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Vol. 31, No.19
-FREEwww.advocatenews.net
Free
Every Friday
Revere Police promote two at
City Hall ceremony
By Tara Vocino
A
sergeant was promoted
to a lieutenant, and a police
offi cer was promoted to a
sergeant during last Thursdayâ€™s
promotional ceremony in Revere
City Hall council chambers.
Stacey J. Bruzzese was promoted
from Sergeant to Lieutenant,
and Sean G. Matthews was
promoted from Patrol Offi cer to
Sergeant.
PROMOTE | SEE Page 1
781-286-8500
Friday, May 13, 2022
Fiore resigns from
City Council, cites
medical issues
Special election called for Ward 5
issues, I cannot effi ciently represent
the residents of Ward 5,â€
stated Fiore in a letter read at
Monday nightâ€™s City Council
meeting. â€œTherefore, effective
today, I am resigning from the
offi ce of Ward 5 City Councilor. I
would like to thank the residents
of Ward 5 for the opportunity to
serve and I wish everyone well.â€
Fiore ran an impressive camAL
FIORE
Resigns from City Council due
to medical issues
By Adam Swift
W
FAMILY PRIDE: The family of Lt. Stacey Bruzzese is pictured, from left to right: father-in-law William
Fantasia, mother-in-law Deborah Fantasia, husband, Offi cer Nicholas Fantasia, son, Anthony
Fantasia, proud mother Marian Bruzzese, Lt. Stacey Bruzzese, father, Anthony Bruzzese, sister,
Laurie Cogswell and her nephew, Timothy. See page _ for photo highlights. (Advocate photo by Tara Vocino)
ard 5 City Councillor Al
Fiore has resigned from
the City Council because of
health concerns. Fioreâ€™s resignation
sets up a midsummer special
election for the remainder
of his term.
â€œDue to my ongoing medical
paign in 2021 to return to the
City Council after nearly two
decades away, defeating longtime
Ward 5 Councillor John
Powers.
Fiore is a former Council President,
who was fi rst elected at
the age of 22 and then stepped
down at 31 to raise his family before
running again for the Ward
5 seat in 2021.
Several councillors wished
Fiore well on Monday night.
â€œItâ€™s unfortunate that the councillor
has given his resignation,
but he has to do what is best for
RESIGNS | SEE Page 17
City Council approves parking benefits district
By Adam Swift
M
onday night the City Council
approved the adoption
of a Parking Benefi ts District in
the city. The councilâ€™s Economic
Development Subcommittee
recommended the full council
adopt the parking benefi ts district
at its May 2 meeting. The
district would allow the city to
use revenue from its parking
meters on Broadway, Shirley Avenue
and the Central Avenue
parking lot for a number of aesthetic
and safety upgrades.
â€œA parking benefi ts district allows
us to be a little more fl exible
in how we use our parking
meter revenues throughout the
city,â€ said Richard Viscay, the cityâ€™s
fi nance director, at the subcommittee
meeting. â€œA parking benefi
ts district essentially gives us
more fl exibility to use those meter
revenues in a more expansive
way than we currently use them
now, which is primarily paying
our parking meter control offi
cers and maintenance of the
parking meters.â€
The money collected from the
meters could be used in districts
around those metered areas for
aesthetic upgrades, such as new
barrels and planters, as well as
maintenance and tree plantings,
and even some pedestrian safety
improvements and green energy
initiatives, such as installing
new electric vehicle charging
stations.
â€œWe do want people to know
that we do collect these monies
and that we do put them to use;
weâ€™re not using it to balance the
tax rate or anything else,â€ said
Viscay.
As part of the Parking BeneIRA
NOVOSELSKY
Ward 2 Councillor
fi ts District, the city would also
create a parking advisory committee
to oversee the use of the
funds. That committee is likely
to include city councillors, representatives
from the mayor
and fi nance directorâ€™s offi ces, the
parking director and local business
people.
Ward 2 Councillor Ira Novoselsky
said the new district is a great
idea and asked if it would use
funds from collected tickets and
fi nes as well as the meter revenues.
Viscay said the state law
only allows cities to collect the
meter revenues, not the fi nes.
â€œThere are a lot of things in
that list you mentioned that we
have been looking at for a long
time, specifi cally more barrels
and more cameras,â€ said Novoselsky.
â€œThis
is designed to improve
the aesthetics of some of our
main drags, Broadway and
Shirley Avenue, where it would
be a huge uplift to have more
barrels, more streetscaping and
more lights,â€ said Parking Director
Zachary Babo. â€œIt also benefi
ts the amenities related to our
green energy and our alternative
transportation.â€
Councillor-at-Large Marc Silvestri,
the chair of the Economic
Development Subcommittee,
said the Parking Benefi ts District
looks like a great idea.
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THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, MAY 13, 2022
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Hours: Mon. - Tues. 6AM - 6PM / Thurs. & Fri. 6AM - 7PM / Sat. 7AM - 5PM / Sun. 9AM-1PM
Mystic Valley Elder Services issues
RFP for older adult programs
M
ystic Valley Elder Services
(MVES) has issued a Request
for Proposals (RFP) to fund
innovative programs that promote
the health, well-being, and
independence of older adults
and to complement or supplement
the support activities of
primary caregivers.
Areas of focus include: family
caregiver issues and services;
special populations such as elders
with special needs, isolated,
marginalized, LGBT elders
and those who are disadvantaged
by racial, cultural and/or
linguistic barriers; health promotion
programs that focus
on evidence-based programs
for older adults; transportation;
housing insecurity; social insecurity/isolation;
health and wellness,
including physical and behavioral
health; and economic
insecurity.
Funding is available by MVES
through the Older American Act
and is subject to availability of
federal funding. The project begins
on October 1 and ends on
September 30, 2023.
MVES is requesting Letters
of Intent from organizations
wishing to apply for funding
to support individuals ages 60
and older in MVESâ€™ service area,
which includes Chelsea, Everett,
Malden, Medford, Melrose,
North Reading, Reading, Revere,
Stoneham, Wakefi eld and Winthrop.
The Letter of Intent, not
to exceed two pages, should
include:
â€¢ Purpose of the program
â€¢ Which of the AAA funding
priorities the program will address
â€¢
The estimated amount of Title
III funding the applicant will
request
â€¢ Anticipated number of older
adults the program expects
to serve
â€¢ Cities and towns the program
plans to serve
Letters of Intent should be
sent electronically to lreid@
mves.org by 4 p.m. on Friday,
June 10. They will be reviewed
and prospective applicants will
be notifi ed no later than close
of business on Wednesday,
June 15 regarding their eligibility
to complete the full application
for Title III funding which
will be due on Wednesday, July
6 at 4 p.m.
If you have questions please
contact Lauren Reid, MVES Director
of Community Programs,
at lreid@mves.org or 781-3882382.
Family
Picnic & Pollinator Event â€“ Sat., May 28
A
ll Revere residents are invited
to a Family Picnic and
Pollinator Event on Saturday,
May 28, from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. â€“
with Saturday, June 4 as the rain
date. The event will take place
at the Susan B. Anthony Middle
School Park and Field located at
107 Newhall St. in Revere. Residents
are encouraged to bring a
blanket and food and enjoy the
free bounce house, music and
kidsâ€™ activities.
Since one out of three bites we
eat depends on pollinators, at
the event participants will also
receive information about the
importance of pollinators and
what they can do in their homes
to protect their habitat. A limited
number of pollinator-friendly
plants will be available for free
for families to take home.
According to U.S. Department
of Agriculture, â€œIn the Northeast,
several key pollinators have experienced
drastic declines including
the federally listed (endangered)
rusty patched bumble
bee, yellow banded bumble
bee, monarch butterfl y and several
cuckoo bumble bees. These
recent declines are attributed to
a number of interacting factors
including pathogens, habitat
loss and degradation, exposure
to harmful chemicals, and increasingly
extreme weather patterns.â€
(https://www.nrcs.usda.
gov/wps/portal/nrcs/detailfull/me/technical/ecoscience/
threat/?cid=nrcseprd1575616)
According
to Facebook, this is
an event by Revere on the Move
and the Revere CARES Coalition,
and â€œThis event was organized by
Ward 4 but is OPEN TO ALL! Ward
4 Neighborhood Pod is part of a
Wellness Team Initiative to create
connections & closeness between
neighbors.â€
The Wellness Team members
seek to connect residents by
neighborhood or ward. Previously,
the Wellness Team has organized
community events to get
neighbors out in the community
and build connections. The Wellness
Team consists of residents,
the City of Revere Covid Ambassadors,
and staff members from
The Neighborhood Developers
and the Revere CARES Coalition.
Visit the event page here:
https://bit.ly/RevereFamilyPicnicAndPollinatorEvent
REVERE
PUBLIC
SCHOOLS
Public Hearing
A public hearing for the
conversion of SeaCoast
to an innovation school
will occur on May 17th
at School Committee
meeting.
May 6, May 13, 2022
Prices subject to
change
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Page 3
Morabito wants brighter
lights on Broadway
Councillors to query Suffolk Downsâ€™
biosafety info
By Adam Swift
C
ouncillor-at-Large Steve
Morabito wants to see
more lights shine down on
Broadway. At Monday nightâ€™s
City Council meeting, Morabito
presented a motion asking
Mayor Brian Arrigo to request
the public works and community
development departments
to install decorative street lamps
extending the entire length of
Broadway.
â€œI submitted the motion because
many residents expressed
their concerns about the lack
of lighting at the beginning
of Broadway and at the end,â€
said Morabito. â€œCurrently, the
streetlamps on Broadway, they
exist from Fenno Street all the
way going northbound to Rossetti
Street, so that leaves no
streetlamps going southbound
from Fenno to Revere Beach
Parkway, and northbound from
Rossetti to Beach Road.â€
After submitting the motion,
Morabito said he received information
about funding for
some additional street lights
from the community development
program manager. â€œShe
informed me that their department
had submitted an application
in their annual plan for
the community development
block grant, and if approved by
HUD, they would be able to install
six to eight streetlamps,â€
Billy Tseâ€™s
441 Revere St., Revere
(781) 286-2882
www.Billytserevere.com
Hours: Sunday â€“ Thursday, 11:30 AM â€“ 9:30 PM;
Friday & Saturday, 11:30 AM â€“ 10:30 PM
â€¢ Order Online: www.order.mealkeyway.com
â€¢ Reservations: Billytserevere.com
Sushi Chef David, formerly of Super Fusion in Boston
with Billy Tseâ€™s owner, Xiang Wang at the brand new
Sushi bar.
New Sushi Bar Now Open!
Sushi Specials:
Sushi Cupcake
4 pcs - $18 / 8 pcs- $35
Broiled fresh lobster, sea
scallop, pressed sushi rice
STEVEN MORABITO
Councillor-at-Large
Hatata Kaiyaki $10.95
Sea scallop, crab meat, and
shrimp. Tobiko baked in spicy
mayo. Topped of scallop shell.
Spicy Salmon Tartar
$9.95
Salmon, Avo, Tobiko, Tempura
flakes. Spicy mayo mix
topped with taro chip.
Sea Spoon (4 spoon)
$18.95
Uni, Ikura, quail eggs, scallion
and Panzu sauce.
n
We Sell
Cigars
&
Cigar
Accessories
R.Y.O.
GERRY VISCONTI
Council President
said Morabito. â€œThey also hope
to utilize seed funds for some
lighting, but when it comes to
LIGHTS | SEE Page 21
HRC proposes task
force to establish
public forum
By Adam Swift
T
he Human Rights Commission
(HRC) is establishing a
task force that will look at setting
up a public forum or mediation
to address issues some residents
have with the commission.
Since late last year, a small
group of residents and other
meeting attendees have disrupted
the monthly HRC meetings,
calling for the abolishment
of the commission and raising
concerns about issues like the
Black Lives Matter movement,
Critical Race Theory and the end
of Columbus Day celebrations.
Several of those meetings were
ended early by HRC Chair Janine
Grillo Marra as the disruptions
got out of hand. The April meeting
ended before the HRC got to
the public forum portion of the
meeting, much to the consternation
of some of the commissionâ€™s
critics in attendance.
The latest meeting of the HRC
on May 5 was mostly a more
ordered aff air, by recent standards,
as the commission made
it to the public forum. Several
residents raised their concerns
about the direction of the HRC,
while one woman who identifi
ed herself as Mary Santos took
her time at the podium to explain
why she was dressed as
a mayonnaise bottle (for Cinco
De Mayo).
Several Revere residents did
use the public forum as an opportunity
to voice their support
for the HRC. â€œItâ€™s an honor and a
privilege to be up before you,
and I truly applaud all the work
FORUM | SEE Page 21
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THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, MAY 13, 2022
Cambridge Health Alliance Names Doug
Kress New Chief Community Officer
425r Broadway, Saugus
Located adjacent to Kohls Plaza Route 1 South
in Saugus at the intersection of Walnut St.
We are on MBTA Bus Route 429
781-231-1111
At this time, the state requires
everyone to wear masks
We are a Skating Rink with
Bowling Alleys, Arcade and
two TVâ€™s where the ball
games are always on!
PUBLIC SKATING SCHEDULE
12-8 p.m.
Sunday
Monday
Tuesday
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Price includes Roller Skates
Rollerblades/inline skates $3.00 additional cost
Private Parties
7:30-11 p.m.
$10.00
Price includes Roller Skates
Adult Night 18+ Only
Wednesday
Thursday
Friday Everyone must pay admission after 6 p.m.
Private Parties
Private Parties
4-11 p.m.
Saturday
12-11 p.m.
$9.00
$9.00
Everyone must pay admission after 6 p.m.
