEAR IN REVIEW | from page 11
nies for custodial services. Former
School Committee Member
Arthur Grabowski says voters
should replace the committee
members who support
privatization of custodians.
The state Inspector General’s
Office says the School Department’s
custodial service bid
documents should have become
public once the decision
was made. Saugus school custodians’
jobs were eliminated
to provide funding for the
superintendent’s new educational
plan. The School Committee’s
vote to replace school
custodians violated the state’s
Open Meeting Law, The Saugus
Advocate alleges. At a Special
Town Meeting, members vote
overwhelmingly for a nonbinding
resolution to oppose privatization;
members also vote
unanimously to set up procedures
for initiating future nonbinding
resolutions. The School
Committee ignores public support
for the custodians, confirms
secret vote to privatize
with little public discussion.
The Town of Saugus signs a
one-year contract with a Lynn
company to replace the Saugus
Public Schools custodians.
A Saugus High School student
shows custodians they are appreciated
and loved by many
– more than 3,500 – on her online
website.
A car hits a pedestrian on
Main Street, causing life-threatening
injuries. At Saugus High
School’s 148th Commencement
Exercises, 95-year-old
World War II Navy veteran Peter
J. Decareau is assisted up to
the stage in his wheelchair to
get his diploma and then tips
his cap after getting a standing
ovation from the Saugus High
School Class of 2019. The Annual
Town Meeting approves a
budget that features three police
officers for the new traffic
safety enforcement unit. World
Series Park and Saugus High
School host a state tournament
game – a first in the park’s
15-year history. School Committee
Member Lisa Morgante
celebrates at Saugus High
School graduation as her twins
– daughter Jana and son Jake –
are among the graduates. Kelly’s
Roast Beef draws rave reviews
from the Board of Health
on the way management responded
to a health issue. The
Saugus Lions Club celebrates
its 90th birthday. State Representative
RoseLee Vincent
(D-Revere) is honored for “her
unswerving commitment to
environmental issues and the
health and safety of her constituents”
during the 46th Annual
Meeting of Saugus Action
Volunteers for the Environment
(SAVE). The healthcare workers
of Saugus Care and Rehabilitation
Center rescind their strike
notice originally planned for
June 20 and 21.
Wheelabrator Technologies,
Inc. shuts down its trash-toenergy
plant on Route 107 to
make repairs to solve noise
problems which have bothered
residents in Saugus and Revere
over the past two weeks. The
Citizens for a Safer Saugus leader
sounds off on pending traffic
safety concerns that the group
wants addressed.
July
Successful Saint – Saugusbred
and owned by Anthony
Zizza of Saugus – is one of
the winners on the last day of
horse racing at Suffolk Downs.
Selectmen give an ultimatum
to National Grid, which owes
the town more than $47,000
for public safety details at its
work sites. Healthcare workers
and Saugus Care and Rehabilitation
settle on a new contract.
A businessman who seeks an
auto dealer’s license to go with
an auto repair shop on Hamilton
Street faces a new obstacle
in his dealings with the town.
Privatization should have
been discussed publicly, The
Saugus Advocate alleges in a
second Open Meeting Law
complaint. The School Committee
voted to privatize custodial
services 16 days after the
town signed a contract with the
company that will replace the
21 school custodians, The Saugus
Advocate reports. School
Committee Members Elizabeth
Marchese and Lisa Morgante
say the minutes from the
May 8 Executive Session meeting,
in which a vote was taken
to replace 21 custodians with a
private company, are filled with
inaccuracies.
There is no basis for speed
limit reduction on major Saugus
streets, a consultant hired
by the town concludes in a
town-wide speed limit study;
The Engineering Corp. (TEC)
of Andover makes preliminary
recommendations for
six streets. Neighborhood opposition
grows for proposed
doggy daycare on Lincoln Avenue.
Town Manager Scott C.
Crabtree announces he has
launched a comprehensive organizational
needs and staffing
analysis of the Saugus Police
Department. The Board of
Health votes to hold Wheelabrator
accountable for alleged
noise violations; stiff fines and
revocation are possible. The Evans
School Playground reconstruction
project is underway.
Saugus Fire Chief Michael Newbury
stresses that a water loop
is necessary to make the Saugus
Ridge housing project safe.
A Suffolk County grand jury
indicts Saugus Selectman Mark
Mitchell on 18 counts; the prosecutor
says Mitchell allegedly
embezzled close to $1.3 million
from the Boston Center
for Adult Education during his
eight years as controller of the
Boston-based nonprofit. Mitchell
is also charged with the alleged
embezzlement of funds
from his own political campaign.
Town
Manager Crabtree says
Stackpole Field improvements
will benefit Saugus youngsters.
A Lynn man crashes his
SUV into the rotary of Saugus
Center early Sunday morning,
toppling the town’s tall Christmas
tree that has been used for
many years in the town’s annual
tree lighting ceremony. The
former owner of Giovanni’s
Roast Beef & Pizza pleads guilty
to tax fraud for failing to report
$800,000 in corporate and personal
income to the IRS.
August
All four of his colleagues on
the Saugus Board of Selectmen
say Mark Mitchell should resign
from the board. They say Mitchell
has lost the public’s trust and
become a distraction after being
indicted for his alleged embezzlement
of nearly $1.3 million
from the Boston Center
for Adult Education while he
served as its controller. Interim
Police Chief Ronald Giorgetti
recognizes several members
of the Saugus Police Department
for exemplary service.
The Massachusetts Gaming
Commission awards Saugus
and Revere an additional
$425,000 for a Route 1 improvement
project.
A Suffolk Superior Court
judge concludes that the state
Department of Environmental
Protection (MassDEP) made
the right decision in approving
Wheelabrator Technologies,
Inc.’s plans to expand the
ash landfill at its trash-to-energy
plant on Route 107. Area
citizens rally on the front lawn
at Town Hall to protest recent
noise from Wheelabrator. During
a show cause hearing held
by the Board of Health, a Wheelabrator
official apologizes for
the noise, but insists the company
kept the state and Board
of Health informed of its response
to problems. A Wheelabrator
attorney disagrees
with the “violations” cited by
the Board of Health.
The School Committee
FACING CRIMINAL CHARGES: Saugus Selectman Mark Mitchell
outside the courtroom in Suffolk Superior Court after pleading
not guilty to charges that he embezzled close to $1.3 million
during an eight-year period as controller of the nonprofit
organization Boston Center for Adult Education. (Saugus Advocate
file photos by Mark E. Vogler)
grades Saugus Public Schools
Superintendent Dr. David DeRuosi,
Jr. “proficient” in most
performance standards. Town
Manager Scott C. Crabtree
touts completion of historic
Saugus Town Hall renovations
and sidewalk repaving.
The Board of Selectmen vote to
lower the Central Street speed
limit to 30 mph. Saugus Firefighter
Robert Johnson finishes
tops in his class among those
graduating from the Massachusetts
Firefighting Academy.
School Committee members
cite areas where Supt. DeRuosi
needs improvement. A former
Saugus Chamber of Commerce
executive director says
he is on a six-month mission
to revive it. A classic grand piano
is donated to the Saugus
Senior Center. Officials reflect
on the passing of Joseph Attubato,
who worked 50-plus
years for the Town of Saugus –
mostly as DPW director. Retired
K9 Officer Tim Fawcett and his
beloved dog – the late K9 Bruin
– get a Boston Bruins salute
at a fundraising car show. Supt.
DeRuosi welcomes new teachers
to the ground level of Saugus
Public Schools “total revamp”
as the new school year
begins. The town hires Todd
Baldwin as the Engineering Department’s
full-time engineer,
filling a long-vacant position
in town government. School
Committee Chair Jeannie Meredith
hails the future opening
of the future Saugus MiddleHigh
School in 2020 as a highlight
of the new 2019-20 academic
school year. Town Accountant
Donna Matarazzo
lands a job as finance director
of Lawrence Public Schools.
September
Due to an impending storm,
town officials decide to postpone
this year’s Founder’s
Day Celebration a week. Two
die from injuries in a head-on
crash involving a wrong-way
driver on Route 1. Saugus receives
a $33,000 state grant to
help assist climate change actions.
Selectmen won’t back
down from “pay up or no pole”
ultimatum to National Grid.
The state Department of Environmental
Protection (MassDEP)
issued a draft approval to
Wheelabrator Saugus, Inc. on
its pending application to update
its existing Emission Control
Plan (ECP). Saugus remembers
the 9/11 tragedy in a Fire
Station Ceremony. Wheelabrator
Technologies, Inc. accuses
the town’s Board of Health of violating
the Open Meeting Law
during the show cause hearing
the board held in response
to noise complaints against the
company. Saugus honors Vietnam
War veteran Randy P. Briand
and Debra Dion-Faust, a
retired educator who has been
active in the town’s community
affairs, with the 2019 “Person
of the Year Award” at the 39th
Annual Saugus Founders Day
Celebration. The Town of Saugus
receives a FEMA grant totaling
$884,883 to hire five new
firefighters. The Town receives
$135,565 in Green Communities
Competitive Grant funds.
The Town Manager touts a $3.5
million savings, crediting it to
less expensive bond borrowing,
the Town’s “solid financial
YEAR IN REVIEW| SEE PAGE 13
׉	 7cassandra://73nEq7oLStzjCAidEaXgq15ne4zWuDObffkN6sHBMBE#`̰ ^A{׉EaTHE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – Friday, January 3, 2020
Page 13
A NEW MILESTONE IN SCHOOL BUILDING PROJECT: Decorated with an American flag and a fir tree, the final piece of steel is hoisted to the top of the future
Saugus Middle-High School during last April’s “Topping Off” ceremony.