Sorry No Checks - ATM on site
Roller skate rentals included in all prices
Inline Skate Rentals $3.00 additional
BIRTHDAY & PRIVATE PARTIES AVAILABLE
www.roller-world.com
î€­î€‰
î‚‡ î€µîˆîîŒî„î…îîˆ î€°î’îšîŒî‘îŠ î€¶îˆî•î™îŒî†îˆ
î‚‡ î€¶î“î•îŒî‘îŠ î€‰ î€©î„îî î€¦îîˆî„î‘î˜î“î–
î‚‡ î€°î˜îî†î‹ î€‰ î€¨î‡îŠîŒî‘îŠ
î‚‡ î€¶î’î‡ î’î• î€¶îˆîˆî‡ î€¯î„îšî‘î–
î‚‡ î€¶î‹î•î˜î… î€³îî„î‘î—îŒî‘îŠ î€‰ î€·î•îŒîîîŒî‘îŠ
î‚‡ î€ºî„î—îˆî• î€‰ î€¶îˆîšîˆî• î€µîˆî“î„îŒî•î–
î€­î’îˆ î€³îŒîˆî•î’î—î—îŒî€ î€­î•î€‘
CAMBRIDGE, Mass. â€” Cambridge
Health Alliance (CHA), a
community health system serving
Cambridge, Somerville and
Bostonâ€™s metro-north communities,
has named Doug Kress as its
new chief community offi cer. He
most recently served as the director
of health and human services
for the City of Somerville
(Mass.). At CHA, Mr. Kress will
build partnerships with community-based
nonprofi t groups, local
governments, and state and
regional agencies to advance
the health systemâ€™s clinical, research,
and policy initiatives. He
will oversee CHAâ€™s Department
of Community Health Improvement,
which leads eff orts to improve
access and health status
outcomes in the communities
we serve, and link its resources
to strategic priorities. He will
also strengthen lines of communication
throughout all of CHAâ€™s
communities to identify potential
collaborations and develop
community-based programs
that respond to the needs of its
patients and local residents. Mr.
Kress comes to CHA with more
than 20 years of experience in
municipal leadership, policy development,
and community organizing.
He has a proven track
record in developing multi-sector
collaborations, building public/private
partnerships, navigating
local regulations, and employing
data analysis to drive results
and engage communities.
During his tenure with the City
of Somerville, Mr. Kress successfully
reorganized and expanded
the Department of Health and
Human Services, overseeing areas
including public and school
health, prevention, emergency
preparedness, the Council on
Aging, and veteransâ€™ services.
Managing a staff of 65, he developed
and implemented the
departmentâ€™s policies, goals, objectives,
and performance measures,
including the recruitment
and retention of a diverse workforce,
performance management,
employee relations and
engagement, and oversight of
grant, local, state, and federal
funding opportunities. He also
expanded the departmentâ€™s focus
to better emphasize behavioral
health, equity, accessibility,
and community engagement.
Prior to that position, Mr. Kress
held several public administraDOUG
KRESS,
new chief community offi cer
at Cambridge Health Alliance.
tor roles in Minnesota, including
director of development services
for the City of Minneapolis
and policy aide for a Minneapolis
City Council member. He
holds a masterâ€™s degree in education
from the University of
Minnesota and a masterâ€™s in
public policy from Tufts University.
â€œDoug is an experienced
and driven leader who deeply
understands our organization
and shares our commitment to
improve the health of our communities,
and we are thrilled he
is joining our team,â€ said CHAâ€™s
CEO Assaad Sayah, MD.
Free Gardening Workshop June 11
/ Taller gratis de jardinerÃ­a bÃ¡sica
Junio 11
Free Virtual Gardening Basics
Workshop
Saturday, June 11 at 11 AM.
Do you have a sunny spot outside
that gets 6-8 hours of sun?
Have you always wanted to grow
î€¶
î€¯î€¤î€±î€§î€¶î€¦î€¤î€³î€¨ î€‰ î€°î€¤î€¶î€²î€±î€µî€¼ î€¦î€²î€‘
î€°î„î–î’î‘î•îœ î€ î€¤î–î“î‹î„îî—
î‚‡ î€¥î•îŒî†îŽ î’î• î€¥îî’î†îŽ î€¶î—îˆî“î–
î‚‡ î€¥î•îŒî†îŽ î’î• î€¥îî’î†îŽ î€ºî„îîî–
î‚‡ î€¦î’î‘î†î•îˆî—îˆ î’î• î€¥î•îŒî†îŽ î€³î„î™îˆî•
î€³î„î—îŒî’î– î€‰ î€ºî„îîŽîšî„îœî–
î‚‡ î€¥î•îŒî†îŽ î€µîˆî€î€³î’îŒî‘î—îŒî‘îŠ
î‚‡ î€¤î–î“î‹î„îî— î€³î„î™îŒî‘îŠ
îšîšîšî€‘î€­î„î‘î‡î€¶îî„î‘î‡î–î†î„î“îˆî€îî„î–î’î‘î•îœî€‘î†î’î
î‚‡ î€¶îˆî‘îŒî’î• î€§îŒî–î†î’î˜î‘î— î‚‡ î€©î•îˆîˆ î€¨î–î—îŒîî„î—îˆî– î‚‡ î€¯îŒî†îˆî‘î–îˆî‡ î€‰ î€¬î‘î–î˜î•îˆî‡
î€™î€”î€šî€î€–î€›î€œî€î€”î€—î€œî€“
î€§îˆî–îŒîŠî‘îŒî‘îŠ î„î‘î‡ î€¦î’î‘î–î—î•î˜î†î—îŒî‘îŠ î€¬î‡îˆî„î– î—î‹î„î— î„î•îˆ î‚´î€ªî•î’î˜î‘î‡î– î‰î’î• î€¶î˜î†î†îˆî–î–î‚µ
î€¯î„î‘î‡î–î†î„î“îŒî‘îŠ
veggies but are not sure how to
get started?
Then we have just the workshop
for you. Talk and learn with
Janet Moses, an experienced gardener
who will answer your questions.
No backyard? No problem,
we will also discuss veggies you
can grow in pots.
We will meet VIRTUAL through
Zoom. We will send out the Zoom
link closer to the workshop date.
Fifteen participants will receive
a pot, soil, and vegetable seeding
(Pick Up Only). As well square foot
gardening guide and instructions
on building a raised bed via email.
While we welcome all to attend
our virtual meeting, the free planting
materials are only for Revere
residents. Priority will be given
to those who have not received
them in the past. We will provide
the materials to those who attend.
If we have more Revere residents
at the workshop than materials,
then we will raffl e them.
bÃ¡sica
AM.
Tiene un lugar soleado al aire
libre que reciba de 6 a 8 horas
de sol?
Quiere cultivar verduras, pero
Taller gratis de jardinerÃ­a
SÃ¡bado 11 de junio a las 11
no estÃ¡ seguro cÃ³mo empezar?
Entonces tenemos el taller perfecto
para usted. Venga, hable,
y aprenda con Janet Moses Ella
tiene varios aÃ±os de experiencia
en jardinerÃ­a. No tiene un patio?
No hay problema, tambiÃ©n hablaremos
de las verduras que puede
cultivar en macetas.
Nos reuniremos VIRTUALMENTE
a travÃ©s de Zoom. Llene
esta aplicaciÃ³n si quiere participar.
Mandaremos el link de
Zoom cuando la fecha del taller
estÃ© cerca.
HabrÃ¡ interpretaciÃ³n en
espaÃ±ol.
Se regalarÃ¡ maceta, tierra y
planta a quince participantes.
(TendrÃ¡n que recoger estos materiales).
AdemÃ¡s, le mandaremos
por correo electrÃ³nico una
guÃ­a de jardinerÃ­a que explica el
mÃ©todo de sembrar usando pies
cuadrados. Todos estÃ¡n bienvenidos
a participar en el taller virtual,
pero los materiales gratis para
sembrar, son sÃ³lo para los residentes
de Revere. Se darÃ¡ prioridad
a quienes no los hayan recibido
en el pasado. Daremos los
materiales a quienes asistan al
taller. Si tenemos mÃ¡s residentes
de Revere en el taller que materiales,
haremos una rifa para escoger
los ganadores.
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Page 5
Revere High School freshman
Abigail McHugh â€“ Sixth Poet
Laureate at RHS
T
he annual Poet Laureate
Contest is an opportunity
for young, creative writers
to showcase their work. The
contest consists of promoting
student pieces and exhibiting
the power of writing. This contest
is open to all students in
grades 9-11.
HOW YOU ENTER: Poets are
asked to write and submit four
original poems
â— Any style of poetry works!
It just has to be your own authentic,
individual poetry
â— You can submit a poem in
a language other than English,
just also give us a translation
â— You can also choose to include
an audio recording of
your poem(s), if you feel that
your poetry must be heard as
well as seen by the judges **
SEND YOUR POEMS (and any
recordings) to scolum@reverek12.org
by Apr 13, 2022
** THE JUDGING: Your work
will be carefully and lovingly
reviewed by a panel of judges
(this will include both staff
and students-- whose identities
will be secret until the contest
is over). Judges will read
and give feedback on your poems
during April break. The
rubric they use is on page 2
(below)-â€“ read it as you write,
edit, and submit! You will get
an email on April 25 to let you
know if you are a fi nalist. During
1 advisory block at the end
of April, there will be an award
ceremony to reward the fi nalists
and winner of the contest.
At that ceremony, the fi nalists
will each read one of their poems
receive a giftâ€“ a fun, literary
prize! IF YOU WIN: The student
who gets fi rst place will
have the title and position of
Poet Laureate between April
2022 and April 2023. During
that time, the Poet Laureate
willâ€¦
â— add this impressive
achievement to their college
applications and resume
â— have the opportunity to
take a personalized poetry
workshop (an independent
study with Mrs. Colum) to
grow their poetic love and capabilities
â—
participate in Poetry Out
Loud meetings (1-2 times per
month)
â— plan at least one poetryrelated
event or activity for the
RHS community per semester
(poetry workshops? Guest
speaker events? Start thinking
now!)
â— write a poem for the senior
class, which will be included
in the yearbook and read at
graduation
â— promote their love of poetry!
All of that happens with
the guidance and support of
Mrs. Colum and the Poetry
Planning Board.
Contacts:
Joe McHugh (Abbyâ€™s father)
781-307-3039
Sara Colum â€“ RHS Teacher
315-877-8666
scolum@revere.org
â€œBobâ€™s always a
phone call away.â€
î‚¶ îƒŒî€„îƒ“î€„ îƒîƒ˜îƒ‘îƒŽîƒ›îƒîƒ¢î€†
VP, C.J. DOHERTY, INC.
îƒîƒŠîƒ•îƒ” îƒîƒ˜ îƒ‹îƒ˜îƒ‹ îƒŠîƒ‹îƒ˜îƒžîƒ îƒ˜îƒžîƒ› îƒŒîƒ˜îƒ–îƒ–îƒŽîƒ›îƒŒîƒ’îƒŠîƒ•
îƒŠîƒ—îƒ îƒŒîƒ˜îƒ—îƒœîƒîƒ›îƒžîƒŒîƒîƒ’îƒ˜îƒ— îƒ•îƒ˜îƒŠîƒ—îƒœî€„
îƒ îƒŽî„îƒ›îƒŽ îƒ›îƒŽîƒŠîƒîƒ¢ îƒîƒ˜ îƒ‘îƒŽîƒ•îƒ™ îƒ¢îƒ˜îƒž îƒîƒŽîƒ îƒœîƒîƒŠîƒ›îƒîƒŽîƒî€„
îƒ‹îƒ˜îƒ‹ îƒ”îƒŠîƒ–îƒ’îƒ—îƒŽîƒ›
îƒœîƒŽîƒ—îƒ’îƒ˜îƒ› îƒŸîƒ’îƒŒîƒŽ îƒ™îƒ›îƒŽîƒœîƒ’îƒîƒŽîƒ—îƒ
îƒ‹îƒ”îƒŠîƒ–îƒ’îƒ—îƒŽîƒ›îƒ„îƒŽîƒŸîƒŽîƒ›îƒŽîƒîƒîƒ‹îƒŠîƒ—îƒ” î€„ îƒŒîƒ˜îƒ–
î€¤î€Ÿ î€¥î‚´î€¡î€¦î€Ÿî‚´î€¡î€¤î€Ÿî€ž
For Advertising
with Results,
419 BROADWAY, EVERETT MA 02149
îƒ îƒ îƒ î€„îƒŽîƒŸîƒŽîƒ›îƒŽîƒîƒîƒ‹îƒŠîƒ—îƒ”î€„îƒŒîƒ˜îƒ–î‚¹îƒîƒŽîƒîƒœîƒîƒŠîƒ›îƒîƒŽîƒ
Member FDIC
Member DIF
call The Acall The Advocate Newspapers
or Info@advocatenews.net
dvocate Newspapers
at 781-286-8500
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THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, MAY 13, 2022
Vision for McKinley School includes early education,
community, arts space
By Adam Swift
T
he former McKinley School
could soon be home to an
early education center, community
art and education space
and workforce development
programs. At a public forum on
Tuesday night, consultants and
city offi cials presented the fi ndings
of the McKinley School visioning
process, a process that
has seen input online and at four
public forums over the past several
months. The Reimagining
the McKinley School Project is a
joint project between the City of
Revere and MassDevelopment.
Need a hall for your special event?
The Schiavo Club, located at
71 Tileston Street, Everett is
available for your Birthdays,
Anniversaries, Sweet 16 parties
and more?
Call Paul at
(617) 387-5457 for details.
â€œThe school has been vacant
since it closed in 2014, so this is
a really great time to think about
what it could be and what it
could do for the city since it is
located in the heart of the city
here in Revere,â€ said Elise Zilius
of project consultant Studio Luz
Architects.
The goal of repurposing and
rehabbing the shuttered school
building is to transform it into
â€œa beacon of accessibility â€¦ for
education and community programming,
as well as creating
spaces for entrepreneurship to
thrive and support a network
of economic mobility, as well as
workforce training for individuals,â€
said Sophie Nahrmann of
Studio Luz.
The top three uses for the
school identifi ed by the public
are community education
space, early education space
and performing arts and gallery
space.
â€œThe primary program for the
McKinley School will be early education
and childcare space, surrounded
by a network of community
center and community
education spaces,â€ said Nahrmann.
Those
community spaces
could include wellness programs,
community classrooms,
multipurpose spaces, workforce
training spaces and spaces that
could be shared by smaller nonprofi
ts. In addition, the initial
plans for the third fl oor of the
building call for a small theater
space bracketed by art and music
studio space. The community
event spaces would be focused
in the basement, with a
mixture of early childhood education
and care spaces that
could also double as community
and workforce development
space on the fi rst and second
fl oors.
â€œThese three create a constellation
around an early education
core to create a really vibrant
and diverse multigenerational
space that can draw members
from all over the community
into the center of the town,â€ said
Nahrmann.
The total building square footage
is about 36,000 square feet,
of which about two-thirds is usable
space.
â€œThe bones of the building still
are here, and we are keeping 85
percent of the existing footprint,
but then adding in elements to
key areas to make it fl exible for
the community and just liven up
the space completely so that it
is a place that people want to
come to,â€ said Zilius.
The next steps to make any
kind of renovation and rehabilitation
at the school a reality
include a feasibility analysis of
the building structure, an environmental
analysis and an ADA
analysis.
â€œWeâ€™re going to be working
on getting some ideas of what
all this is going to cost; thatâ€™s the
next step,â€ said Julie DeMauro of
the cityâ€™s Planning & Community
Development Department.
â€œOnce those steps are in place,
we will really be going out for
some big funding when we understand
what it is going to take
to rehab this building into space
we all want to see.â€
DeMauro said next steps will
also include identifying specifi c
programs besides the school departmentâ€™s
early education program
that could use the space.
An opportunity to be
heard: guest speaker
Sen. Lydia Edwards â€“
May 16
O
n Monday, May 16 at 6:30
p.m., the Winthrop Republican
Town Committee (WRTC)
is hosting an hour with State
Senator Lydia Edwards, whose
First Suff olk and Middlesex District
includes Revere. This onehour
event is a perfect opportunity
for the community and
those individuals who feel their
voices are not being heard in
the â€œone partyâ€ state of Massachusetts.
Help Senator Edwards
know what issues are important
to you or respectfully comment
on important current topics.
The WRTC encourages residents
to take advantage of this
opportunity for respectful dialogue
which will take place at
the Winthrop Senior Center (35
Harvard St.).
â€¢ Due to capacity constraints
free admission to this May 16
event must be obtained by
registering on Facebook at the
â€œWinthrop Republican Town
LYDIA EDWARDS
State Senator
Committeeâ€ Facebook account
or by emailing winthroprtc@
gmail.com.
â€¢ Comments or questions for
Senator Edwards should be submitted
to the â€œWinthrop Republican
Town Committeeâ€ Facebook
account or by emailing
winthroprtc@gmail.com. This will
permit as many questions from
the community as time permits.
Like us on Facebook
advocate newspaper
Facebook.com/Advocate.news.ma
×‰	Ú 7cassandra://fXN-hRsyDG_XthXAB6-VJv9KWnmulrRe9WdPTtLp5EEÍ(“Í`Ì°Í ×b}˜ÆG¯®f­×‰EÚÉTHE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, MAY 13, 2022
Page 7
Hebrew SeniorLife Honors Nursing Staff at Academic Celebration
Carline Cenat is Chosen as R.N. of the Year and Dadie Petit-Frere is Picked as Personal Care Associate of the Year
Three Nurses to Participate in the Nurse Excellence Program to Deepen their Skills
BOSTON â€“ At its annual Academic
Program Celebration, Hebrew
SeniorLife, a Harvard Medical
School affi liate, one of Bostonâ€™s
Top Places to Work, and
New Englandâ€™s largest nonprofit
provider of senior health care
and living communities, named
Carline Cenat, Registered Nurse,
as R.N. of the Year and Dadie Petit-Frere,
P.C.A., as Personal Care
Associate of the Year. Cenat, who
lives in Randolph, is a Staff Registered
Nurse at Hebrew Rehabilitation
Center â€“ Boston and has
been employed by Hebrew SeniorLife
since 2004, starting as a
C.N.A. before becoming a nurse.
Petit-Frere, who lives in Brockton
and is a Senior Patient Care
Associate at Hebrew Rehabilitation
Center at NewBridge on the
Charles in Dedham, has worked
at Hebrew SeniorLife since 2012.
The ceremony, held May 4,
also recognized recent C.N.A.s
who graduated from the Certified
Nursing Assistant training
program based at Hebrew
Rehabilitation Center - Boston.
This fi ve-week, fully paid program
combines classroom time,
lab skill training, and supervised
time with patients. This year, 10
graduated from the program.
As part of its eff ort to recognize
the special role that nurses
play on the care team, Hebrew
SeniorLife also named three
nurses as part of its Nurse Excellence
Program: Debra Dunlap,
staff registered nurse at Hebrew
Rehabilitation Center at NewBridge
on the Charles in Dedham,
who lives in North Easton;
Laura Hunt, R.N., Nurse Manager
at Hebrew Rehabilitation Center
at NewBridge on the Charles in
Dedham, who lives in Norwood;
and Jacquelyn Mello, Staff Registered
Nurse at Hebrew Rehabilitation
Center â€“ Boston, who
lives in Hyde Park. Drawn from
throughout the organization,
these nurses will receive individually
crafted learning opportunities
to deepen their knowledge
base for a particular area
of interest. Participants of the
program attend conferences
and meetings, participate in
policy or educational programming
development, and help in
special projects to expand their
skills in wound management,
dementia care, or end of life, to
name a few.
Senior Staff Chaplain Hali Diecidue
delivered the invocation
and Susan Graff, M.S.N., R.N.,
Director, Professional Practice
and Education, issued welcoming
remarks and Jean Roberson,
M.S.N., R.N., Clinical Nurse
Specialist, provided an overview
of nursing programs. Other
speakers included Melissa
into aging at the Hinda and Arthur
Marcus Institute for Aging
Research and trains more than
1,000 geriatric care providers
each year. For more information
about Hebrew SeniorLife, visit
https://www.hebrewseniorlife.org
or follow us on our blog,
Facebook, Instagram, Twitter,
and LinkedIn.
PUBLIC AUCTION
FRIDAY, JUNE 3RD AT 1:00 PM
MORTGAGEEâ€™S SALE OF REAL ESTATE
â€¢ MALDEN â€¢
15 ROOM / 6 BEDROOM
TWO FAMILY
DUPLEX STYLE HOME
Malden, MA
To Be Sold On The Premises
Brockton resident Dadie Petit-Frere, C.N.A. (right), and Randolph
resident Carline Cenat, R.N., were honored last night as Personal
Care Associate of the Year and Registered Nurse of the Year, respectively.
Lou Woolf, president and CEO of nonprofi t Hebrew
SeniorLife, congratulated the two winners who are committed
to helping to care for residents.
Bayer Tearney, Board Chair of
Hebrew SeniorLife and Louis
J. Woolf, President and Chief
Executive Offi cer, Hebrew SeniorLife.
Margie Lunder, a Hebrew
SeniorLife donor, introduced
the nightâ€™s honorees. The
evening concluded with a presentation
from Tammy Retalic,
D.N.P., M.S., R.N., Chief Nursing
Offi cer and Vice President, Patient
Care Services, Hebrew Rehabilitation
Center.
National Nurses Month
As part of National Nurses
Month, nearly three dozen nurses
from Hebrew SeniorLife were
nominated for their impeccable
work for the annual â€œSalute to
Nursesâ€ supplement published
in the Boston Globe. Nominees
range from newly minted nurses
to some with decades of experience,
and from home health
aides to day and night charge
nurses to hospice care â€“ showcasing
the organizationâ€™s continuum
of care.
According to Retalic, â€œHebrew
SeniorLife is committed to delivering
world-class clinical quality
to our patients and we support
that by off ering many opportunities
for ongoing education
and professional development
that can position nurses to advance
their careers.â€
Hebrew SeniorLife serves as
a clinical training site for students
seeking R.N., L.P.N., or
C.N.A. degrees, and trains nursing
students in inpatient and
outpatient settings from partner
schools, including Academy
Health Care, Regis College,
Massachusetts College of Pharmacy
and Health Sciences, Massachusetts
General Institute for
Health Professionals, and LabourÃ©
College.
The organization was recently
designated as an Age-Friendly
Health System by the Institute
of Healthcare Improvement. If
you are interested in joining our
team for a fulfi lling career, please
visit our careers page.
About Hebrew SeniorLife
Hebrew SeniorLife is a national
senior services leader uniquely
dedicated to rethinking, researching,
and redefi ning the
possibilities of aging. Hebrew
SeniorLife cares for more than
3,000 seniors a day across six
campuses throughout Greater
Boston. Our locations include:
Hebrew Rehabilitation CenterBoston
and Hebrew Rehabilitation
Center-NewBridge in Dedham;
NewBridge on the Charles,
Dedham; Orchard Cove, Canton;
Simon C. Fireman Community,
Randolph; Center Communities
of Brookline, Brookline; and Jack
Satter House, Revere. Founded
in 1903, Hebrew SeniorLife also
conducts influential research
FEATURES:
â€¢ Two Family Duplex Style Home â€¢
â€¢ Total of (15) Rooms w/ (6) Bedrooms & (2) Bathrooms â€¢
â€¢ Â±4,317 S/F of Area â€¢ Gas FWA Heat â€¢ Basement â€¢
â€¢ Clapboard Siding â€¢ Hardwood Floors â€¢ Public Water & Sewer â€¢
â€¢ Zoned: Residential A â€¢ Assessorâ€™s Parcel ID: M:137, B:799, L:909 â€¢
Sale Per Order Of Mortgagee
Attorney Keith K. Fuller
5300 Bigelow Commons, Enfield, CT
Attorney For Mortgagee
TERMS OF SALE: $10,000.00 Deposit Cash Or Certified Funds
5% Buyers Premium Applies
Other Terms To Be Announced At Time Of Sale
Aaron Posnik
AUCTIONEERS â€¢ APPRAISERS
West Springfield, MA â€¢ Philadelphia, PA
413-733-5238 â€¢ 610-853-6655
TOLL FREE 1-877-POSNIK1 â€¢ (767-6451)
MA Auc Lic #161 â€¢ PA Auc Lic #AY000241L
Web: www.posnik.com â€¢ Email: info@posnik.com
Gerry
Dâ€™Ambrosio
Attorney-at-Law
Is Your Estate in Order?
Do you have an update Will, Health
Care Proxy or Power of Attorney?
If Not, Please Call for a Free Consultation.
14 Proctor Avenue, Revere
(781) 284-5657
â€œLOCATED AT BUS STOP TO MALDEN T-STATIONâ€
220 Lebanon Street
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THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, MAY 13, 2022
Northeast Metro Tech Cosmetology
Students Welcome Loved Ones for Day
of Beauty to Celebrate Motherâ€™s Day
J&
$46 yd.
S
î€¯î„î‘î‡î–î†î„î“îˆ î€‰ î€°î„î–î’î‘î•îœ î€¦î’î€‘
MULCH SALE!
Discount Spring Special
PICK-UP or DELIVERY AVAILABLE
617-389-1490
Premium Hemlock or Pitch Black
BELOW WHOLESALE COSTS
LANDSCAPERS WELCOME
$4 yd.
$42 yd.
$3 yd.
î€µî€¯î€¥î€¢î€¤î€±î€§ î€¥î€²î€¥î€ºî€¬î€µ
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îžî€½îƒî€¼îŸ î€¿îƒî‚î‰îƒî€¼î€¾î‚
Event Details
When: Thursday, May 19th from
6:30-8:30 pm
Where: Revere History Museum,
108 Beach St., Revere, MA 02151
Contact Us At (781) 286-2226 or
rschpmuseum@comcast.net with
any questions!
Skyla Christie, of Revere, performing a color service and
blow-dry on her grandmother, Fran Christie.
WAKEFIELD â€“ The loved ones
of students in Northeast Metro
Tech's cosmetology program
were invited to the school last
î€®î€¥î€²î€¥î€®î€¥î¯î€µ î€®î€¡î€µî€¥î€¬î€¬î€¤î‰î€¢î€¡î€³î€±î€º
î€µî€¥î€ºî€¤î€¡î€® î€¢î€¥î€ºî€¬î€¥î€® î€¥î€²î€¥î€ºî€¬î€µ
Lisandro Baez, of Chelsea, performing
a blow-dry style on his mother, Carmen
Urena. (Courtesy Photo Northeast Metro Tech)
week for a day of beauty in celebration
of Motherâ€™s Day.
On Friday, May 6, the cosmetology
program welcomed 11
guests, who were gifted a variety
of services that students
have been working to master.
The guests included mothers,
grandmothers, aunts, and older
sisters of students in the program,
and each got to choose
from a menu of options, including
conditioning treatments,
hair coloring, and various styling
techniques.
Loved ones were invited via
elegant, hand-addressed invitations.
Northeast's culinary
program supported the event
by providing refreshments for
guests.
The event was developed
through a collaborative effort
by Cosmetology Department.
"It
was so great to see our students,
families, and teachers collaborating
on such a positive
learning experience," Superintendent
DiBarri said.
REVERE SOCIETY FOR CULTURAL &
HISTORICAL PRESERVATION -
REVERE HISTORY MUSEUM
LORENZ J. FINISON
PRESENTS
Author of Boston's Cycling
Craze: A Story of Race,
Sport, and Society, Lorenz
writes about Boston's
bicycling scene from 18801900.
In
this book, he describes
the opportunity for all races
and genders to participate
in the activity, and how it
transformed Boston as we
know it.
He has worked closely with
the Revere History Museum
for his research, and we are
thrilled to have him speak at
this event.