YEAR IN REVIEW | from page 12
standing” and high bond rating.
A split MCAS report card for
Saugus – excellent: Lynnhurst
Elementary School on “School
of Recognition” list; poor: Saugus
High and Belmonte Middle
School “requiring assistance or
intervention.” Saugus Cable TV
gets help to build a studio in
the Saugus Historical Society
building and money for new
equipment after overwhelming
support on funding articles
at a Special Town Meeting.
Sean Moynihan and Michael
Richards receive sergeant
promotions at the Saugus Police
Department. Town Meeting
Member Steven DiVirgilio
chides the Saugus TV board for
not filing timely reports. The
state Attorney General rejects
an article setting procedures
for nonbinding resolutions. The
Town Charter keeps Michael
A. Coller from running for two
“major” town offices concurrently,
the town clerk advises;
Coller picks the Board of Selectmen
over the School Committee
as the office he will seek.
The Saugus Police Department
earns state reaccreditation.
October
Vietnam War veteran Gordon
Shepard receives a national
award for restoration of the
G.A.R. Burial Plot at Riverside
Cemetery; Shepard receives
the 2019 Founder’s Award from
Edward J. Norris, Commanderin-Chief
of the National Organization
of the Sons of Union
Veterans of the Civil War. A
Saugus firefighter is thankful
smoke detectors were working
when the fire broke out in the
basement of his home. Another
wrong-way driver crash on
Route 1; two receive serious
injuries in a head-on collision.
The Highland Avenue sidewalk/paving
project is completed.
State
Representative RoseLee
Vincent says the state Department
of Environmental
Protection (MassDEP) misled
her about the preliminary Emission
Control Plan for Wheelabrator
Technologies. Saugus
and Revere residents express
concerns about Wheelabrator
Technologies, Inc. being allowed
to use emission credits
to meet proposed pollution
standards. Wheelabrator-related
issues draw attention during
SAVE’s Candidates Night.
The state Attorney General’s
Office rules that the temporary
two-year moratorium on multifamily
homes of three units or
more – which was approved
by a Special Town Meeting in
April – is proper. A Saugus man
pleads guilty to a scam that enabled
his Malden-based cleaning
company to evade $74,000
in workers’ compensation insurance
premiums. Town Manager
Scott C. Crabtree presents
the Board of Selectmen with
a Capital Improvement Plan
during their final 2019 meeting
together. The Saugus Garden
Club observes its 75th anniversary.
Saugus environmental
leaders are honored with a
Clean Water Action Award.
November
Candidates seeking 62 positions
– including Selectmen
and School Committee seats
– gear up for Election Day. A
town-wide ED streetlight conversion
is underway, could save
town close to $600,000 a year,
according to Town Manager
Scott C. Crabtree. The town
government says new, brightlycolored
crosswalks will reduce
maintenance and improve
safety. The town government
reports that 60 percent of the
work has been completed on
the new Saugus Middle-High
School project.
Payback at the polls: Voters
avenge the School Committee’s
decision to replace school
custodians: 100 percent of the
School Committee incumbents
are voted out, half of the selectmen
incumbents are defeated
and 20 percent of Town
Meeting members ousted. Former
custodian Bill Moore celebrates
as victorious Town Meeting
Member. New Board of Selectmen
Chair Anthony W. Cogliano
Sr. says he would have
saved custodians’ jobs. Corinne
Riley finishes second in Selectmen’s
race to gain support as
the next vice chair. Thomas R.
Whittredge tops the field of
10 School Committee candidates
to become the committee’s
next chair. Ryan P. Fisher
gets the vice chair assignment
after finishing as runner-up
in the voting for School Committee.
New School Committee
Chair Whittredge says he
would have opposed replacement
of school custodians and
will bring them back if possible.
Work begins on the TownWide
Master Plan. Saugus celebrates
at the Evans Park grand
opening. The town government
installs Solar Radar Speed
Signs. A car driven by a Melrose
woman crashes through
the front window of Giovanni’s
Roast Beef & Pizza. New
Board of Selectmen Chair Cogliano
calls on fellow selectmen
and Town Manager Crabtree
to “get the ball rolling” on
building a west side fire station.
One-vote margin loser Andrew
James Whitcomb says he won’t
seek a recount in the Precinct
4 Town Meeting race. A group
of Saugus citizens are calling
for the Saugus Department
of Public Works Building to be
named after the late, long-time
DPW Director Joseph Attubato,
who worked more than 50
years for the town and passed
away earlier in the year. Town
Meeting members Michael J.
Serino and Ryan P. Fisher resign
their seats after getting elected
to the Board of Selectmen and
School Committee, respectively.
Town Manager Scott C. Crabtree
tells selectmen he will consider
hiring a company to help
find a permanent replacement
for former Saugus Police Chief
Domenic DiMella. Young readers
at the Saugus Public Library
get to spend part of a Saturday
with New England Patriots Star
Julian Edelman during a book
reading in Boston. The First
Congregational Church-UCC
Saugus makes plans to “unveil”
the restored pipe organ at
a Thanksgiving concert; the organ
was damaged in a Dec. 8,
2017, two-alarm blaze.
Despite spending millions
YEAR IN REVIEW| SEE PAGE 16
׉	 7cassandra://3XrwQVt_hwbvLOflqUvsd9w7iS9Pdcza9dTftrFQAmc"`̰ ^A{Ё^A{ρ
PבCט   (u׉׉	 7cassandra://Svp8VXs7Mei-ISCtpD1lQNj70ySMmjbmJ9FaOB7gEx8 "`)׉	 7cassandra://F11uJ4qgcf114ybsaoi2OaPcDY8xAifbr0SnE2yC1N0͘T`J׉	 7cassandra://v4KCjtgone3QGt_wrhJJ4W9eTSumHYh9nG27NmyTTbs0q`̰ ׉	 7cassandra://Q9XdrVqY79rC4vsvoLOkIdJ2hZhGB8bxZqA3P9AcZVQ [H͠^A{ט ( (u׉׉	 7cassandra://garbL_eZIwEUJmyn0VGkvRCRHRmmnLjgjsoTZBoE4SY  `)׉	 7cassandra://ZFLH6-W5jxpoq7AkPzjioTNvoo7QvjFi08jiW-_rCsE͓6`J׉	 7cassandra://sdUK57BwyYn7RKcuj3-hc_mWh9IiMl7q5JfAWmlIKdw)9`̰ ׉	 7cassandra://66RiFs3lTKDY6UM6G5jDYvOq179i4LKliCw-mDm_nLA {q͠^A{׉E(Page 14
THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – Friday, January 3, 2020
Saugus drops two at Christmas tourney
Sachems sophomore defenseman Matty Robbins avoids the
check of a North Reading opponent to make a forward pass
in Thursday’s opening round contest.
Saugus players Jason Freehling (8) and Andrew Cipriano (16) defend the front of the net in
last Thursday’s 5-4 loss to North Reading in the opening round of the Kasabuski Christmas
Tournament. (Advocate Photos by Greg Phipps)
By Greg Phipps
D
espite being outshot by
a hefty margin, the Saugus
High School hockey team
came close to earning its first
victory of the season last Thursday
afternoon in the opening
round of the annual Kasabuski
Christmas Tournament at Kasabuski
Arena. Trailing North
Reading, 5-2, in the third periLawn
and Yard Care
SNOW PLOWING
*REASONABLE RATES
* PROMPT SERVICE
* PARKING LOTS
USA
781-521-9927
od, the Sachems scored twice
to pull within one with just
over a minute left in regulation.
But they couldn’t notch
the equalizer and dropped a
5-4 decision.
Saugus then fell to Peabody
by a 5-1 count in last Friday’s
consolation game and was
blanked, 5-0, at Winthrop on
Tuesday. As a result, the team’s
record dropped to 0-5 on the
early season.
Saugus head coach Jeff Natalucci,
whose squad had
been outscored 13-2 in its first
two games, was encouraged
by the performance against
North Reading. “I liked our effort.
If we just learn to execute
a little better in certain areas
and certain situations, we’ll be
better,” he told the press after
the game. “We gave ourselves
a shot and stuck with it. We
were down 5-2 in the third period.
It would have been easy
to mail it in. We gave ourselves
a chance to win this game right
until the end.”
The Sachems scored first
when Lorenzo Keegan tallied
on a breakaway off a nice feed
from Richie Mauro. The visitors
would score twice to take a 2-1
lead into the first intermission.
Mauro was penalized for five
minutes late in the second period,
and that helped lead to
two quick North Reading goals
and a 4-1 deficit.
After Saugus’s Massey Ventre
whipped in a shorthanded goal
off a rebound to make it 4-2,
North Reading tallied again to
increase its lead to three. Jason
Caron connected for a thirdperiod
score to close the gap
to 5-3, and Keegan netted his
second tally of the day with just
over a minute to go and goalie
Jack Devereaux out of the net.
The contest would not have
been as close had it not been
for the stellar goaltending by
Devereaux, who was pressured
all game and held North Reading
at bay. He made an amazing
61 saves on 66 shots to keep
his team in it. The major penalty
to Mauro proved to be a key
turning point. North Reading
scored three times while Mauro
was in the box.
“We’re not built to be a man
down or play four-on-four
hockey, and Mauro is one of our
better players,” said Natalucci.
“He’s a captain and a guy we
need on the ice. We can’t have
him in the penalty box for five
minutes.”
In the loss to Peabody, eighth
grader Cam Anderson scored
his first varsity goal to account
for the lone Sachems tally. Saugus
is scheduled to host Lynn at
Kasabuski on Saturday (scheduled
8 p.m. faceoff).
Saugus goalie Jack Devereaux maneuvers for position in the crease against a North Reading
forward. Devereaux stopped 61 shots in last Thursday’s first-round defeat.
Call
Driveways
from $25
׉	 7cassandra://v4KCjtgone3QGt_wrhJJ4W9eTSumHYh9nG27NmyTTbs0q`̰ ^A{׉ETHE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – Friday, January 3, 2020
Page 15
Saugus girls
lose to Everett
By Greg Phipps
W
ith about a week of practice
time under their belt,
the Saugus High School girls’
basketball team hoped to resume
the season on a winning
note. Unfortunately, they ran
up against an undefeated Everett
squad and came out on
the short end of a 50-36 final
Monday night.
The loss left the Lady Sachems
at 2-2 on the early season
with a Friday contest on tap
at Winthrop. Saugus will then
host Lynn Classical on Monday.
One highlight in the Everett
contest was Taylor Bogdanski
Saugus boys fall twice
after earning first win
finishing with a career-high 15
points. No other Saugus player
reached double figures. Fallon
Millerick netted seven while
Kiley Ronan and Molly Granara
held their own defensively
against a formidable Everett
front line.
Thus far, Saugus’s victories
have come against Salem and
Beverly, with the two defeats
being handed down by Lynn
English in the season opener
and Everett on Monday. The
Lady Sachems are looking to
carry over the momentum of
a 14-8 campaign a year ago –
a season that included a first
round playoff win.
By Greg Phipps
M
aking some adjustments
on defense, the Saugus
High School boys’ basketball
team earned its first victory of
the season last Monday, Dec.
23, at home. But the Sachems
couldn’t extend the momentum
of that first win and ended
up dropping their next two
games to fall to 1-5 as the New
Year enters.
Senior forward and team captain
Christian Correia poured
home 28 points in a 77-62 win
over Essex Tech. That contest
featured an effective 2-3 zone
defense employed by Saugus
– a move that led to numerous
turnovers and mistakes
by the opposition. Joe Lusso
contributed 19 points to the
victory, and Myles Manalaysay
dropped in 15. Nick Israelnew
traffic safety enforcement
unit staffed by three police officers
is a top priority in the
town budget he would be recommending
for the 2020 fiscal
year that begins July 1. His request
– which was also recommended
by Interim Police Chief
Ronald C. Giorgetti – passed at
the Annual Town Meeting.
There is no basis for speed
limit reduction on major Saugus
streets, according to a consultant
hired by the town to do
a town-wide speed limit study;
The Engineering Corp. (TEC)
of Andover offered preliminary
recommendations for six
streets.
One of the highlights of the
Saugus’s Taylor Bogdanski, shown here in action against
Beverly, finished with a career-high 15 points in a loss to
Everett on Monday. (Advocate Photo by Greg Phipps)
town-wide speed limit analysis
was the installation of solar
radar speed signs, which Crabtree
said have had “a pretty
good calming effect” on drivson
also netted six points and
grabbed six rebounds.
“We had a lot of really good
performances. Christian played
great, Joe came out hot and
Myles is really starting to settle
into the offense,” head coach
Mark Bertrand told the press
after the game. “When we can
get all three of them going in
a game like we did tonight, we
can really be dangerous on offense.”
Lusso
produced 10 points in
the opening quarter as Saugus
led 22-12 after one period.
and increased the margin
to 40-27 by halftime. After an
Essex Tech rally made it a seven-point
game, the Sachems
went on a late-third-quarter
surge to build the advantage
back to 59-42 after three
quarters.
Last Friday, despite strong
PUBLIC OUTRAGE | from page 6
ing. More than a dozen of the
solar speed signs had been installed
by year’s end.
Wheelabrator issues
Relations between town
officials and Wheelabrator
Technologies, Inc. remained
strained. Wheelabrator representatives
continued to skip
Board of Health meetings, contending
that the board’s ongoing
threats of litigation against
the company created an adversarial
atmosphere.
A Suffolk Superior Court
judge concluded that the state
Department of Environmental
Protection (MassDEP) made
the right decision in approving
Wheelabrator Technologies,
Inc.’s plans to expand the
ash landfill at its trash-to-energy
plant on Route 107.
New issues of conflict arose
games from Correia and Manalaysay,
the Sachems couldn’t
keep up with the Beverly Panthers
and fell by a 67-56 final
last Friday at home. Correia finished
with a double-double effort
of 15 points and 12 boards
while Manalaysay tallied 13
points and had four steals.
On Monday, the Sachems
found themselves in a close
battle, trailing 35-30 after three
quarters at Medford. But they
managed just 10 points in the
final stanza while the hosts put
up 15 in an eventual 50-40 loss.
Points were at a premium in
this one, as Correia once again
had a team-high 14, followed
by Israelson with 13 and Manalaysay
with nine.
The Sachem boys host Winthrop
this Friday night and travel
to take on Lynn Classical on
Monday.
during 2019. The first one developed
when Wheelabrator
Technologies, Inc. shut down
its trash-to-energy plant on
Route 107 to make repairs to
solve noise problems which
had bothered residents in Saugus
and Revere for two weeks.
At that point, the Board of
Health voted to hold Wheelabrator
accountable for alleged
noise violations, noting that
stiff fines and revocation were
possible.
Area citizens rallied on the
front lawn at Town Hall to protest
noise from Wheelabrator.
During a show cause hearing
held by the Board of Health,
a Wheelabrator official apologized
for the noise, but insisted
the company kept the state
and Board of Health informed
of its response to problems.
A Wheelabrator attorney disagreed
with the “violations” cited
by the Board of Health.
Also last year, MassDEP issued
a draft approval to Wheelabrator
Saugus, Inc. on its
pending application to update
its existing Emission Control
Plan (ECP). State Rep. RoseLee
Vincent said MassDEP officials
misled her about the preliminary
ECP for Wheelabrator
Technologies. Saugus and
Revere residents expressed
concerns about Wheelabrator
Technologies, Inc. being allowed
to use emission credits
to meet proposed pollution
standards.
Wheelabrator and MassDEP
PUBLIC OUTRAGE | SEE PAGE 19
׉	 7cassandra://sdUK57BwyYn7RKcuj3-hc_mWh9IiMl7q5JfAWmlIKdw)9`̰ ^A{ҁ^A{с
PבCט   (u׉׉	 7cassandra://m6xkz-VY0R1SSDSUYPDYS7Q-gRjNMrEHhyKZubBjw4Y `)׉	 7cassandra://PNOllS8Jm0GxucZfyDS_IawRS7hX8av66eBWed0q8og͖`J׉	 7cassandra://Wxpcd656rUsk6Gr0NxHbTlQhmA1WVpFwI_TbwKTmkLc,`̰ ׉	 7cassandra://L8782fskNO4Km8J7vvYfcyiWgBOkKMGoYzS5JiXsOH0 ͈͠^A{	ט ( (u׉׉	 7cassandra://H6SD_z4swCmI5IHi81YdE9ROW5YvHdB0DjgeeiSafQs nl`)׉	 7cassandra://HEcKqo-yzfdkNoqs3W0zB6npKAHu58dQZxr9cbw4j5o͍8`J׉	 7cassandra://mxWJHsJKsBp4qPDod-9zN-qplOiXdHPoGUXgPY61P_U)`̰ ׉	 7cassandra://pgHtREMrWftIimCOjx-xSSIUq7ISi0WZ6XWEnoMHciU ~,͠^A{
נ^A{ C9ׁH #http://www.reverealuminumwindow.comׁׁЈ׉EPage 16
THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – Friday, January 3, 2020
YEAR IN REVIEW | from page 13
A FUTURE HOME: Saugus TV personnel, town officials and others gather for a groundbreaking ceremony in the backyard of 30 Main St., home of the Saugus
Historical Society – and the future home of Saugus TV – where a major construction and renovation project began last month.
of dollars to build a new Middle-High
School and to renovate
other buildings, there is no
guarantee the quality of Saugus
Public Schools will improve
when the new facilities open,
according to a report released
by the state Department of Elementary
and Secondary Education.
Citing a long list of deficiencies
which need to be corrected
to improve the schools,
the “District Review Report” declares
“The urgent need for a
series of changes.” Saugus Public
Schools are hindered by the
lack of leadership and school
improvement plans, according
to the District Review Report.
On average, homeowners
will pay $178 more and businesses
$160 more, under new
tax rates approved by the selectmen.
Selectmen approve
a Peabody family entertainment
business’s relocation to
Square One Mall. Wheelabrator
and MassDEP sign a consent
order over summer noise that
disturbed Revere and Saugus
residents. Board of Selectmen
Chair Cogliano advocates the
creation of a special committee
on Wheelabrator issues. Saugus
Firefighter Anthony Roger
Arone and Fire Department
Lieutenant William E. Cross are
recognized at the state’s 30th
Annual Firefighter of the Year
Awards Ceremony.
December
Nearly a week after Alan Joseph
Silipigni’s tragic death,
the spirit of the Saugus boy
sparks a celebration of his life
at the town’s Annual Tree Lighting
Ceremony. Town Meeting
Member Peter Manoogian submits
an article for the 2020 Annual
Town Meeting that would
prohibit Saugus elected officials
from obtaining town employment
or contracts during
their term of office.