Postponed due
to illness
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Page 9
MAPC Launches â€˜MetroCommon
2050: Shaping our Region Togetherâ€™
New long-range land use and public policy plan offers a vision and practical
steps toward a more equitable and resilient future for Greater Boston
î€°îµºîµ¼î¶„îµ¾î¶’ î¹Ÿ î€¥î¶‹î¶ˆî¶î¶‡
Attorneys at Law
î€ î€³î€¨î€µî€¶î€²î€±î€¤î€¯ î€¬î€±î€­î€¸î€µî€¼ î€ î€µî€¨î€¤î€¯ î€¨î€¶î€·î€¤î€·î€¨
î€ î€©î€¤î€°î€¬î€¯î€¼ î€¯î€¤î€º î€ î€ªî€¨î€±î€¨î€µî€¤î€¯ î€³î€µî€¤î€¦î€·î€¬î€¦î€¨
î€ î€³î€¨î€µî€¶î€²î€±î€¤î€¯ î€¥î€¤î€±î€®î€µî€¸î€³î€·î€¦î€¼ î€ î€¦î€¬î€¹î€¬î€¯ î€¯î€¬î€·î€¬î€ªî€¤î€·î€¬î€²î€±
14 Norwood St., Everett, MA 02149
Phone: (617) 387-4900 Fax: (617) 381-1755
î€ºî€ºî€ºî€‘î€°î€¤î€¦î€®î€¨î€¼î€¥î€µî€²î€ºî€±î€¯î€¤î€ºî€‘î€¦î€²î€°
John Mackey, Esq. * Katherine M. Brown, Esq.
Patricia Ridge, Esq.
Pictured from left, Elizabeth Weyant, Rep. Barber, Rep. Vargas, and Rep. Ciccolo. (Photos are Courtesy MAPC).
BOSTON â€“ May 5, 2022â€“
Flanked by Congresswoman
Ayanna Pressley, MA-07, and
scores of public officials and
stakeholders from across Greater
Boston this week, the Metropolitan
Area Planning Council
(MAPC) offi cially unveiled a
land use and public policy blueprint
designed to put the region
on a course toward a more equitable,
sustainable and prosperous
future.
Developed through grassroots
research, analysis, and
public outreach over the past
three years, MetroCommon
2050: Shaping our Region Together
details five â€œAction Areasâ€
including Growth & Mobility,
Homes for Everyone, Equity
of Wealth & Health, Dynamic
& Representative Government,
and Climate Change Adaptation
& Resiliency â€“ and outlines bold,
achievable goals for the 101 cities
and towns within the MAPCâ€™s
planning territory, along with
useful research and tools to ensure
success.
The Action Areas were informed
by four core values Greater
Boston residents and workers
identifi ed as crucial for the regionâ€™s
success: equity, resilience,
prosperity, and stewardship.
â€œWe are charting an inclusive
vision of the future of the region,
and we do that together,â€
said Congresswoman Pressley
in her keynote remarks at the
launch event, noting the importance
of regional planning in
improving outcomes for residents
across the socio-economic
spectrum. â€œThese last two years
Congresswoman Ayanna Pressley
Everett
Aluminum
10 Everett Ave., Everett
617-389-3839
Owned & operated by the Conti
î‰î„îîŒîîœ î–îŒî‘î†îˆ î€”î€œî€˜î€› î‚‡ î€˜î€š Years!
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î‚‡î€¹îŒî‘îœî î€¶îŒî‡îŒî‘îŠ
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î‚‡î€§îˆî†îŽî–
î‚‡î€µî’î’f î‘îŠ
î‚‡ î€©î˜îîîœ î€¬î‘î–î˜î•îˆî‡
î‚‡ î€µîˆî“îî„î†îˆîîˆî‘î— î€ºîŒî‘î‡î’îšî–
www.everettaluminum.com
î‘îŠ
î€±î’îšî‚·î– î—î‹îˆ î—îŒîîˆ
î—î’ î–î†î‹îˆî‡î˜îîˆ î—î‹î’î–îˆ
î‹î’îîˆ îŒîî“î•î’î™îˆîîˆî‘î—
î“î•î’îîˆî†î—î– îœî’î˜î‚·î™îˆ î…îˆîˆî‘
î‡î•îˆî„îîŒî‘îŠ î„î…î’î˜î—
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BOSTON | SEE Page 19
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every day beginning at 4 PM
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THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, MAY 13, 2022
PROMOTE | FROM Page 1
Proud son, Seamus pinned his father Sean Matthews.
Proud son Anthony pinned his mother, Lt. Stacey Bruzzese,
from sergeant to lieutenant during last Thursdayâ€™s
promotional ceremony at Revere
City Hall. (Advocate photos by
Tara Vocino)
Bruzzese with her husband, Nicholas,
and son, Anthony.
Pictured from left to right: members of the criminal investigation unit â€” Det. Sgt. John Gibson,
Det. Dennis Arsenault, Det. Sgt. Milton Alfaro, Det. Doug Zingali, Lt. Stacey Bruzzese, retired Det.
Sgt. Steven Pisano, Det. Capt. Maria LaVita, crime analyst Sarah White, Suff olk County Sheriff Det.
Lt. Jarrod Trovato and Det. David Caramanica.
Bruzzese with her parents, Marian and Anthony, husband, Nicholas
and their son, Anthony.
Pictured from left to right: Det. Captain Maria LaVita, Mayor Brian Arrigo, Police Chief David Callahan,
incoming Lt. Stacey Bruzzese, incoming Sgt. Sean Matthews, Executive Offi cer Sean Randall
and Captain Amy Oâ€™Hara.
Pictured from left to right: Revere Police Chief David Callahan, Stacey
Bruzzese, Sean Matthews and Executive Offi cer Sean Randall.
Pictured from left to right: proud wife, Patricia, incoming Sgt.
Sean Matthews and their sons, Seamus and Liam.
×‰	Ú 7cassandra://-krQ4Jh3ixhOuQFF0x5ZGvOn-1MknnjtXqg1YnKNU-gÍ-‰Í`Ì°Í ×b}˜ÆG¯®f±×‰EÚïTHE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, MAY 13, 2022
Page 11
Great Revere Clean-Up tackles litter and brush citywide
C
apitol Waste Services, Inc. staff ers cleaned up a messy strip of the
Lee Burbank Highway that hadnâ€™t been touched in approximately
10 years as part of the Great Revere Clean-Up on Saturday. Volunteers
tackled diff erent areas of the city to collectively beautify Revere.
Members of Capitol Waste Inc. worked on brush removal.
Pictured from left to right: Matthew Clements, event sponsor Blanchards Wine & Spirits General
Manager Bridget Hurd, Blanchards Owner Christine Elder, DPW Foreman William Guinasso,
Massachusetts Beautiful Executive Director Neil Rhein and DPW Superintendent Paul Argenzio
during Saturdayâ€™s Great Revere Clean-Up. (Advocate photos by Tara Vocino)
On Saturday morning Capitol Waste Services, Inc. cleaned up a messy
strip of Lee Burbank Highway during the Great Revere Clean-Up.
Pictured from left to right: Councillor-at-Large Marc Silvestri, Capitol Waste staff ers Michael
Merullo, Frank Vargas, Rafael Lemus and Owner Joseph Ricupero, Councillor-at-Large Steven
Morabito, Richard Parker, Edwin Batista, Vladimir Diaz, Mayor Brian Arrigo and Councillor-atLarge
Gerry Visconti; kneeling: Juan Zavala and Luis Rodriguez.
Dept. of Public Works Foreman William Guinasso (at right) and Ward 4
Councillor Patrick Keefe
Pictured from left to right: Top row: Juan Zavala, Vladimir Diaz, Armando Reyes, Richard Parker,
Edwin Batista, Michael Merullo and Rafael Lemus; kneeling: Luis Rodriguez and Frank Vargas
worked on cleaning up brush along the highway.
Revere High School senior Kevin
Martinez (at left) and freshman
Christopher Guerrero cleaned
up the bridge along Broadway.
Zachary Cazzie, 9, holds the bag
of trash that he collected.
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THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, MAY 13, 2022
Baseball Pats fall at home to Boston Latin, 5-2
Third baseman Ollie Svendsen warms up
with the team before the game against
Boston Latin.
Max Doucette stops Boston Latin from crossing
home plate to keep them off the scoreboard.
The Patriots baseball team are shown lining up after warm ups prior
to game start. (Advocate photos by Mike Riley)
Pats Pitcher Chris Cassidy gets a hit for Revere to put one man
on base.
Chris Cassidy begins throwing heat
to start off the game against The Wolf
Pack.
Patâ€™s catcher Max Doucette rounds third base to break the
0-0 tie against The Wolf Pack.
Patriots Kyle Cummings gets low to try and tag out opposing Boston
Latin players.
Revereâ€™s Brendan Sack demolishes a ball straight to centerfi
eld to hype up the team.
#14 Max Doucette dives back to fi rst base to keep his position at fi rst base.
Revere junior Dom Boudreau turns
on the jets and races to fi rst base after
a deep hit outfi eld.
Revere High Coach Mike Manning briefi ng the Patriots
on Boston Latinâ€™s top players.
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Page 13
Revere softball team falls short in thriller at Northeast
Northeast battled back to take
the lead, but Revere fought back
and owned a 16-14 lead entering
the bottom of the eighth
frame. Bella Stamatopoulos singled
for Revere to bring in the
go-ahead run in the top of the
eighth.
Patriots Head Coach Megan
Revereâ€™s Lea Doucette received a pat on the back from teammates
after hitting a two-run home run on Tuesday.
By Greg Phipps
U
nlike many other teams
this spring, which has been
marred by inclement weather,
the Revere High School softball
team has been able to play most
of its games as scheduled. The
Patriots were already 14 games
into their season entering Tuesdayâ€™s
road matchup against the
Northeast Metro Tech Knights.
Coming off two straight wins
â€“ over Northeast last week and
Chelsea on Monday â€“ the Patriots
were looking to make
it three in a row. They nearly
pulled it off , but an eighth-inning
walk-off , three-run homer
catapulted the host Knights to
a dramatic 17-16 win. The loss
left Revere at 4-11 overall with
three games remaining on the
schedule.
The Patriots were without
their regular starting pitcher, Isabella
Qualtieri, who was out
with an injury. Replacing her
was Ally Straccia, who was making
her fi rst start of the season
and ended up striking out two.
Through three innings, it was
looking pretty good for the Patriots,
who built a 6-2 lead with
the help of a two-run blast off
the bat of Lea Doucette.
Oâ€™Donnell praised the eff ort of
her squad, citing the defensive
play of outfi elders Astrid Noriega,
Lilian Calderon and Brianna
Miranda, infi elders Riley Straccia,
Doucette, Jordan Martelli,
who was making her fi rst varsity
start at second base, Luiza
Santos and catcher Ari Keohane.
â€œIt was a whole team eff ort
even though we came up short,â€
Oâ€™Donnell said of the loss.
On off ense, Doucette nearly
launched a second home run,
but it drifted just foul down
the left fi eld line. She fi nished
with three hits and three RBIs,
and Riley Straccia contributed
three hits and an RBI. Noriega
also belted three hits and drove
in three.
The Patriots defeated the
Knights by an 18-12 score when
the two teams met last Thursday
in Revere. The Patriots hosted
Malden on Wednesday and
entertain Everett this Friday at
St. Maryâ€™s Park. They close out
the season with home games
against Oâ€™Bryant on Monday,
May 16, and Somerville on
Wednesday, May 18.
Lawrence A. Simeone Jr.
Attorney-at-Law
~ Since 1989 ~
* Corporate Litigation
* Criminal/Civil
* MCAD
* Zoning/Land Court
* Wetlands Litigation
* Workmenâ€™s Compensation
* Landlord/Tenant Litigation
* Real Estate Law
* Construction Litigation
* Tax Lein
* Personal Injury
* Bankruptcy
* Wrongful Death
* Zoning/Permitting Litigation
300 Broadway, Suite 1, Revere * 781-286-1560
lsimeonejr@simeonelaw.net
REVERE PUBLIC SCHOOLS
Public Hearing
Revere second baseman Jordan
Martelli followed through on
this throw to fi rst during Tuesdayâ€™s
contest at Northeast.
Notice is hereby given in accordance with the
provisions of Section 61 of Chapter 71 of the
Massachusetts General Laws, that the Revere
School Committee will conduct a public hearing on
Tuesday, May 17, 2022, at 6:00 p.m. via Zoom and
in the Emmanuel M. Ferrante School Committee
î€µî’î’î îîˆîˆî—îŒî‘îŠî€ îî’î†î„î—îˆî‡ î’î‘ î—î‹îˆ î‚¿î•î–î— îƒ€î’î’î• î’î‰ î—î‹îˆ
Revere High School, 101 School Street, for the
purpose of discussing and voting the enrollment
of non-resident students (also known as School
Choice) in the Revere Public Schools.
Revereâ€™s Astrid Noriega lashed a base hit on Tuesday.
May 6, May 13, 2022
Wildlife Control and Tree Service
24-Hour Service
Revere shortstop Riley Straccia put the tag on a Northeast
Metro Tech base runner attempting to steal on
Tuesday.
In her fi rst start this season, Revere pitcher
Ally Straccia wound up for this pitch in
Tuesdayâ€™s game at Northeast Metro Tech.
Fully Insured
781-269-0914
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THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, MAY 13, 2022
Malden High softball rout Lady Pats, 17-1
Ally Straccia on the mound to start Wednesday for the
Revere Patriotâ€™s as they took on Malden.
Arianna Keohane catches the ball as Mahrianna Comin-Larmie
at the plate leans back to avoid being hit
with the pitch.
Bella Stamatopoulos and her teammates look on as
the Patriotâ€™s fell to Malden Wednesday, 17-1.
Ally Straccia ducks as a line drive comes her way.
Riley Straccia looks to make a catch as a player from
Malden is in limbo between bases.
Luiza Santos steps away from third base and gets into
position as Malden player hovers the base in the background.
Revereâ€™s
third base women Luiza Santos gets ready to
throw the ball to fi rst base in hopes for an out.
Brianna Miranda took the mound mid game for Revere
Wednesday.
Luiza Santos swiftly makes her way to third base, as a
Malden play hopes to tag her out.