Student learning outcomes
in Saugus Public Schools are
jeopardized by inconsistent instruction
and curriculum districtwide,
according to the District
Review Report. The report
further states that Saugus Public
Schools are limited by an inability
to analyze data used for
measuring educational progress.
And high turnover in administration
has hampered efforts
for professional development
of Saugus Public Schools
educators. Too many students
in Saugus Public Schools are
getting suspended while the
school district is also plagued
by “high chronic absence rates”
for grades 7-12, according to
the report.
A 31-foot Norway spruce that
was planted in the island near
the Civil War monument in
Saugus Center takes the place
SAVORING SAVE SUCCESS: Precinct 1 Town Meeting Member
Ann Devlin, who is also president of Saugus Action Volunteers
for the Environment (SAVE), is thrilled after Town Meeting
approved two environmental articles: one to greatly reduce the
use of plastic checkout bags, and another measure to reduce
the use of polystyrene food containers.
׉	 7cassandra://Wxpcd656rUsk6Gr0NxHbTlQhmA1WVpFwI_TbwKTmkLc,`̰ ^A{׉ETHE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – Friday, January 3, 2020
Page 17
ASKS| from page 1
gliano Realty Services and also
a licensed realtor with Littlefield
Real Estate, which is also located
in Saugus. He was first elected
to the Saugus Board of Selectmen
in 1991 and served for
10 years before taking a break
from Saugus politics. Highlights
of this week’s interview follow.
Q: What do you consider
the most significant events
that happened in Saugus during
2019?
A: From a political standof
the Colorado blue spruce,
which stood 45 to 48 feet tall
before it got knocked down by
a reckless Lynn driver in July. Retired
town nurse Ginny Atwood
talks about turning 100 years
old. Selectmen welcome public
input at a Jan. 14 workshop on
various projects and key issues.
Four Precinct 10 Town Meeting
members caucus and select
Peter Delios, Jr. to fill the Town
Meeting seat vacated by Michael
Serino after he was elected
to the Board of Selectmen. A
Saugus woman is charged with
wire fraud after allegedly stealing
more than $400,000 from
her elderly uncle. Alex Mello
is hired as the town’s new Senior
Planner, filling a position
that has been vacant for more
point, the laying off of our
custodians turned out to be
the most significant event in
2019 in my opinion. The public
hearings on the subject were
nothing short of embarrassing,
and because of it the citizens
of Saugus spoke and replaced
the entire School Committee
– Tommy Whittredge
being voted in as Chairman,
along with former School
Committee Members Arthur
Grabowski and John Hatch
YEAR IN REVIEW | from page 16
than a year. A construction and
renovation project begins at
the Saugus Historical Society
building on Main Street, breaking
ground for the future site
of Saugus TV. Precinct 2 Town
Meeting member Bob Camuso
warns about Revere development’s
negative impact on
dead-end streets in Saugus.
Board of Selectmen Chair Anthony
W. Cogliano, Sr. says he
is concerned about a proposed
development being considered
by Revere officials having a negative
impact on traffic and the
quality of life in the Cliftondale
neighborhood. A man escapes
potential life-threatening injuries
after his car hits a tree near
the area of 119 Main St. and
rolls over on its roof.
and new Members Dennis
Gould and Ryan Fisher. I also
believe it had a huge effect on
the Board of Selectmen’s race
as well. Former Selectman Michael
Serino was once again
elected to the Board along
with Vice Chairman Corinne
Riley and myself, while incumbents
Jeff Cicolini and
Deb Panetta maintained their
seats. People were looking for
change and this was a huge
statement on their behalf.
We also saw the retirement
of one of Saugus’s favorites,
Police Officer Tim Fawcett, and
the passing of longtime DPW
Director Joe Attubato. Just after
Thanksgiving we shared in
grief with the sudden passing
of Allan Silipigni. What makes
this community great is our
people, and they didn’t disappoint
with the tremendous
outpouring of support for the
Silipigni Family at our Annual
Tree Lighting.
Q: What do you see as the
major issues facing the town
in 2019?
A: As I
look to the year
ahead, there are many things
to address. If the custodians
were a tough issue to handle
last year, the School Committee
will be faced with even
more tough personnel decisions
as we close four elementary
schools and get ready for
the opening of the new High
School/Middle School.
From the Town side, we
need to solve the development
moratorium as a result
of the rezoning of Rt 1., the
ASKS| SEE PAGE 22
www.reverealuminumwindow.com
׉	 7cassandra://mxWJHsJKsBp4qPDod-9zN-qplOiXdHPoGUXgPY61P_U)`̰ ^A{ԁ^A{Ӂ
PבCט   (u׉׉	 7cassandra://bncxcNLxsTH-JhObEW2AN4kc2XCBDRNJ5FEJBk1_U14 
N` )׉	 7cassandra://iQc4ccwcSrQ0xLp3ogiMHH6tEhEVsVm0dMrSjz2e2LM͓<`J׉	 7cassandra://-jX3F1z4ssA3B65jco8X0hIHV9GjLbH8xztm-ArIBo0#p`̰ ׉	 7cassandra://vHTfhU05wBR98gQX7tNpjhZG4ppq3dysGI6u-FerGsQͲ͠^A{ט ( (u׉׉	 7cassandra://P5_Bsu1L_B68IGWGBr3VuZDMlEEHRTYXC-ORUULBmkM 
}` )׉	 7cassandra://kpsICm6b-PlUhtyUZcEzx7ZCp3yb17a2LN0UY5j3Vk0͍`J׉	 7cassandra://Zg7UuQwGFpCIlH3fHY-XnNdC3eOi2AZUC4H0y6-SFGw#`̰ ׉	 7cassandra://pmd8DLQ5iLjIekouRcIfj7yXr0PZhmpcQvu1CSsu_2I %U ͠^A{נ^A{ 	a̣9ׁHmailto:mvoge@comcast.netׁׁЈנ^A{ 	0Vb9ׁHhttp://62saugus.orgׁׁЈנ^A{ 	0̭9ׁHmailto:bferringo@comcast.netׁׁЈנ^A{ 	09ׁHmailto:pack62saugus@gmail.comׁׁЈנ^A{ H9ׁHmailto:Cmoreschi@saugus-ma.govׁׁЈ׉E+SPage 18
THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – Friday, January 3, 2020
THE SOUNDS
OF SAUGUS By Mark Vogler
H
ere are a few tidbits that you might want to know about
this week in Saugus.
Happy New Decade
If you like numbers, this is going to be an interesting year. It’s
the start of a new decade. It’s also a presidential election year.
And, in case you are interested, the Massachusetts Presidential
Primary is set for March 3 – just a couple of months from now.
And for those of us who graduated from High School in 1970,
it’s also a class reunion year. So, a few of us will be celebrating
their 50th.
I’m a member of the Joseph Case High School Class of 1970.
We had about 160 members in our class. Case was a small school
back then, which set by the Swansea Dam in Swansea, Mass.
Swansea was and still is a small town of under 16,000 people
located in Bristol County in southeastern Massachusetts near
Fall River and about a dozen miles southeast of Providence, R.I.
As I recall – though my graduating class was a small one – we
were on double sessions during my last two years. Eventually,
the town got a new high school and Case High became Joseph
Case Junior High School. I for one, along with a lot of other
Swansea natives, think the Junior High School is a better building
than the high school that it replaced.
I’m on a roll this morning about Case after getting an email
reminding me that 2020 is a reunion year for the Class of 1970.
But I was also reminded that it was up to each class to plan and
organize its own event. And at the moment, there is no reunion
scheduled for the Joseph Case High Class of 1970. And from what
I understand, there probably won’t be one.
But if there were one, I’d be interested in going back and seeing
how my classmates made out. The last time I went to a reunion
was 30 years ago.
“The Year in Review”
This week’s edition of The Saugus Advocate is devoted to a look
back at 2019 and some of the major events that happened over
the last 12 months.
In the course of my journalism career, I always found it a lot
of fun to assemble a “Year in Review” edition, particularly for a
weekly newspaper. This is my fourth “Year in Review” issue for The
Saugus Advocate. I find it interesting to leaf through 52 newspapers
and select the top stories and photos that chronicle a year
of life in a community.
Of course, it’s a lot of work and takes a considerable commitment
of time to look through each of the week’s papers. And
that’s the only way to determine what the major stories were,
which ones were the most important, the most interesting and
the most entertaining over a year’s time.
This year, there is no question which Saugus story tops them
all – the case of the 21 custodians who were replaced by a private
Lynn company. The letters-to-the-editor opining on the issue
whether the school district is better off with them or without
them began trickling in in March. And we got more letters
on the custodians than on any other topic. We ran more “Advocate
Asks” interviews on privatization of custodial services than
on any other issue. Overall, there were far more stories – particularly
front-page stories – than on any other subject we covered
in The Saugus Advocate during the year.
There were other education stories – like MCAS results and the
state Department of Elementary and Secondary Education’s District
Review Report – that were far more significant to our readers
than the custodians issue. And also the ongoing construction
of the new Saugus Middle-High School, which is due to open
this year (spring for the middle school and the fall for the high
school). But none of those hit home and on the same humane
level as the plight of the custodians, who are truly the unsung
heroes who work for the betterment of the schools.
The Saugus Public Schools custodians getting the shaft from
the school administration in a way that truly lacked transparency
was a story that everyone can relate to: young kids, teenagers,
college kids, parents and senior citizens.