Riley Straccia covering second base, made the out
and works to get the ball back to the pitcher during
Wednesdayâ€™s game with Malden.
Riley Straccia is safe at second base as player from Malden
still hopes to make the out.
Catcher Arianna Keohane. (Advocate photos by Emily Harney)
Ally Straccia covers second base in hopes to tag out a
player from Malden during Wednesdays game.
Ally Straccia of Revere takes off from second base during
Revereâ€™s game with Malden Wesdnesday.
Kelren Fernandes Dias makes her way to third base
for the Revere Patriots Wednesday. Revere fell to Malden,
17-1.
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Page 15
Baseball Pats earn important
league win over Malden
By Greg Phipps
T
he off ense has struggled in
recent games for the Revere
High School baseball team. But
the Patriots got the bats rolling
in Wednesday's 8-1 Greater Boston
League (GBL) victory at Malden.
The win left Revere at 7-3 in
league play.
Captains Chris Cassidy and
Mike Popp produced solid
games with fi ve hits and four RBIs
between them. Cassidy stroked
three hits, including a double,
scored twice, and drove in two.
Popp provided two hits, including
a two-bagger, along with two
RBIs and three stolen bases.
On the mound, Domenic Boudreau
took home the win by
hurling fi ve-and-two-thirds innings
and allowing just three
hits and one run. He also fi nished
with four Ks. The Patriots
improved to 8-6 overall with
the victory.
The Malden game was a refreshing
change of pace for
the Patriots, who had been involved
in numerous tight, lowscoring
aff airs recently. On Monday,
Revere found itself in a 0-0
tie through four innings against
Boston Latin before the visitRevereâ€™s
Kyle Cummings continued his fi ne pitching with a save
in relief in last Fridayâ€™s win over Mystic Valley.
ing Wolfpack broke it open and
eventually notched a 5-2 win.
The bats did make some noise
last Friday in a 5-3 home victory
over Mystic Valley. Cassidy,
Boudreau and Sal DeAngelis
each drove in a run and starting
pitcher Ollie Svendson went six
innings to earn the win. He gave
up just three hits and fanned
three. Kyle Cummings, who has
been perhaps the team's best
pitcher, tossed an inning in relief,
allowing a run on two hits,
to end up with the save.
The Patriots resume action
on Monday, May 16, when they
travel for a GBL matchup with
Everett. They're on the road
again next Wednesday, May
18, for a rematch against Boston
Latin.
Big Sister Boston President & CEO
Deb Re Announces Retirement
BOSTON â€“ After 16 years at
the helm, Big Sister Bostonâ€™s
President & CEO Deborah Re announced
sheâ€™s stepping down
from her role at the end of this
year. Through a video message
to friends, donors, and supporters
of Big Sister Boston, Re made
her announcement highlighting
her pride in the organizationâ€™s
innovative programming
and ability to serve over 20,000
girls during her tenure.
Under Reâ€™s leadership, Big
Sister Boston has been recognized
by the Greater Boston
Chamber of Commerce, the
Massachusetts Conference for
Women, and the Massachusetts
Nonprofit Network. In
2020, 2019, and 2017, the organization
received the Quality
Award from Big Brothers Big
Sisters of America (BBBSA), as
well as the 2015 national Agency
of the Year for its substantial
growth in the number of children
served, quality and length
of mentoring relationships, and
increased fundraising. Re was
an appointed member of the
City of Bostonâ€™s Womenâ€™s Commission
advising former Mayor
Martin J. Walsh and has served
as a member of Governor Charlie
Bakerâ€™s transition team. Additionally,
Re has received the Pinnacle
Award from the Chamber
of Commerce and has been recognized
as a one of Boston Business
Journalâ€™s â€œWomen of Infl uence.â€
She has received awards
from numerous organizations
including the Lewis Family
Foundation.
â€œThroughout her remarkable
career, Iâ€™ve admired Deb
for leading with integrity and
authenticity. Big Sister Boston
wouldnâ€™t be what it is today
without her leadership and
deep commitment to helping
girls thrive,â€ said Melissa MacDonnell,
President, Liberty Mutual
Foundation and Vice President,
Community Investments
at Liberty Mutual Insurance. â€œI
want to personally thank her
for always putting the needs
of the girls fi rst and for changing
so many lives for the better.â€
â€œAll of us at Big Sister Boston
are grateful to Deb for her passion,
leadership, and unwavering
focus on our mission to ignite
girlsâ€™ passion and power to
succeed through positive mentoring
relationships,â€ said Big
Sister Boston Board Chair Carey
Cort. â€œWeâ€™re excited to build
upon her legacy of an organization
uniquely positioned to tap
into and nurture the vast potential
that is the girls and young
women of Greater Boston. The
stage is set for a new leader to
shepherd the organization into
the next decade; to continue to
forge strong connections in the
community and partnerships
that will benefit Greater Bostonâ€™s
girls for years to come.â€ The
organization has retained Koya
Partners to lead the search for
GREATER BOSTON LEAGUE BASEBALL STANDINGS
(as of May 11)
Team
Lynn Classical
Lynn English
Somerville
Revere
Everett
Medford
Malden
Chelsea
Hitting Leaders
Player (School)
Tyler Wilson (Lynn Classical)
Ian Born (Somerville)
Mateus Anell (Somerville)
John Poli (Medford)
Chris Cecca (Revere)
Noah Brown (Somerville)
Frankie Velasquez (Everett)
Andrew Leone (Revere)
Matt Turilli (Everett)
Darnell Leon (Lynn Classical)
Sam Ortega (Malden)
Owen Kelly (Medford)
Mikey Popp (Revere)
Jake Simpson (Malden)
GBL (W-L)
10-1
8-3
7-1
7-3
5-4
2-8
2-9
0-10
Overall (W-L)
11-2
8-4
10-2
8-6
6-5
2-12
4-11
0-12
GREATER BOSTON LEAGUE LEADERS
H-AB
19-37
14-28
13-29
10-23
9-21
11-27
13-32
Almani Medina (Lynn Classical) 16-40
7-18
10-36
7-20
10-31
12-38
11-35
10-32
RBI
17
10
9
4
6
9
7
11
5
11
13
5
3
7
5
GREATER BOSTON LEAGUE LEADERS
IP
Pitching Leaders
Player (School)
Kevin Whalen (Lynn Classical)
Kyle Durant (Lynn Classical)
Aidan Oâ€™Sullivan (Somerville)
Ollie Svendson (Revere)
Tyler Wilson (Lynn Classical)
Knico Ramirez (Lynn Classical)
Kyle Cummings (Revere)
Brandon McMahon (Malden)
Dm Boudreau (Revere)
Sam MacGilvray (Medford)
Kevin Clark (Somerville)
Omar Marshall (Everett)
W-L
11 2/3 1-0
23
3-1
26 1/3 3-0
14 1/3 0-1
22 2/3 4-0
12
26.1
37
22
17
1-0
4-0
1-4
2-1
21 1/3 0-2
2-1
18 1/3 1-2
their next President & CEO.
Re will continue to lead Big
Sister Boston through the remainder
of 2022, and the organization
plans to celebrate her
16 years of leadership at their
annual gala, Big in Boston, in
October.
About Big Sister Association
of Greater Boston
Big Sister Association of
Greater Boston ignites girlsâ€™
passion and power to succeed
through positive mentoring
relationships with women
and enrichment programs that
support girlsâ€™ healthy development.
Since 1951, Big Sister
Boston has focused on meeting
the unique needs of girls by
providing them with the guid.AVE
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ance,
care, and support of a
Big Sister. Today, the organization
serves nearly 2,500 women
and girls throughout Greater
Boston through professionally
supported one-to-one mentoring
relationships and enrichment
activities that address the
social-emotional development
of girls ages 7 â€“ 24. Big Sister
Boston is the only independently
supported agency within the
Big Brothers Big Sisters (BBBA)
nationwide network to solely
serve girls and women and was
recognized by BBBSAâ€™s Leadership
Council as the 2015 National
Agency of the Year. For more
information, please visit www.
bigsister.org or follow @bigsisterboston
on Facebook, Instagram,
and LinkedIn.
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THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, MAY 13, 2022
21st Annual Harpoon 5-Miler to Benefit ALS â€”
Lou Gehrigâ€™s Disease â€“ is Back in Person on May 22nd
W
akefield, MA â€“ The 21st
annual Harpoon 5-Miler,
sponsored by Harpoon Brewery
to benefi t The Angel Fund
for ALS Research, will be held on
Sunday, May 22nd. The 5-Miler
has raised more than $2.37 million
for ALS research through
The Angel Fund.
â€œAfter two years as a virtual
event, we are all looking forward
to hosting the race this year at
Harpoon Brewery,â€ Mass. Bay
Brewing Company President
Charlie Storey said. â€œOur virtual
events in both 2020 and 2021
again surpassed our wildest
dreams, with participants from
42 states and 9 diff erent countries
taking part and helping us
raise funds for ALS research. We
canâ€™t wait to see what the 2022
edition of the Harpoon 5-Miler
will bring.â€
In addition to the in-person
race, the Harpoon 5-Miler will
also be held virtually,
allowing an unlimited number
of runners, walkers, and cyclists
from across the country to
walk, run, cycle, or fi nd a way to
complete 5 miles, whether indoors
or outdoors, on May 22nd
.
The in-person Harpoon 5-Miler
begins with bib pickup at 8
a.m. until 9:45 a.m. The pushrim
and handcycle race begins
at 9:55 a.m. with the race kicking
off at 10 a.m. Individuals and
team awards will be presented
at 12 noon for the following:
Individual Awards
Fastest Overall (Male/Female)
Fastest Friend of Harpoon
(Male/Female)
1st, 2nd and 3rd Place Pushrim
& Handcycle
1st, 2nd and 3rd Place (Male/
Female) in the following age categories:
21-29, 30-39, 40-49, 5059,
60-69, 70+
1st Place Male/Female winning
times are determined by
"gun time" as per USATF rules.
Team Awards
1st, 2nd, and 3rd Place Male
4-Pack Team
1st, 2nd, and 3rd Place Female
4-Pack Team
1st, 2nd, and 3rd Place Coed
4-Pack Team (must be a minimum
of 1 female or male to
qualify)
All runners, whether running
as part of a team or not, will be
timed individually and have
their time posted compared to
the entire race field. Runners
who are part of team will have
their time scored as part of the
team's time.
In-person participants can
register on the website www.
harpoon5miler.com until 11:59
p.m. EDT on May 15, 2022 and
virtual participants can register
until 11:59 p.m. EDT on May
20, 2022.
Harpoon 5-Miler ($60 Entry
Fee) includes:
â€¢ Entrance into the Harpoon
5-Miler
â€¢ Commemorative race day
shirt
â€¢ 2 beer tickets (Friends of
Harpoon will receive a 3rd beer
ticket)
â€¢ Post-race meal
â€¢ 2022 fi nishing medal
â€¢ Harpoon 5-Miler 2022 pint
cup
â€¢ Donation to The Angel Fund
â€¢ Post-race dance party at Harpoon
Brewery with DJ Steve
Greco!
Virtual 5-Miler ($10 Entry Fee)
includes:
â€¢ Entrance into the Harpoon
5-Miler
â€¢ Custom 2022 5-Miler pdf bib
â€¢ Donation to The Angel Fund
Harpoon 5-Miler participants
are encouraged to raise additional
funds for The Angel
Fund for ALS Research in addition
to the entry fee. Fundraising
awards will be presented to
runners based upon donations
made online or received via mail
by Friday, May 15th at 5:00 p.m.
The Richard Hackel Award will
be given to the Harpoon 5-Miler
runner who goes above and beyond,
raising the most funds for
The Angel Fund and the Scott
Carlson Award will be given to
the fundraising team that goes
above and beyond, raising the
most funds for The Angel Fund.
â€œWe are excited to celebrate
in-person and virtually with all
the runners and walkers who
continue to support The Angel
Fund through the Harpoon
5-Miler,â€ Rich Kennedy, president
of The Angel Fund said. â€œThe Angel
Fund is grateful to Harpoon
Brewery for its support these
past 21 year as we continue our
fi ght to fi nd a cure for ALS.â€
In addition to the Harpoon
5-Miler, donations to the Angel
Fund for ALS Research can also
be made online at www.theangelfund.org
or can be sent
to The Angel Fund, 649 Main
Street, Wakefi eld, MA 01880. All
donations should be made payable
to The Angel Fund for ALS
Research.
Information about The Angel
Fund for ALS Research can be
obtained on the website, www.
theangelfund.org.
For Advertising with Results, call The Advocate Newspapers
at 781-286-8500 or Info@advocatenews.net
call he Adv cate Ne spapers
×‰	Ú 7cassandra://9rSOFpEvC6odUFd_rnhUE974ShWWiiL5VvaQM3XgFeoÍ)"Í`Ì°Í ×b}˜ÆG¯®f·×‰EÚ/RTHE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, MAY 13, 2022
Page 17
Pioneer Charter School of Science I Ranks Among the Top
Massachusetts High Schools, According to U.S. News & World Report
EVERETT - Pioneer Charter
School of Science I (PCSS I),
based in Everett, was ranked
among the stateâ€™s best high
schools by U.S. News and World
Report in its annual â€˜Best High
Schoolsâ€™ ranking. The school
ranked 15th in Massachusetts
among 378 public high
schools.
â€œA great high school educates
all students from diff erent
social and economic backgrounds,
exposing them to
challenging coursework on the
path to graduation,â€ U.S. News
stated in its ranking. â€œThe highest
ranked public schoolsâ€¦are
those whose students demonstrated
outstanding outcomes
above expectations in math,
reading and science state assessments,
earned qualifying
scores in an array of college-level
exams, and graduated in high
proportions.â€
PCSS I, located in Everett,
was one of eight charter public
schools that ranked among
the Top 20 high schools in Massachusetts,
including its sister
school in Saugus - PCSS II.
â€œOur team of students, teachers
and families work extremely
hard all year round, and itâ€™s
gratifying to see their commitment
recognized in this way,â€
said Sanela Jonuz, PCSS Iâ€™s Principal.
â€œWe are proud to be accomplishing
our mission to prepare
our students for higher education
and career success.â€
The rankings were based on
six categories: College Readiness,
College Curriculum
Breadth, Graduation Rate, State
Assessment Proficiency, State
Assessment Performance (compared
with what U.S. News predicted
for a school with its demographic
characteristics in its
state) and Underserved Student
Performance.
PCSS I received 97 out of a
Mystic Valley Elder Services to
Hold Free Workshop â€”
Dr. Paul Lamâ€™s Tai Chi for Healthâ€”in June at the
Stoneham Senior Center
STONEHAM â€” Mystic Valley
Elder Services will present a
free workshop seriesâ€” Dr. Paul
Lamâ€™s Tai Chi For Health â€”on
Fridays, June 3 -- July 22, 10:30
to 11:30 AM
at the Stoneham Senior Center,
136 Elm Street, Stoneham.
Find pain relief, reduced stiff -
ness, and a better quality of
life through tai chi. Tai chi is often
described as â€œmeditation in
motion,â€ harmonizing body and
mind by practicing slow continuous
movement accompanied
by deep breathing. The class
will cover the basic movements
in Dr. Paul Lamâ€™s CDC approved
program. Thereâ€™s growing evidence
that this mind-body practice
has value in treating or preventing
many health problems.
Our practice is gentle, requiring
a small range of motion.
Registration is free, but required.
To register, please call today
as class size is limited: 781438-1157.
RESIGNS
| SEE Page 17
him and his family, and I wish
him nothing but wellness and
health in the future,â€ said Councillor-at-Large
Steve Morabito.
Councillor-at-Large Dan Rizzo
said he has been friends with
Fiore for nearly three decades.
â€œHe brought a lot to this council
in terms of knowledge and
understanding, but his health
is paramount, and he is doing
what is right for him,â€ said Rizzo.
â€œIf we are going to serve the
residents well, then we have to
be in the right frame of mind
and in the right health to work
eff ectively, so I think he is making
the right decision, and I just
Mystic Valley Elder Servicesâ€™
Theater Event to be Held
June 25
â€œAinâ€™t Misbehavinâ€™, The Fats
Waller Musical Show!â€
(Malden/Stoneham, MA)â€”
Mystic Valley Elder Services annual
theater event fundraiser
â€œAinâ€™t Misbehavinâ€™, The Fats
Waller Musical Show!â€, the
Award-winning musical celebration
that transforms the theater
into the steamy Savoy Ballroom
and the incomparable Cotton
Club to bring you the songs that
made Fats Waller famous , will
be held Saturday, June 25, at
6:30pm at the Greater Boston
Stage Company in Stoneham.
Sponsorships and tickets are
now available. Proceeds benefi t
Mystic Valley Elder Servicesâ€™ programs
that keep older adults independent
and in their homes.
Tickets cost $75 each and sponwant
to off er him my best and
continued support for whatever
he needs.â€
Immediately following the
reading of Fioreâ€™s resignation letter,
the council approved holding
a special election to fi ll his
seat for the remainder of his
term.
While the council recently approved
redistricting and re-precincting
for the city following
the 2020 US Census, the special
election will be held with
the precincts and ward boundary
lines under which Fiore was
elected last year.
â€œBecause this seat was fi lled
with what we would call the
old, or current, ward, those are
sorships levels range from $100
to $20,000. Special thanks to
lead sponsors, StonehamBank,
Agero, Inc. and John and Wendy
Pereira. Please contact Jenny
Vanasse at 781-388-4802 or jvanasse@mves.org
or visit www.
mves.org/fundraising-events for
more information.
-30Located
in Malden, Mass., Mystic
Valley Elder Services is a nonprofit
agency that provides essential
home- and communitybased
care and resources to older
adults, people living with disabilities,
and caregivers who reside
in Chelsea, Everett, Malden,
Medford, Melrose, North Reading,
Reading, Revere, Stoneham,
Wakefi eld and Winthrop. Agency
services include coordination of
home care, transportation, Meals
on Wheels, and information and
referrals. For more information,
please call (781) 324-7705 or visit
www.mves.org.
the lines that will govern this
election,â€ said Election Commissioner
Paul Fahey. â€œThe precincts
in the fall for the state election
will be with the new precincts,
but for this election we are going
to have to use the old precincts.
There are fi ve precincts
(in Ward 5), two subprecints and
three main precincts, and those
voting locations will remain the
same for this one election.â€
Fahey said nomination papers
will likely be available next
week, and the election is tentatively
scheduled for Tuesday,
July 19. There will be no preliminary
election, and the winner
will be the top vote getter of all
the candidates who qualify.
possible 100 points in the rankings.
PCSS
Iâ€™s graduation rate also
played a large role in its state
ranking - the school graduated
94% of its class. Graduates have
gone on to some of the most
prestigious colleges in the country,
including Columbia, MIT,
Dartmouth, Brown, Cornell, Williams,
and Northwestern.
PCSS I is a rigorous college
preparatory charter school
based with a mission to prepare
educationally under-resourced
students for todayâ€™s competitive
world.
The PCSS community speaks
30 languages and has family ties
to 40 countries. At PCSS I, 64% of
the students are minority, 75%
are high needs, 60% are low
income, 21% are English Language
Learners, and 8% are students
with special needs.
About The Pioneer Charter
School of Science
Pioneer Charter School of
Science off ers a rigorous academic
curriculum emphasizing
math, science, and analytical
thinking skills balanced by
a strong foundation in the humanities.
The school off ers extended
days/hours and careeroriented
college preparation.
Students must pass fi ve math
and fi ve science classes in order
to graduate - more than state
standards, and students must
complete 40 hours of community
service. The school has a 195day
school calendar, extended
days, after school tutoring and
â€œvoluntaryâ€ Saturday classes for
students who need extra help.
- LEGAL NOTICE -
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î€·î€«î€¨ î€·î€µî€¬î€¤î€¯ î€¦î€²î€¸î€µî€·
î€³î€µî€²î€¥î€¤î€·î€¨ î€¤î€±î€§ î€©î€¤î€°î€¬î€¯î€¼ î€¦î€²î€¸î€µî€·
î€¶î˜îµµî’îîŽ î€³î•î’î…î„î—îˆ î„î‘î‡ î€©î„îîŒîîœ î€¦î’î˜î•î—
î€•î€— î€±îˆîš î€¦î‹î„î•î‡î’î‘ î€¶î—î•îˆîˆî—
î€¥î’î–î—î’î‘î€ î€°î€¤ î€“î€•î€”î€”î€—
î€‹î€™î€”î€šî€Œ î€šî€›î€›î€î€›î€–î€“î€“
î€§î’î†îŽîˆî— î€±î’î€‘ î€¶î€¸î€•î€•î€³î€“î€˜î€šî€–î€¨î€¤
î€¨î–î—î„î—îˆ î’î‰î€ î€­î€¤î€°î€¨î€¶ î€¤î€±î€§î€µî€¨î€º î€°îµ¼î€©î€¤î€§î€¼î€¨î€±
Dî„î—îˆ î’î‰ î€§îˆî„î—î‹î€ î€“î€”î€’î€“î€™î€’î€•î€“î€•î€•
CITATION ON PETITION FOR
FORMAL ADJUDICATION
To all interested persons: A Petition for î€©î’î•îî„î î€³î•î’î…î„î—îˆ î’î‰ î€ºîŒîî
îšîŒî—î‹ î€¤î“î“î’îŒî‘î—îîˆî‘î— î’î‰ î€³îˆî•î–î’î‘î„î î€µîˆî“î•îˆî–îˆî‘î—î„î—îŒî™îˆ î‹î„î– î…îˆîˆî‘ î‚¿îîˆî‡ î…îœ
î€®î„î•îˆî‘ î€§îˆî‘î‘îŒî–î’î‘ of î€°î„îî‡îˆî‘î€ î€°î€¤ requesting that the Court enter
a formal Decree and Order and for such other relief as requested
in the Petition. The Petitioner requests that î€®î„î•îˆî‘ î€§îˆî‘î‘îŒî–î’î‘ of
î€°î„îî‡îˆî‘î€ î€°î€¤ be appointed as Personal Representative(s) of said
estate to serve î€ºîŒî—î‹î’î˜î— î€¶î˜î•îˆî—îœ on the bond in î˜î‘î–î˜î“îˆî•î™îŒî–îˆî‡
î„î‡îîŒî‘îŒî–î—î•î„î—îŒî’î‘î€‘
î€¬î€°î€³î€²î€µî€·î€¤î€±î€· î€±î€²î€·î€¬î€¦î€¨
î€¼î’î˜ î‹î„î™îˆ î—î‹îˆ î•îŒîŠî‹î— î—î’ î’î…î—î„îŒî‘ î„ î†î’î“îœ î’î‰ î—î‹îˆ î€³îˆî—îŒî—îŒî’î‘ î‰î•î’î
î—î‹îˆ î€³îˆî—îŒî—îŒî’î‘îˆî• î’î• î„î— î—î‹îˆ î€¦î’î˜î•î—î€‘ î€¼î’î˜ î‹î„î™îˆ î„ î•îŒîŠî‹î— î—î’ î’î…îîˆî†î—
î—î’ î—î‹îŒî– î“î•î’î†îˆîˆî‡îŒî‘îŠî€‘ î€·î’ î‡î’ î–î’î€ îœî’î˜ î’î• îœî’î˜î• î„î—î—î’î•î‘îˆîœ îî˜î–î— î‚¿îîˆ
î„ îšî•îŒî—î—îˆî‘ î„î“î“îˆî„î•î„î‘î†îˆ î„î‘î‡ î’î…îîˆî†î—îŒî’î‘ î„î— î—î‹îŒî– î€¦î’î˜î•î— î…îˆî‰î’î•îˆî€
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î€·î‹îŒî– îŒî– î€±î€²î€· î„ î‹îˆî„î•îŒî‘îŠ î‡î„î—îˆî€ î…î˜î— î„ î‡îˆî„î‡îîŒî‘îˆ î…îœ îšî‹îŒî†î‹ îœî’î˜
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î„î‘î‡ î’î…îîˆî†î—îŒî’î‘ î‰î’îîî’îšîˆî‡ î…îœ î„î‘ î€¤îµ¶î‡î„î™îŒî— î’î‰ î€²î…îîˆî†î—îŒî’î‘î– îšîŒî—î‹îŒî‘
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îŒî‘î™îˆî‘î—î’î•îœ î’î• î„î‘î‘î˜î„î î„î†î†î’î˜î‘î—î– îšîŒî—î‹ î—î‹îˆ î€¦î’î˜î•î—î€‘ î€³îˆî•î–î’î‘î– îŒî‘î—îˆî•îˆî–î—îˆî‡
îŒî‘ î—î‹îˆ îˆî–î—î„î—îˆ î„î•îˆ îˆî‘î—îŒî—îîˆî‡ î—î’ î‘î’î—îŒî†îˆ î•îˆîŠî„î•î‡îŒî‘îŠ î—î‹îˆ î„î‡îîŒî‘îŒî–î—î•î„î—îŒî’î‘
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 ÍLÍrG9×H¯http://mapc.org××Ðˆ× ×b} ÆG¯®g	 Í¤Í0s9×H³http://www.mapc.org××Ðˆ×‰EÚ)æPage 18
THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, MAY 13, 2022
If you have any questions about this weekâ€™s report,
e-mail us at bob@beaconhillrollcall.com or call us at (617) 720-1562.
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THE HOUSE AND SENATE:
Beacon Hill roll Call records local
senatorsâ€™ votes on roll calls
from the week of May 2-6. There
were no roll calls in the House
last week.
Technical audio problems
plagued the Senate live broadcast
near the end of the session.
All Senate sessions are broadcast
live on the Legislatureâ€™s website at
www.malegislature.gov After the
Senate adjourned and the online
video broadcast ended, the audio
could still be heard online.
Sen. Will Brownsberger (D-Belmont)
who presided over the
Senate debate, conducted several
â€œmic checksâ€ and could be heard
asking a technician, â€œIt doesnâ€™t
sound like Iâ€™m underwater anymore?â€
All
Senate roll calls were on
amendments to the bill allowing
undocumented/illegal immigrants
to apply for a Massachusetts
standard driverâ€™s license.
Sen. Bruce Tarr (R-Gloucester),
the sponsor of several failed
amendments to the bill, did not
respond to repeated requests
from Beacon Hill Roll Call to comment
on why he fi led the amendments.
Sens. Brendan Crighton
(D-Lynn) and Adam Gomez (DSpringfi
eld), two key backers of
the bill, did not respond to repeated
requests from Beacon Hill Roll
Call to comment on why they opposed
all of Tarrâ€™s amendments.
UNDOCUMENTED/ILLEGAL
IMMIGRANTS CAN GET DRIVERâ€™S
LICENSE (S 2851)
Senate 32-8, approved a bill allowing
undocumented/illegal
immigrants to apply for a Massachusetts
standard driverâ€™s license.
The House has approved
a diff erent version of the bill and
the Senate version now goes to
the House for consideration. The
bills are similar and both branches
approved their version by veto-proof
margins. Once the two
branches agree on a fi nal version,
the measure goes to Gov. Charlie
Baker.
The legislation requires an applicant
â€œwithout legal presenceâ€
in the United State to provide the
RMV with a foreign passport and
at least one of fi ve other documents:
a driverâ€™s license from another
state, a foreign driverâ€™s license,
a birth certifi cate, a foreign
national identifi cation card or a
marriage certifi cate or divorce decree
from any U.S. state.
â€œThe [bill] makes our roads safer
and, just as importantly, makes
the lives of more than 185,000
Massachusetts immigrants without
status easier by allowing
them to earn a standard driverâ€™s
license,â€ said Sen. Brendan Crighton
(D-Lynn). â€œIn the absence of a
robust regional public transportation
system, it is impossible for
many Massachusetts residents to
get through their day without the
use of a car. No one should fear
detention or deportation over essential
everyday tasks such as getting
to work, school, doctorâ€™s appointments
and grocery stores.