And depending on what happens with the pending and multiple
Open Meeting Law (OML) complaints, Saugus residents
could be talking about it for months to come.
As an outsider coming into Saugus several days a week, I observed
that what happened to the school custodians really stuck
in the average Saugonian’s craw.
As Peter Manoogian put it in an interview shortly after the
election: “It’s not so much that it was done, but how it was done.
I believe the people of Saugus have a fundamental fairness. You
don’t treat people that way – the way they were treated at the
June meeting.”
Agreed.
Had the School Committee held public discussions on the
privatization of custodial services instead of being so secretive
and adopting “a public-be-damned” attitude, the discourse
would have been more civil. The process would have been fair,
and anyone who wanted to talk about the issue would have had
the opportunity
Instead, the custodians didn’t receive a fair shake. The voters,
for the most part, understood this well. And there was payback
at the ballot box.
Open Meeting Law determinations overdue
As far as the Open Meeting Law complaints filed by The Saugus
Advocate and others alleging violations by the School Committee
in their decision to privatize the custodians, the time for
determinations by the state Attorney General’s Division of Open
Government is ridiculously late. We’re into the seventh month
now. That’s way too long
And the cynical side of me wonders whether the Division of
Open Government even cares about making a determination
at this point.
I was told back in late October that it would probably be December
by the time the complaint was reviewed because of a
backlog of cases. I called the division a couple of weeks ago and
left a message, but got no response back.
I will withhold judgment on the division’s thoroughness and
quality of work until I see the written determination. But it sure
does seem like the OML was in better hands when each county’s
District Attorney’s Office had a prosecutor who specialized
in OML complaints.
I remember the Essex County District Attorney’s Office having
a prosecutor named Bender who was highly efficient in dispensing
these cases. Bender could determine within weeks if not
days whether there was a violation. Now we’re talking months
and half years to get the job done.
If the Attorney General is so interested in Open Government,
she needs to spend more time making sure that it works.
Early primary voting
This just in from Town Clerk Ellen Schena: There will be Early
Voting for five days only for the upcoming March 3, 2020, Presidential
Primary Election. The dates for Early Voting are Monday,
February 24 through Friday, February 28. Early Voting will take
place in the Town Clerk’s Office during regular Town Hall hours:
Monday: 8:30 a.m. to 7 p.m.; Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday:
8:15 a.m. to 5 p.m.; and Friday: 8:15 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. Absentee
Voting will remain the same as in all past elections.
A “shout-out” for Ruth Berg
I got an email this week from Ruth Berg, one of the founders of
the North Shore Computer Society. Ruth sent me an email with
a flyer attached titled “The Second Coming...of Santa.”
“‘Santa’ will tell you how to save money on your Comcast bill,
as well as answer your questions. Santa already helped one customer
save $60 per month, and in addition provided Netflix for
free!” according to the flyer.
“Presented by the North Shore Computer Society, a 501(c)(7)
nonprofit. Find out more at: www.northshorecomputer.org, call
978-977-2618, or email: info@northshorecomputer.org”
If you want to find out about it firsthand, go listen to the presentation
of Comcast Service Representative Richard Mireault at
7 p.m. on Thursday, Jan. 9 at the Peabody Municipal Light Plant
at 201 Warren St., Ext., Peabody.
Oh, by the way, Ruth tells me she is the one who got $60 shaved
off her monthly Comcast bill. It’s worth checking out.
A shout-out for David Silipigni
Joseph Silipigni tells us that is brother David did a masterful
job in launching a holiday Toys for Tots Drive in memory of Joe’s
son, Alan Joseph Silipigni, the 14-year-old Saugus High School
student who died unexpectedly in late November. Joe said the
drive raised $12,670.
“Alan’s memory sure did help many kids in need this Holiday
Season,” Joe said of his late son.
Want to “shout-out” a fellow Saugonian?
This is an opportunity for our paper’s readers to single out –
in a brief mention – remarkable acts or achievements by Saugus
residents, or an act of kindness or a nice gesture. Just send
an email (mvoge@comcast.net) with the mention in the subject
line of “An Extra Shout-Out”
– no more than a paragraph –
anything longer might lend itself
to a story and/or photo.
Volunteer civic
opportunities galore
If you didn’t get elected to
public office this fall or wish
you ran, there’s plenty of opportunities
for you to get involved
in public service to Saugus.
You can still help the town
out in a constructive fashion.
You don’t have to get elected
to perform some public service.
Become a part of the town’s future.
Here’s
a few opportunities
you might want to check out.
The Saugus Town Manager is
accepting resumes/applications
from Saugus residents for
several volunteer positions on
the following Boards or Commissions:
Board
of Assessors: The responsibility
of this Board is to
annually determine the full and
fair market value of all real estate
in the town. Guidelines are
set by the Dept. of Revenue, Bureau
of Local Assessment.
Board of Health: They are
responsible for protecting and
serving the citizens in health
areas, such as food sanitation,
restaurants, markets and compliance
with the state sanitary
and other health codes as well
as emergency preparedness.
Medical degree or physicians
preferred.
Boats and Waterways Commission:
The responsibilities of
these positions are to provide a
clear, effective and professional
policy, that will ensure the interests
of commercial, fishing
and recreational boating and
that the waterways will be accessible
to all citizens. One position
requires that the person
be a waterway-abutting homeowner
with no commercial interest
in waterways or adjacent
lands. One position requires
that the person be a Saugus
Town Meeting Member.
Commission on Disabilities:
The responsibilities of
these positions are to answer
questions and provide referral
guidance regarding disability-related
issues in accordance
with the Mass. General Laws.
Conservation Commission:
The Commission’s responsibility
is to preserve the natural resources
of Saugus and to protect
the remaining open spaces,
wildlife, salt marshes, and
ponds, and to restore streams
and the Saugus River to their
natural state.
Historical Commission: The
Commission’s responsibility is
to preserve and register all historical
sites in Saugus.
Planning Board: The Board’s
responsibilities are to hear, review
and vote on the applicaSOUNDS
| SEE PAGE 19
׉	 7cassandra://-jX3F1z4ssA3B65jco8X0hIHV9GjLbH8xztm-ArIBo0#p`̰ ^A{׉E&uTHE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – Friday, January 3, 2020
Page 19
PUBLIC OUTRAGE | from page 15
later in the year signed a consent
order over the summer
noise that disturbed Revere
and Saugus residents. Board
of Selectmen Chair Anthony W.
Cogliano, Sr. advocated the creation
of a special committee on
Wheelabrator issues.
The indictment of
Selectman Mark Mitchell
A Suffolk County grand
jury indicted Selectman Mark
Mitchell on 18 counts; the prosecutor
said Mitchell allegedly
embezzled close to $1.3 million
from the Boston Center
for Adult Education during his
eight years as controller of the
Boston-based nonprofit. Mitchell
is also charged with the alleged
embezzlement of funds
from his own political campaign.
All
four of Mitchell’s colleagues
on the Saugus Board of
Selectmen said Mitchell should
resign from the board. They
said Mitchell lost the public’s
trust and became a distraction
after being indicted for his alleged
embezzlement of nearly
$1.3 million from the Boston
Center for Adult Education during
the eight years he served as
its controller.
Earlier in the year, Mitchell
was named in a lawsuit filed by
the Boston Center for Adult Education,
which alleges that the
Saugus selectman “misappropriated”
at least $515,000 during
his time as controller.
Work continues on the
new Saugus MiddleHigh
School
It’s the biggest and most expensive
project in town and
has been a major, ongoing stoSOUNDS
| from page 18
tions proposed to the Town of Saugus regarding subdivision
plans, zoning special permits, rezoning issues and site plan review
of permits.
Youth and Recreation: The Commission was established for
ry since its conception. In late
October, the town reported
that about 60 percent of the
work had been completed on
the construction of the new
Saugus Middle-High School
project since work had begun
on the project during the summer
of 2018.
When complete, the new
Middle-High School complex
will total 270,000 total square
feet, including a 12,000-squarefoot
gymnasium and capacity
for 1,360 students in grades
6-12. It will house state-of-theart
science labs and technology
classrooms, fine and performing
arts classrooms and a
750-seat auditorium. In addition,
plans include a new sports
complex and outdoor track,
walking paths, outdoor classrooms
and student gardens.
Current plans call for the Middle
School to open in the spring
and for classes to start in the
new High School in the fall.
Environmental
victories for SAVE
It is a rare, uphill battle for any
warrant article submitted to
Town Meeting to pass without
a favorable recommendation
from the Finance Committee.
But Saugus Action Volunteers
for the Environment (SAVE) received
overwhelming support
from the Town Meeting on
two articles which the Finance
Committee had recommended
to be postponed indefinitely.
SAVE authored an article to
greatly reduce the use of plastic
checkout bags, and another
measure to reduce the use
of and polystyrene food containers.
The
Finance Committee had
recommended the articles be
postponed indefinitely because
members preferred to
see the state Legislature adopt
the purpose of carrying out programs including but not limited
to, those designed to meet the opportunities, challenges and
problems of the youths of the town.
If you are interested in volunteering and are a resident of Saugus,
please submit a letter of interest and resume to: Saugus
Town Manager; 298 Central Street, Suite 1; Saugus, MA 01906,
or email Cmoreschi@saugus-ma.gov.
Other volunteer opportunities
This info is from Wendy Reed, clerk of the Saugus Board of Se1.
“Wonder Girl” was a character
on what TV series?
2. What planet is known for its
ring?
3. On Jan. 4, 1965, who called for
creating the “Great Society”?
4. What does USB mean?
5. How many bones are in the
human body: 51, 102 or 206?
6. On Jan 5, 1914, due to mass
production benefits, what
manufacturer changed its wage
rate to be $5/eight hours from
$2.40/nine hours?
7. What is the Eve of Epiphany also
called?
8. On Jan. 6, 1941, whose State of
the Union message concerned
Four Freedoms?
9. What is the name of Little
Orphan Annie’s dog?
10. Who was the first person elected
to the Swimming Hall of Fame in
Fort Lauderdale, Fla.?
11. What is the body’s largest
internal organ?
12. What fruit is gewürztraminer?
13. On Jan. 7, 1896, who came
out with “The Boston CookingSchool
Cookbook”?
14. In January 1793, the first
successful U.S. balloon flight was
witnessed by what president?
15. On Jan. 8, 1902, what founder
of humanistic psychology was
born? (Hint: initials CR.)
16. What pair appeared in “Keeper
of the Flame,” “Adam’s Rib”
and “Guess Who’s Coming to
Dinner”?
17. On Jan. 9, 1913, what U.S.
president was born whose
parents had a citrus farm?
18. What group has a monthly
magazine called Boys’ Life?
19. President Abraham Lincoln
thought that reading what is
“the best cure for the ‘Blues’”?
(Hint: starts with B.)
20. On Jan. 10, 1812, the New
Orleans became the first of what
type of boat to travel down the
Mississippi?
Answers below, please no cheating!
FROM
PAGE 19
lectmen.
Selectmen are extending the deadline for those interested in
applying for the following positions on volunteer boards:
The Affordable Housing Trust Board of Trustees
The Cemetery Commission
The Cultural Council
These are volunteer/nonpaid positions for Saugus residents.
Those interested may submit a letter of interest/resume no later
than January 14, 2020, to:
Saugus Board of Selectmen
Saugus Town Hall, Suite #4
298 Central Street
Saugus, MA 01906
Breakfast at Legion Hall
Cpl. Scott J. Procopio Saugus American Legion Post 210 is in
its seventh year of Friday morning breakfasts. The doors open
at 7:30 a.m. at 44 Taylor St. in Saugus. Breakfast will be served
from 8 to 9 a.m. The breakfasts will run through the end of May,
with the exception of school vacations or Fridays when there is
no school. A $6 donation is requested, with all proceeds going
to help the Legion operate. Everyone is welcome, according to
John Cannon, the cook on duty.
Main attractions at the Saugus Public Library
There’s always something interesting or entertaining going
on at the Saugus Public Library – for people of all ages –
from young children to senior citizens. Here are a few events to
check out:
• Annual Food for Fines: now through Feb. 29. The library will
help you so that you may help others. If you have overdue fines,
the library will reduce your fines in return for donations of nonperishable
food, Donations will be given to local food pantries.
Your fines will be reduced $1 for each item donated. Please don’t
drop off expired food.
• Friendship Storytime on Fridays continues. This special program
for children, which begins at 9:30 a.m., is sponsored by the
Coordinated Family & Community Engagement Grant. It can help
parents nurture their child’s social and early literacy skills with
structured story time.
• Let’s Get Ready For Kindergarten Playgroup! This playgroup,
which is sponsored by the Coordinated Family & Community Engagement
Grant, helps kids prepare for kindergarten. Fall and
winter hours are Saturdays at 10 a.m. It’s recommended for children
ages three through five. Activities change weekly.
comprehensive regulations for
Massachusetts instead of the
town adopting local regulations
that might conflict with
state policies.
Planning for the future:
building moratorium
State Attorney General Maura
Healey’s Office has approved
the temporary building moratorium
on multifamily units
that was adopted during a Special
Town Meeting in April. The
measure bans the construction
of multifamily homes of three
units or more.
Crabtree said the temporary
moratorium was necessary because
the town has been experiencing
an unanticipated
increase in the construction of
multifamily dwellings. He noted
the town was conducting
a comprehensive study of the
PUBLIC OUTRAGE | SEE PAGE 20
Cub Scout and Boy
Scout recruitment
Cub Scout Pack 62 and Boy
Scout Troop 62 are still seeking
new members after a successful
recruitment effort on
Founders Day. Cubs can sign
up on Monday nights from
6:45 to 8 p.m. at the Cliftondale
Congregational Church at
50 Essex St. in Saugus. Please
use the door marked “office” in
the front of the church. We are
located in the basement. Cub
Pack 62 welcomes boys from
age five (kindergarten) to age
10 (Grade 5.)
Boy Scouts can register on
Tuesday nights from 6:45 to
8:30 p.m. in the basement of
the Cliftondale Congregational
Church. Our Boy Scout program
is for young men ages 10
1/2 to 17 (Grades 6-12)
For any questions on our Cub
Scout program, please contact
Cubmaster Bill Ferringo at
pack62saugus@gmail.com or
bferringo@comcast.net. For Boy
Scouts, please contact Scoutmaster
John Kane at troop62saugus.org
or 781-389-2708.
Let’s hear it!
Got an idea, passing thought
or gripe you would like to
share with The Saugus Advocate?
I’m always interested in
your feedback. It’s been more
than three and a half years
since I began work at The Saugus
Advocate. I’m always interested
in hearing readers’ suggestions
for possible stories
or good candidates for “The
Advocate Asks” interview of
the week. Feel free to email
me at mvoge@comcast.net.
Do you have some interesting
views on an issue that you want
to express to the community?
Submit your idea. If I like it, we
can meet for a 15- to 20-minute
interview at a local coffee shop.
And I’ll buy the coffee.
1.
“Wonder Woman”
2. Saturn
3. President Lyndon Johnson
4. Universal Serial Bus
5. 206
6. The Ford Motor Company
7. Twelfth Night
8. President Franklin D. Roosevelt
9. Sandy
10. Johnny Weissmuller
11. Liver
12. A grape
13. Fannie Farmer
14. George Washington
15. Carl Rogers
16. Katherine Hepburn and Spencer
Tracy
17. Richard Nixon
18. The Boy Scouts of America
19. The Bible
20. Steamboat
׉	 7cassandra://Zg7UuQwGFpCIlH3fHY-XnNdC3eOi2AZUC4H0y6-SFGw#`̰ ^A{ց^A{Ձ
PבCט   (u׉׉	 7cassandra://P0VFHlHX8oGJTqyrL79kHORpcvyZMjAv7QgoeBZ7VXU N8`)׉	 7cassandra://8bjB46WQIifd-e57Bn4zopxlC84_tbA5pDNkH8lTQf4ͣt`J׉	 7cassandra://En-X9g8qM1o1TbOIiOLaK6rjxqkJTSDuNDPbKRYD_jo-`̰ ׉	 7cassandra://2b6XQbShQQLDJFq05jNy_3ajhupf76csHV7tWxJDEhA \͠^A{ט ( (u׉׉	 7cassandra://3r9jaTLZ71xkdzWKFKc_GSGP4xQTtE29sWDb_HnN2Nc `)׉	 7cassandra://z4lihzD-XIfYKtfBS9oTXfmIYlJmgTWvtEGKj0gk18Qͥ`J׉	 7cassandra://VK7Owl9qLWEr5llOqyY35LICrYTWY4rY-xa-gXmV3xM1v`̰ ׉	 7cassandra://6g3HpMxieEoO-aSqJyGCWBPaZRLwy5c31QVXgdOTJJQ i͠^A{נ^A{ w.9ׁHhttp://www.advocatenews.netׁׁЈנ^A{ 9ׁHmailto:Christine27@comcast.netׁׁЈ׉EPage 20
PUBLIC OUTRAGE | from page 19
construction’s impact on police,
fire, emergency public safety,
the school district, the water,
sewer, roadway infrastructure
and the safety of the general
public.
THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – Friday, January 3, 2020
wide Master Plan.
The impact of development
on the town has become a major
issue. During a Special Town
Meeting last year, members approved
$150,000 for upgrading
and completion of the townGetting
a new home
for Saugus TV
It was a busy and productive
year for the staff and Board of
Directors of Saugus TV.
A Special Town Meeting in
September approved $550,000
to build a Public, Education
and Government (PEG) access
studio/facility in Saugus.
Town Meeting members also
approved a $275,000 request
to buy equipment for the studio.
They also voted to provide
$215,088 for the operating budget
of the PEG access studio.
In December, Saugus TV and
Commercial Snow Services
* Everett * Chelsea * Revere * East Boston
Call Anthony (617) 212-2003
* Snow Plowing * Sanding Services
* Snow Plowing * Shoveling
* Parking Lots * Condominums
* Businesses
Over 35 Years of Experience!
Experienced
Bartender/Server
wanted for restaurant
in Everett Square.
Call
(617) 387-9810
EVERETT
MALDEN
REVERE
SAUGUS
A
dvocAte
Newspapers
Published weekly by
The Advocate Newspapers, Inc.
• MAIN OFFICE •
573 Broadway, Everett, MA 02149
Mailing Address:
PO Box 490407, Everett, MA 02149
Telephone: (617) 387-2200 / (781) 286-8500
(781) 233-4446 / FAX: (617) 381-0800
Email us at:
Jmitchell@advocatenews.net
info@advocatenews.net
James David Mitchell, Publisher
James D. Mitchell, Editor
The Advocate Newspapers, Inc. are free
newspapers published every Friday.