It is time for Massachusetts to
join the 16 other states who have
passed this common-sense legislation.â€
â€œIt
was important to me to listen
to my local police chiefs, many [of
whom] indicated to me that they
had concerns,â€ said Sen. Anne
Gobi (D-Spencer), one of only
fi ve of the Senateâ€™s 37 Democrats
to vote against the bill. â€œAs wellmeaning
as the legislation is, I do
believe there will be unintended
negative consequences. For one,
the legislation will task the RMV
with verifying documentation.
You do not have to look very far
to see problems the RMV continues
to have, including the Brockton
RMV improperly awarding
2,100 drivers licenses without a
road test.â€
â€œWe are a nation of immigrants,
and our commonwealth continues
to be profoundly and positively
shaped by immigrants from
all over the world,â€ said Senate
President Karen Spilka (D-Ashland).
â€œThey deserve to be able
to safely get to work and school,
care for their families and participate
in the lives of their communities.
I am thrilled that the Senate
has moved forward with this
proposal which will support families,
improve public safety and be
good for our economy.â€
â€œState-issued drivers licenses
are a primary form of identifi cation
in our society and they carry
real-world consequences and
responsibilities,â€™â€™ said GOP Minority
Leader Sen. Bruce Tarr who led
the opposition to the measure.
â€œWe proposed safeguards to ensure
that a privilege to drive does
not, under any circumstance, become
misused for any purposes
including access to voting in elections
or anything else that could
put the public at risk. The 9/11
Commission said that all layers of
government should secure stateissued
identifi cation documents
describing it as a national security
and law enforcement imperative
to combat identity fraud and
illegal immigration.â€
(A â€œYesâ€ vote is for the bill. A â€œNoâ€
vote is against it).
Sen. Lydia Edwards
Yes
MUST HAVE DISTINGUISHING
FEATURES (S 2851)
Senate 8-31, rejected an
amendment that would require
the license to have a background
color and other features which
will distinguish it from all other licenses
issued by the RMV.
â€œ[This] would have helped address
issues raised by a number
of local police chiefs in the district
I represent who I consulted
with prior to yesterdayâ€™s vote,â€ said
Sen. Marc Pacheco (D-Taunton).
â€œBased on the input I received, the
possible corruption of our state licensing
process was fl agged as a
signifi cant concern.â€
Amendment opponents said
law enforcement offi cers do not
need a distinctive license to identify
a driver. They said the amendment
could create an opportunity
for stigma and allow someone
to discriminate against its holder.
(A â€œYesâ€ vote is for the amendment.
A â€œNoâ€ vote is against it).
Sen. Lydia Edwards No
NOT VALID FOR ID (S 2851)
Senate 7-32, rejected an
amendment that would require
that the license include the words
â€œNot valid for identifi cationâ€ prominently
in bold text.â€
Amendment supporters said
that the license is meant to operate
a motor vehicle and it should
be made clear that it is not valid
for identifi cation purposes.
Amendment opponents said
the amendment is unnecessary
and will only lead to and open
up opportunities to discriminate.
(A â€œYesâ€ vote is for the amendment.
A â€œNoâ€ vote is against it).
Sen. Lydia Edwards No
REQUIRE RMV TO PROVIDE
INFORMATION TO CITY AND
TOWN CLERKS (S 2851)
Senate 10-29, rejected an
amendment that would require
the RMV to provide information
on the holder of a Massachusetts
driverâ€™s license to any city or town
clerk requesting information to
verify the identity and eligibility
of any individual using a Massachusetts
license to vote or to register
to vote.
Amendment supporters said
this would ensure that anyone
who receives a Massachusetts license
who is not eligible to vote
is not accidentally registered to
vote. â€œThe bill does very little to
prevent the issue of an undocumented
citizen using their driverâ€™s
license to register to vote,â€ said
Sen. Ryan Fattman (R-Sutton).
â€œThis poses a challenge to the integrity
of the process to register
to vote, because city and town
clerks will not be able to determine
whether or not an individual
is eligible to register. My amendment
would add strength to the
security of this process by ensuring
that Massachusetts is in compliance
with the law that enables
U.S. citizens to vote.â€
Amendment opponents said
getting a driverâ€™s license has nothing
to do with a personâ€™s ability to
vote. They noted there are many
non-citizens, such as green card
recipients, who have earned a license
but are not eligible to vote.
(A â€œYesâ€ vote is for the amendment.
A â€œNoâ€ vote is against it).
Sen. Lydia Edwards No
PROMISE NOT TO USE LICENSE
TO REGISTER TO VOTE
OR FOR ID (S 2851)
Senate 7-31, rejected an
amendment to a section of the
bill that requires the applicant to
attest, under the pains and penalties
of perjury, that their license
to operate has not been suspended
or revoked in another state or
country. The amendment would
also require the applicant to attest
that he or she will not use his
or her license for the purpose of
registering to vote, voting or for
identifi cation.
Amendment supporters said
this is simply another safeguard
to ensure that the license will not
be misused with the intent to vote
illegally.
Amendment opponents said
there are suffi cient safeguards in
the bill to ensure there will not be
improper use of this license.
(A â€œYesâ€ vote is for the amendment.
A â€œNoâ€ vote is against it).
Sen. Lydia Edwards No
HOW LONG WAS LAST
WEEKâ€™S SESSION? Beacon Hill
Roll Call tracks the length of time
that the House and Senate were
in session each week. Many legislators
say that legislative sessions
are only one aspect of the Legislatureâ€™s
job and that a lot of important
work is done outside of
the House and Senate chambers.
They note that their jobs also involve
committee work, research,
constituent work and other matters
that are important to their
districts. Critics say that the Legislature
does not meet regularly or
long enough to debate and vote
in public view on the thousands
of pieces of legislation that have
been fi led. They note that the infrequency
and brief length of sessions
are misguided and lead to
irresponsible late-night sessions
and a mad rush to act on dozens
of bills in the days immediately
preceding the end of an annual
session.
During the week of May 2-6, the
House met for a total of 45 minutes
and the Senate met for a total
of fi ve hours and 32 minutes.
Mon. May 2 House 11:01
a.m. to 11:21 a.m.
Senate 11:08 a.m. to 11:11 a.m.
Tues. May 3 No House session
No
Senate session
Wed. May 4 No House session
No
Senate session
Thurs. May 5 House 11:02
a.m. to 11:27 a.m.
Senate 11:12 a.m. to 4:41 p.m.
Fri. May 6 No House session
No Senate session
Bob Katzen
welcomes feedback at
bob@beaconhillrollcall.com
Bob founded Beacon Hill Roll
Call in 1975 and was inducted
into the New England Newspaper
and Press Association
(NENPA) Hall of Fame in 2019.
×‰	Ú 7cassandra://yAPSBm71qDzSTi_f4PHu8Vh5Q2KBbIMqfkbzBhFs2jIÍ%{Í`Ì°Í ×b}˜ÆG¯®f¹×‰EÚ+ÛTHE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, MAY 13, 2022
Page 19
BOSTON | FROM Page 9
have showed us that our destinies
are tied, and we donâ€™t improve
outcomes by doing what
weâ€™ve always done. We can, and
we must, legislate equity, healing,
and justice.â€
MAPC Executive Director Marc
Draisen dedicated the plan to
victims of the COVID-19 pandemic.
â€œMetroCommon
2050 launches
at a time when we face unprecedented
challenges fueled
by a devastating pandemic, increased
political polarization, an
urgent climate crisis, and a recognition
of the impact racism has
had on our past and present,â€
said Draisen. This plan acknowledges
how these global, national,
regional and local events affect
us all, and looks to the future
of Greater Boston with hope,
knowing that, together, this region
has the power and ability
to bring about the change we
desire.â€
Draisen and other MAPC staff
introduced MetroCommon 2050
at an event Thursday morning
hosted by the John F. Kennedy
Library in Columbia Point, and attended
by over 200 elected and
appointed Greater Boston offi -
cials, non-profi t leaders, project
stakeholders, community nonprofi
t partners and others.
In addition to interactive
booths and exhibits matching
Action Area themes, the event
featured a moderated panel led
by MAPC Deputy Executive Director
of Public Aff airs & Advocacy
Elizabeth Weyant, featuring
State Representatives Christine
Barber, Andy Vargas, and Michelle
Ciccolo.
MAPC based the new regional
roadmap on a robust information
gathering process that
included tours of the region,
and interviews as well as focus
groups with residents, planners,
and municipal and state
leaders. That feedback - including
over 600 survey responses -
painted a portrait of what those
who live and work in Metropolitan
Boston want for the region
by 2050. The plan acknowledges
challenges such as historic exclusion,
oppression, and unfairness
that continue today, and outlines
ways to overcome them while
grasping untapped possibilities
to ensure that the region protects
its natural resources, is prepared
for climate change, invests
in downtowns and neighborhoods,
and provides opportunities
for all residents and workers
to thrive.
Grouped within the five Action
Areas, MetroCommon 2050
identifi es ten general goals for
the region, along with specifi c
strategies and proposed policies
for achieving them. The goals include:
Getting
Around the Region:
traveling around Metro Boston
is safe, aff ordable, convenient,
and enjoyable.
Homes for All: All residents of
Metro Boston have places to live
that meet their needs, and that
they can aff ord.
A Climate Resilient Region:
Metro Boston is prepared for â€“
and resilient to â€“ the impacts of
climate change.
A Net Zero Carbon Region: the
Metro Boston region is highly energy
effi cient and has reduced
its greenhouse gas emissions to
net zero.
Dynamic and Representative
Governments: Local governments
and regional agencies
have the capacity and resources
to deliver the services and supports
our residents deserve, and
to maintain and invest in our
built and natural environments.
A Healthy Environment: Greater
Bostonâ€™s air, water, land, and
other natural resources are clean
and protected â€“ for people and
for the rest of the ecosystem.
Economic Security: Everyone
has the financial resources to
meet their needs and to live fulfi
lling lives.
Economic Prosperity: Greater
Bostonâ€™s economy benefi ts all in
the region.
Healthy and Safe Neighborhoods:
People are safe, healthy,
and connected to one another.
Thriving Arts, Culture, and Heritage:
Greater Boston is full of
unique places and experiences
that bring joy and foster diversity
and social cohesion.
Since MetroCommon 2050 is
a land use and policy plan designed
for practical use, MAPC is
scheduling meetings with residents
and offi cials throughout its
101-municipality region to make
connections and jumpstart conversations
toward next steps in
realizing the planâ€™s vision. Presentations
are available for public
gatherings or internal meetings,
and MAPC staff will tailor
the content to each communityâ€™s
needs. Governmental bodies
and non-governmental organizations,
interested in fi nding
out what MetroCommon 2050
means for their communities, can
sign up for presentations online.
For more information about
MAPC, visit www.mapc.org. To
interact with the MetroCommon
plan, visit http://metrocommon.
mapc.org.
RevereTV Spotlight
A
new episode of â€œWhatâ€™s
Cooking, Revere?â€ premiered
on Wednesday night,
but it is playing again! Dr. Maritsa
Barros, the City of Revereâ€™s
Chief Offi cer of Talent and Culture,
takes over the RTV kitchen
studio and makes a recipe
inspired by the culture of Cape
Verde. Dr. Barros adds some personal
anecdotes as she cooks a
tuna and rice dish. Follow along
with Dr. Barros tonight at 7 p.m.,
as the episode replays on TV later
or at your convenience on
RevereTVâ€™s YouTube page.
RevereTV was at a few community
athletic events last week,
and the coverage is now playing
on the RevereTV Community
Channel. The fi rst to note
is the Boston Renegades. This is
our hometown Womenâ€™s Football
Alliance team and defending
National Champions. The
teamâ€™s home fi eld is Harry Della
Russo Stadium, and RevereTV
will be covering home games
on Saturdays at 6 p.m. RTV coverage
airs live on all outlets and
replays can be watched on the
channel, but on YouTube at any
time. The latest games include
the Boston Renegades versus
the Detroit Pistons, and then the
Pittsburgh Passion.
In other athletic events, RevereTV
has a highlight reel from
the John T. DiLiegro Foundation
5k Run. This was a community
running event to raise funds
for glioblastoma cancer research,
and also to raise awareness
of glioblastoma cancer. In
the video, youâ€™ll see footage of
some runners, set-up and gathering
around the start and fi nish
and an interview with Karen
DiLiegro about the run in honor
of her brother. You can watch
this highlight reel on RevereTVâ€™s
YouTube page and in between
programming on the Community
Channel.
A new recording of â€œThe Senior
FYIâ€ will be posted to RevereTV
soon. These updates from
the Rossetti-Cowan Senior Center
might become more of a
weekly occurrence â€“ rather than
monthly â€“ in order to keep information
current and timely. Hear
what Elder Aff airs Volunteer Coordinator
Ed Deveau has to say
about recent events for the seniors
of Revere as the update
plays in the mornings on the
Community Channel.
For the month of May, the
RevereTV Community Channel
has a few new programs. â€œLife
Issues with Judie vanKooimanâ€
has premiered its monthly episode,
which plays on Thursday
and Sunday afternoons. A new
community member, Reverend
Danny, is airing his program on
Mondays at 5 p.m. and Wednesdays
at 8 p.m. Reverend Dannyâ€™s
programs come in a variety of
show formats, but the newest
episode will include an interview
with a local business owner.
Tune in to RevereTV to watch.
The RTV Community Channel
is 8 and 1072 on Comcast, and
3 and 614 for RCN subscribers.
How Medicare Covers
Alzheimerâ€™s Disease
Dear Savvy Senior,
What exactly does Medicare cover when it comes to Alzheimerâ€™s
disease? My husband was recently diagnosed with early-stage
Alzheimerâ€™s, and we would like to fi nd out whatâ€™s covered and
what isnâ€™t.