This newspaper assumes no financial responsibility for errors
in advertisements printed herein, but will reprint without
charge that part of an advertisement in which the error occurs.
the Saugus Historical Society
held a joint groundbreaking
ceremony where a new studio
and employee area will be added
onto the 1865-era Saugus
Historical Society building at 30
Main St. The unique, new partnership
forged between Saugus
TV and the Historical Society
should work out ideally for
both nonprofit organizations,
according to Saugus TV Executive
Director Bryan Nadeau.
“Now that we have a home,
inefficient allocation of education
resources in maintaining
and operating six school buildings
-- three of which are over
50 years old,
The school district is headed
we’re trying to revitalize and
keep two nonprofits alive,”
Nadeau said in an interview
later.
“We’re hoping that we can
breathe new life into the Historical
Society. They are still going
to be in the building, and we
will be doing the renovations
in lieu of rent,” he said.
Current plans call for Saugus
TV to move into the Saugus Historical
Society building once it
vacates its current quarters at
the back of the existing Saugus
High School, which is set to be
demolished next year.
Honorable Mention
• Vietnam War veteran Gordon
Shepard received national
award for restoration of G.A.R.
Burial Plot at Riverside Cemetery;
Shepard received the 2019
Founder’s Award from Edward
J. Norris, Commander-in-Chief
of the National Organization
of the Sons of Union Veterans
of the Civil War.
• At Saugus High School’s
148th Commencement Exercises,
95-year-old World War II
Navy veteran Peter J. Decareau
was assisted up to the stage in
REVIEW REPORT | from page 7
in a positive direction with its
ambitious building program.
“The district hopes to find
significant savings in building
operations and maintenance
when grades are reSnow
Shovelers Wanted
(Everett, Revere, Chelsea)
Earn extra money! Need to be in good health to
shovel snow, spread salt, and run a snow blower.
Pays $20 per hour, based on experience.
Call Anthony at (617) 212-2003
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
his wheelchair to get his diploma
and then tipped his cap after
getting a standing ovation
from the Saugus High School
Class of 2019.
• It was a special March tribute
for a dying friend of the Saugus
Police Department – particularly
by his handler, K-9 Officer
Tim Fawcett. K9 Bruin – a nineyear-old
German shepherd that
had been on the Police Department
since February of 2011 –
got an escort from about 30
cruisers from Saugus and area
communities during his final
ride through the streets of Saugus.
Grade School kids holding
posters chanted K-9 Bruin’s
name as they bid him an emotional
farewell.
• During the town’s annual
tree lighting event, town officials
and residents rallied behind
the family of Alan Joseph
Silipigni, a 14-year-old Saugus
High School student who died
unexpectedly in late November.
Many wore Boston Red Sox apparel
at the family’s request and
came to see a special ornament
honoring Alan placed on the giant
Christmas tree.
configured, enabling the district
to locate pre-kindergarten
through grade 12 in just 3
buildings, and close the 3 older
buildings,” the report said.
“As part of a comprehensive
restructuring of its educational
model, the district has secured
funding for construction
of a new middle/high school
building, an addition and renovations
for another school,
and renovations to one other
school building. By 2021, all
students will attend a new, renovated,
or renovated/expanded
school with up-to-date facilities.”
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
LICENSED & INSURED
Call for FREE ESTIMATES!
Offi ce: (781) 233-2244
$
$
$
$
׉	 7cassandra://En-X9g8qM1o1TbOIiOLaK6rjxqkJTSDuNDPbKRYD_jo-`̰ ^A{׉E	2THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – Friday, January 3, 2020
Page 21
“COMPLETE GLASS SERVICE CENTER”
Storefronts & Entrance Doors
Window, floor, deck, and gutter
Custom Mirrors • Table Tops • Auto Glass
Insulated Glass • Window & Screen Repairs
2034 Revere Beach Parkway, Everett
617-389-GLAS
MULLIGAN
CONSTRUCTION
Specializing in: Interior Painting, Exterior Painting, Carpentry,
Bathroom Remodeling, Windows, Decks and More!
* Licensed & Insured - Mike Mulligan, owner
781-738-6933
Walter Robinson
(617) 415-3933
Frank Berardino
MA License 31811
cleaning
Power-washing, trash removal
& clean up
• 24 - Hour Service
• Emergency Repairs
BERARDINO
Plumbing & Heating
Residential & Commercial Service
Gas Fitting • Drain Service
617.699.9383
Senior Citizen Discount
JIM’S
HOME IMPROVEMENT
— General Contractor —
•Kitchens & Baths
• Carpentry • Painting (Int. & Ext.)
• Cleanouts • Windows • Doors
Christine27@comcast.net
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.
• Decks • Additions • All Reasonable
MASS. BUILDER’S LICENSE
NO RESTRICTIONS C.S. 065388
NO JOB TOO BIG, NO JOB TOO SMALL
Call Jim @ 781-910-3649
Now Available by Subscription
Your Hometown News Delivered!
EVERETT ADVOCATE
MALDEN ADVOCATE
REVERE ADVOCATE
SAUGUS ADVOCATE
One year subscription to
The Advocate of your choice:
$80 per paper in-town per year or
$100 per paper out-of-town per year.
Mold & Waterproofing
EXPERTS
Advocate
Call now!
781-233-4446
advertise on the web at
www.advocatenews.net
• Sump Pumps • Walls & Floor Cracks •
ALL WORK GUARANTEED
- Licensed Contractor -
JPG CONSTRUCTION
Cell phone 781-632-7503
508-292-9134
Name_________________________________________
Address_______________________________________
City_______________ State_______ Zip ____________
CC# _______________________________ Exp. _____
Sec. code____ Advocate (City):___________________
Clip & Mail Coupon with Credit Card, Check or Money Order to:
Advocate Newspapers Inc.
PO Box 490407, Everett, MA 02149
Classifieds
׉	 7cassandra://VK7Owl9qLWEr5llOqyY35LICrYTWY4rY-xa-gXmV3xM1v`̰ ^A{؁^A{ׁ
PבCט   (u׉׉	 7cassandra://zgnO61beaQsBYHbnkvbtKpV5WGgq1JXikyWTxeImTlU $`)׉	 7cassandra://l4HG1cCwUQdvOPdpBv5n7IvfpPAGVnx4zb0OAhvfgUcͅ~`J׉	 7cassandra://Gj2jYhm3B0S9-A4t3A-tOgpgDfpjq2jr2zqcIQqMjxs(`̰ ׉	 7cassandra://u5cWcA4eP8H6l8R02QiIwwMxTr21B7u9QzXdULswWGY '(͠^A{ט ( (u׉׉	 7cassandra://KZc4gSIM7AEGhSklE7-sUf1uGvnTXVYfSXi2Uta_NHw F`)׉	 7cassandra://a7jY4SOG1BDA_vHOgFGQVx1iM5fsv5TzoOHgB8E0Z5c͗`J׉	 7cassandra://3TfG9xhR72lNj2HX6DAxoJziOwhkX8qFHdlIu4tlFm40$`̰ ׉	 7cassandra://dbpZE6c6RoVoR5zkMJKTXi2FxbcR-UiSqwbU0Mvb5pA <-͠^A{ נ^A{# !)9ׁHhttp://www.jrs-properties.comׁׁЈ׉EPage 22
THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – Friday, January 3, 2020
ASKS | from page 17
hiring of a planner is, hopefully,
a step in the right direction.
We also need to fill all of our
vacant positions and figure
out why we’ve become a revolving
door.
We will be forming a committee
this month to start discussions
with Wheelabrator
for post-closure use as well
as establishing a host community
agreement whereas
the Town would receive a per
town fee for the ash placed
in the landfill. Lowering the
nitrogen oxide levels will be
number one on the agenda
as the safety of our neighborIS
YOUR HOME NEXT?
The Saugus
Real Estate Listings are
brought to you by:
ing residents is of the utmost
importance.
Discussion of the West Side
fire station that is long overdue
will also begin this month
as part of our Capital Improvements
Plan.
Finding the right fit for the
four schools that are coming
offline will be another major
part of the Capital Plan, and
we will seek plenty of public
input in the discussions.
I am confident that this
Board of Selectmen will work
well together and I’m looking
forward to a great 2020.
I wish everyone a healthy
and Happy New Year and
thank you for your trust in me.
Call for Classified
Advertising Rates
781-233-4446
53 Jackson Street
Saugus, MA 01906
781-813-3325
REAL ESTATE TRANSACTIONS
Copyrighted material previously published in Banker & Tradesman/The Commercial Record, a weekly trade newspaper. It is reprinted with permission
from the publisher, The Warren Group. For a searchable database of real estate transactions and property information visit: www.thewarrengroup.com.
BUYER1
Ortiz-Garcia, Blanca M
Vega, Paula A
12.12.2019
Dang, An
Polito, Kristen D
Mcgilley, Thomas J
Jaynes, Harold
Pai, Ankuei
Jaynes, Kimberly
EVERETT
BUYER2
Ortiz, Victor M
$885 000,00
Dang, Hien
SELLER1
Haskell, Elaine M
Phung, Lam D
Thomas, Christina M
Brosseau, Jaime
JMJ T
Cirrone, James R
Have a
Happy &
Prosperous
New Year!
SELLER2 ADDRESS
15 Central Pl
Raymond F Bourgoin RET
Phung, Hien L
Mcgilley, Thomas J
Bourgoin, Raymond F
14 Summit Ave
7 Austin Ct #B
6 Eastside Ave
Johnston, Patricia H 12 Newcomb Ave
16 Pearl St
CITY
Saugus
Saugus
Saugus
Saugus
Saugus
Saugus
DATE
17.12.2019
33 Blacksmith Way
11.12.2019
11.12.2019
11.12.2019
11.12.2019
11.12.2019
PRICE
$415 000,00
Saugus
$595 000,00
$240 000,00
$35 000,00
$420 000,00
$549 900,00
LYNN - PRICE REDUCED!
53 Jackson St. Saugus
(781) 813-3325
EVERETT - Zoned as a 3 family but used as 2,
great location, open floor plan, Near Wellington
Station, Encore Casino & Shopping.......$699,000
REVERE
Darlene Minincleri & Sue Palomba
LYNN - Great 2 Bedroom, 1 Bath, 1 Parking space.
Move-in Ready. Great neighborhood, close to public
transportation & amenities..............................$284,900
EVERETT
REVERE BEACH - Magnificent Ocean Views from
all windows; Stainless & Granite Kitchen, Balcony,
Brazilian Cherry Floors throughout...........$499,900
ADMIRAL’S HILL - Gorgeous 2 bed,
2 bath..................................$400,000
~ APARTMENTS FOR RENT ~
Revere, Wakefield , Winthrop, East Boston from
$1600 - $2900 / Some incl. all utilties. Call for details!
Call for a FREE Market Analysis
John
Marino
Lea
Doherty
Pat
Rescigno
Rosa
Rescigno
Xavier
Ortiz
Sharon
D’Allesandro
Kevin
O’Toole
Maureen
Gaeta
Kevin Alvorado
(Office Assistant)
EVERETT - 5/5 2 bdrm ea.unit. Spacious eat in
kitchens, hdwd/fls, partial new roof, driveway, and
more. Steps from Orange line....................$699,000
~ Meet our Agents ~
SOLD
׉	 7cassandra://Gj2jYhm3B0S9-A4t3A-tOgpgDfpjq2jr2zqcIQqMjxs(`̰ ^A{׉ETHE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – Friday, January 3, 2020
Page 23
Follow Us On:
COMMERCIAL & RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY SALES & RENTALS
Sandy Juliano
Broker/President
WE KNOW EVERETT!! Call TODAY to sell or buy with the best!
NEW LISTING BY SANDY!
SINGLE-FAMILY
UNDER AGREEMENT!
SINGLE-FAMILY
67 DARTMOUTH ST., EVERETT
NEW PRICE! $484,000
141 CHELSEA ST., EVERETT
NEW PRICE! $685,000
LISTED BY SANDY!
SOLD BY JOE!
CONDO
180 GREEN ST., UNIT 217 MELROSE
$319,900
OPEN HOUSE
SUNDAY
JAN. 5, 2020
12:00-2:00
SOLD BY SANDY!
SOLD BY SANDY AS BUYER’S AGENT!
205 RIVER RD., TEWKSBURY
39 BROADWAY UNIT #303, MALDEN
NEW PRICE! $399,900
NEW LISTING BY SANDY!
123 CENTRAL AVE., EVERETT
SINGLE FAMILY
$449,900
NEW
RENTAL!
1 BEDROOM WITH PARKING,
CALL NORMA FOR DETAILS
617-590-9143
NEW RENTAL!
2 BED, EVERETT APARTMENT
$1,850/MO
SOLD BY SANDY!
1-BEDROOM CONDO
881 BROADWAY, EVERETT
$244,900
SOLD BY JOE AS BUYER’S AGENT!
61 LOCUST ST., MIDDLETON
CALL JOE FOR DETAILS
617-680-7610
Joe DiNuzzo
- Broker Associate
Norma Capuano Parziale
- Agent
Open Daily From 10:00 A.M. - 5:00 P.M.
433 Broadway, Suite B, Everett, MA 02149
www.jrs-properties.com
Denise Matarazz
- Agent
Maria Scrima
- Agent
Follow Us On:
617.544.6274
Rosemarie Ciampi
- Agent
Kathy Hang Ha
-Agent
Mark Sachetta
- Agent
׉	 7cassandra://3TfG9xhR72lNj2HX6DAxoJziOwhkX8qFHdlIu4tlFm40$`̰ ^A{ځ^A{ف
PבCט   (u׉׉	 7cassandra://yXOVnCSkm12SBQfS925R2u6jX4FADxTnGSJuhNgVnmI `)׉	 7cassandra://b8ne1LB2CBxQSIKeJ8XGNMsMqT7QyF5_G3OL8h66Gi4͒:`J׉	 7cassandra://aMXvUrb1zUnWnRiT2DANkJCA4JoYBxT8-QWFi8sVvjY-`̰ ׉	 7cassandra://8X0hNhA-5f5CE2nORh0flryh7eDf6rBcr-GPZJ7eLco M͠^A{$נ^A{' "̽
9ׁHhttp://WWW.LITTLEFIELDRE.COMׁׁЈנ^A{& ^9ׁHhttp://CarpenitoRealEstate.comׁׁЈ׉EPage 24
THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – Friday, January 3, 2020
.............
#
1
Listing & Selling
Office in Saugus
“Experience and knowledge
Provide the Best Service”
Free Market Evaluations
CarpenitoRealEstate.com
View our website from
your mobile phone!
335 Central St., Saugus, MA
781-233-7300
SAUGUS: 1st AD Free Standing Building with
off street parking, conveniently located just
outside of Cliftondale Square.............$349,900.
SAUGUS: AFFORDABLE 6 rms. Col. offers 3 brms.,
updated, eat-in kitchen, living room open to dining
room, 1st floor laundry, level yard, convenient side
street location...............................................$389,900.
EVERETT: Spacious 3 family offers 21 rms., 10
brms., 5 full & 2 half baths, right side added in
1994 offers 4 levels w/5 br., 3 ½ baths, hrwd,
deck & cent. air, washer & dryer hook-ups
in each unit, located in desirable Woodlawn
neighborhood.......................................$859,900.
REVERE, WEST: NEW 2 br Townhome offers
2 ½ baths, spac. lvrm. open to kit w/granite
& stainless, master w/bath, hardwood floors,
cent. air, one car gar, pavers driveway, located
on dead-end........................................$529,900.
WONDERING WHAT YOUR HOME IS WORTH?
CALL FOR YOUR FREE MARKET ANALYSIS!
SAUGUS: Custom, 5-yr-old Col. offers 9 rms.,
4 br, 3½ baths, 2 master suites, two story
fam. rm. w/gas frplce, wd. flooring, gourmet
kitchen, dining rm., incredible details thruout,
cent. air (2 units), 1st floor lndry room,
breezeway, 3-car garage, level yard with
sprinkler sys. & patio w/ awning, located in
desirable Stonecliffe Heights. Great home in
Great location!...................................$899,900.
SAUGUS: One of the last buildable lots left in
Saugus! Land runs from Hanson Rd. to Hamilton
St. creating a unique opportunity to build new
construction home!..................................$169,000.
LITTLEFIELD REAL ESTATE
SAUGUS ~ Rehabbed colonial. New windows, siding, new kitchen with quartz
counters, stainless appliances, new cabinets. New hardwood flooring throughout
house. New heat. Central AC. New maintenance free deck. .........$570,000
SAUGUS ~ Desirable 2 family. Each unit has
2 beds, updated kitchens and baths, vinyl
siding, in-unit laundry, rear decks .......$499,000
SAUGUS ~ Rehabbed colonial, 4-5 bedroom, 2 full baths, gas heat,
central AC, new siding, new roof, hardwood flooring, fresh paint, new
kitchen with SS appliances quartz counters ...............$559,900
38 Main Street, Saugus MA
WWW.LITTLEFIELDRE.COM
781-233-1401
SAUGUS ~ Raised ranch, 3 bed, 3 bath, gas heat, central AC,
garage under, great location, master bedroom with master bath and walk
in closet, finished lower level for the extended family ......... $579,900
Call
Rhonda
Combe
For all your
SAUGUS ~ 4 bed, 3 bath colonial. Spacious kitchen, SS
appliances, Oversized one car garage, irrigation, gas heat
enclosed porch, centralVac, finished lower level ... $569,900
real estate needs!!
781-706-0842
SAUGUS ~ 3 bed, 1.5 bath colonial. Open
concept 1st floor, 2 car garage, newer gas heat,
roof and HW heater, prof landscaping....$439,900
REVERE ~ 2 family located in the Beachmont
area, 3 beds, one bath in top unit, 2 beds, one
bath lower unit .....................................$639,000
LAND
FOR SALE
WILMINGTON ~ Colonial featuring 4 beds and
2 full baths, great dead end location, central AC,
hardwood flooring, finished lower level ..$534,900
SAUGUS ~ 3 bed ranch, open concept, stainless
appliances, private dead end street, newer gas heat,
hardwood flooring, 10k lot, garage ..............$435,000
LYNN ~ New construction. 3400 sq feet, 4 bed, 2.5 bath,
gas heat, central AC, hardwood flooring, walking closet,
great cul de sac location, garage under ........... $879,999
SAUGUS
Call Rhonda Combe
at 781-706-0842 for details!!
SOLD
SOLD
UNDER
CONTRACT
SOLD
׉	 7cassandra://aMXvUrb1zUnWnRiT2DANkJCA4JoYBxT8-QWFi8sVvjY-`̰ ^A{׈E^A{܁^A{ہ
P,Saugus Advocate  01/03/20Saugus Advocate  01/03/20^ ރ=