Planning Ahead
Dear Planning,
Iâ€™m very sorry to hear about your
husbandâ€™s diagnosis, but youâ€™ll be
happy to know that most medical
costs to treat beneficiaries
with Alzheimerâ€™s disease are covered
by Medicare. Unfortunately,
long-term custodial care costs that
most patients eventually need are
not. Hereâ€™s a breakdown of what
Medicare does and doesnâ€™t cover
when it comes to Alzheimerâ€™s disease,
along with some tips that
can help you plan ahead.
Medical care: For the most
part, ongoing medical care to diagnose
and treat Alzheimerâ€™s disease
is covered by Medicare Part
B, including visits to primary care
doctors and specialists, lab tests,
speech and occupational therapy,
home health care and outpatient
counseling services. Medicare
pays 80 percent of these
costs, and you will be responsible
for the remaining 20 percent after
youâ€™ve met your annual $233 Part
B deductible.
Sixty days of inpatient hospital
care is also covered under Medicare
Part A after you pay a $1,556
deductible. Beyond 60 days, a daily
coinsurance fee is added.
Medications: Most Alzheimerâ€™s
medications are covered under
Medicareâ€™s Part D prescription
drug plans, but coverage varies
so check his planâ€™s formulary. The
only exception is Aduhelm, the
controversial new drug that is estimated
to cost $28,200 per year.
Medicare Part B will only cover this
drug if your husband is enrolled in
a clinical trial.
Long-term custodial care: Itâ€™s
important to understand that
original Medicare does not cover
long-term custodial care. This
includes nursing home care, the
costs of assisted living facilities
and adult day care. Medicare does,
however, pay for some shorter-term
nursing home care, but
only up to 100 days following a
three-day inpatient hospital stay.
Hiring home help for bathing,
toileting and dressing (this
is known as custodial care) is not
covered by Medicare either unless
your husband is also receiving
skilled-nursing care or physical
or occupational therapy.
To help with these costs, you
may want to look into getting a
long-term care insurance policy
or short-term care plan (see aaltci.org/stc)
if possible, or if your income
and assets are very limited,
you may qualify for Medicaid. To
investigate your fi nancial options
for long-term care, go to PayingForSeniorCare.com.
Hospice:
In the fi nal stages of
the disease, Medicare Part A covers
nearly all aspects of hospice
care, including doctor services,
nursing care, drugs, medical
equipment and supplies, physical
and occupational therapy, homemaker
services, counseling and
respite care. To qualify, a doctor
must certify that a patient has six
months or less to live.
Other Insurance and Assistance
If
your husband is enrolled in
original Medicare and he doesnâ€™t
have a supplemental insurance
(Medigap) policy, you should consider
getting him one. A Medigap
plan will help pay for things
that arenâ€™t covered by Medicare
like copayments, coinsurance and
deductibles. To search for plans
in your area, go to Medicare.gov/
plan-compare and click on â€œMedigap
policy only.â€
If youâ€™re enrolled in a Medicare
Advantage plan (like an HMO or
PPO), his plan must provide him
at least the same coverage as original
Medicare does. Some advantage
plans may also off er additional
coverage for home care services.
If you canâ€™t aff ord your Medicare
out-of-pocket costs or need
help with medication expenses,
there are Medicare Savings Programs
and the Extra Help program
that provide fi nancial assistance
for medications. To learn more,
see Medicare.gov/your-medicarecosts/get-help-paying-costs.
You
can also get help through
your State Health Insurance Assistance
Program (see ShipHelp.
org or call 877-839-2675), which
provides free Medicare and longterm
care counseling.
Send your senior questions to: Savvy Senior,
P.O. Box 5443, Norman, OK 73070, or visit SavvySenior.
org. Jim Miller is a contributor to the NBC Today show
and author of â€œThe Savvy Seniorâ€ book.
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THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, MAY 13, 2022
Tax Foundation Reports MA is the 5th Highest State
for Property Taxes
BOSTON â€“ A new Tax Foundation
report shows Massachusetts
has the fi fth highest property
tax rate in the country, with
our stateâ€™s ranking not improving
over the last few years. According
to their report, Massachusetts
has been ranked as
the fi fth highest in 2022, 2021
and 2019. In 2020, Massachusetts
was the sixth highest in
the country. Many of the New
England states rank in the top
ten most expensive states in the
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country, but unlike those other
New England states, Massachusetts
is considering raising its income
tax rate for high income
earners and some small businesses
at this Novemberâ€™s election
through a ballot question.
If the ballot question passes,
these high income earners and
some small businesses are likely
to fl ee our state, further depriving
Massachusetts of these revenues
and increasing the property
tax burden on those who
remain. The Tax Foundationâ€™s report
notes that property taxes
matter to businesses for a wide
variety of reasons and pay a signifi
cant part of the overall property
taxes collected by states. A
copy of the report may be found
by clicking here.
Joseph Garbarino
â€œAccording to the Tax Foundation,
Massachusetts property
owners pay among the highest
property taxes in the entire
country. Todayâ€™s report comes
after Aprilâ€™s state tax collections
numbers show that Massachusetts
collected nearly 80%
more in taxes this April than last
April,â€ stated Paul Diego Craney,
spokesman for the Massachusetts
Fiscal Alliance.
â€œMaking things even worse,
Speaker Ron Mariano and Senate
President Karen Spilka have
a ballot question this November
to raise income taxes by 80% for
some high-income earners and
small businesses. If their 80% tax
hike passes, many affl uent and
small businesses will flee out
state, leaving the middle class to
OBITUARIES
his grandchildren. Joe went on
his fi nal ride May 5, 2022 from
the Buonfi glio Funeral Home.
Interment Puritan Lawn Cemetery.
Richard
â€œRichieâ€
D. Tempesta Jr.
Gino Trichilo
make up for the loss of tax collections,
including property taxes,â€
continued Craney.
â€œIt seems like the Speaker and
Senate President are driving the
state economy right into a brick
wall but they do not seem to
care. Eventually, the high taxes,
high spending, and high infl ation
will catch up to them but it
will come at the expense of the
middle class who will be expected
to pay for these reckless decisions
by our State House leaders,â€
concluded Craney.
Massachusetts Fiscal Alliance
advocates for fi scal responsibility,
transparency,
and accountability in state
government and increased
economic opportunity for the
people of our Commonwealth.
J
oseph A. Garbarino of Malden
formerly of Revere
passed away on April 30, 2022
surrounded by his loving family
at the age of 66. Born in Winthrop
June 24, 1955 to the late
Charles Garbarino and Audrey
Garbarino. Beloved Father of
Lisa Martino of Chelsea, Joseph
Garbarino Jr. and wife Rose of
Revere, Christopher Garbarino
and wife Channary of Peabody,
Bradley Garbarino, and Rochelle
Garbarino of Malden. Devoted
grandfather of Ariel Benson of
Randolph, Devin Zannerini of
Nashua NH, Joseph Garbarino
III of Manchester NH, Stephen
Garbarino (deceased) of Revere,
Amara Garbarino of Brighton,
Mia Garbarino of Chelmsford,
Reina Martino and Philip
Robles of Chelsea, Carter Garbarino
and Corey Garbarino of
Peabody. Great Grandfather of
Wesley Benson of Randolph,
Sean McPherson of Randolph,
Ryan Zannerini (deceased) and
Kayden Dolan of Randolph.
Dear brother to Jimmy Garbarino
of Rhode Island and John
Garbarino and wife Jean of Revere.
Survived by many loving
nieces and nephews. Joseph
loved nothing more than to hit
the road on his Harley, playing
chess, and spending time with
O
R
ichard passed away unexpectedly
on May 7, 2022 at
the age of 60. Born in Winthrop
and raised in Revere to his loving
parents Richard D. Tempesta
Sr. and Bernice (Consolo) of
Revere. Devoted father of Gia
Guarino and her husband Ceaser
Spagnuolo of Boston. Cherished
grandfather of Gia and
Ciana Spagnuolo. Dear brother
of Lorene Cosenza and her
husband David Cosenza Jr. of
Saugus, and Danielle Tempesta
of Revere. Adored uncle of Domenic
and David Cosenza III,
and Bella Tempesta. Also survived
by many loving aunts, uncles,
and cousins. Richie was an
amazing person, he was so full
of life, and had a heart of gold.
He loved telling storyâ€™s to make
people laugh, and he loved his
sports and listening to Madonna.
He will be truly missed by all!
A Visitation was held at the Paul
Buonfiglio & Sons-Bruno Funeral
Home, 128 Revere St., Revere
on May 12, 2022. Interment
Woodlawn Cemetery. In lieu of
fl owers donations may be made
to a charity of oneâ€™s choice.
f Revere passed away
from complications of
cancer on May 9, 2022 at the
age 49. Born in Malden on
October 25, 1972 to Carmela
(Dâ€™Ambrosio) and the late
Giuseppe Trichilo. Beloved fi -
ancÃ© of Lorine Hughes. Dear
brother of Frank Trichilo and
his wife Keila of Revere, Sandro
Trichilo and his wife Renee
of Revere, Annamaria Trichilo
and her boyfriend Edilf Cehic
of Revere, and Joseph Trichilo
and his wife Annie of Lynnfi eld.
Adored uncle of Alexio, Alessandro,
Abriana, Kasim, Vincenzo,
and Filipe. Also survived
by many loving aunts, uncles,
and cousins. Funeral from the
Paul Buonfi glio & Sons-Bruno
Funeral Home 128 Revere St,
Revere on Saturday, May 14,
2022 at 9:00am. Funeral Mass
at St. Anthonyâ€™s Church in Revere
at 10:00am. Relatives and
friends are kindly invited. A visitation
will be held on Friday
from 4:00pm to 8:00pm at the
funeral home. Entombment
Woodlawn Mausoleum. In lieu
of fl owers donations may be
made to St. Jude Childrenâ€™s Research
Hospital, 501 St. Jude Pl.,
Memphis, TN 38105-9959 or at
http://www.stjude.org
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FORUM | FROM Page 3
youâ€™ve been doing,â€ said Ed Deveau.
â€œItâ€™s something that has
been a long time needed, and
Iâ€™m glad to see it.â€
1. On May 13, 1908, what
president delivered an
opening address called
â€œConservation as a National
Dutyâ€ at the Governorsâ€™
Conference on the
Conservation of Natural
Resourcesâ€?
2. Play-Doh was invented
to clean what interior
decoration?
3. What is the largest animal
that can recognize itself
in a mirror?
4. On May 14, 1919, Henry
John Heinz died, who
had founded H.J. Heinz
Co. and invented what
slogan that included a
number?
5. Sound Navigation
Ranging is more commonly
called what?
6. What pilot was Timeâ€™s
fi rst Man of the Year?
7. What cheese has a variety
called fior di latte
(fl ower of the milk)?
8. On May 15, 2001, what
Acting Governor in New
England had twin girls?
9. What Indian tribe traditionally
lived in a hogan?
10. Where would you
fi nd quizzes with grades
that include Outstanding,
Acceptable, Poor and
Dreadful?
11. The men of the Tuareg
Answers
tribe traditionally wear indigo
veils; in what desert
do the Tuareg live?
12. May 16 is International
Day of Light; on May
16, 1960, what synthetic
ruby crystal instrument
was fi rst operated?
13. What 1964 film has
the subtitle â€œor: How I
Learned to Stop Worrying
and Love the Bombâ€?
14. On May 17, 1954,
what did the U.S. Supreme
Court outlaw?
15. Per Japanese tradition,
folding 1,000 of
what type of origami bird
will make someoneâ€™s wish
come true?
16. Which Beatle was inspired
to sing about his
mother, who was named
Mary?
17. On May 18, 1927, what
hotel that then required a
dress code opened in
Boston?
18. When did building of
the Golden Gate Bridge
start: 1899, 1912 or 1933?
19. What does AWOL
mean?
20. On May 19, 1885, in
what Massachusetts city
did African American
Jan Matzeliger begin the
fi rst mass production of
shoes?
During the business portion
of the meeting, the HRC discussed
setting up several working
groups to help streamline
the work the commission does.
In addition to events, education
and evaluation working groups,
the commission agreed to establish
a task force that would
set up a public forum or mediation
to address the concerns
that have been raised by critics
LIGHTS | FROM Page 3
reality, itâ€™s not going to be suffi -
cient to install these lamps, because
only six to eight wonâ€™t cover
a portion of either end; it will
cover a small fraction of what
we need to do. When the time
comes, they are going to need
our help on the City Council to
extend the lighting, and I hope
when that time comes, that we
Page 21
of the HRC.
â€œI recognize there are matters
to be addressed and have
heard the call out for a public
mediation in a meeting and we
will grant that meeting, so that
is something we will work towards:
creating the space to
have this discussion about the
existence of the HRC and get
clear about what our priorities
are moving forward and where
do we stand in the city regarding
the abolishment of the
HRC,â€ said Dr. Maritsa Barros, the
HRC Director. â€œOf course â€¦ we
are here to stay, but I encourage
folks, please, any of those
are all on board to increase the
lighting, especially with all the
new businesses on Broadway.â€
In other business, City Council
President Gerry Visconti and
Ward 1 Councillor Joanne McKenna
requested that representatives
from the developer of Suffolk
Downs appear before the
council on May 16 to discuss
the details of a new life sciences
building planned for constructhoughts
and feelings you want
to express, just hold on because
we will create the place for that
discussion to happen.â€
During the public forum, frequent
HRC critic Gina Castiello
claimed that the HRC is pushing
Black Lives Matter and Critical
Race Theory ideas throughout
the city and the school system.
â€œI, personally, disapprove
of it, and a lot of people in this
community disapprove of it, and
weâ€™re not being heard,â€ said Castiello.
â€œI am glad I am being heard
and bringing attention to this
racist Human Rights Commission
that needs to be abolished.â€
tion at Suff olk Downs.
Visconti and McKenna have
also presented motions requesting
the development of biosafety
level regulations in the city
zoning ordinances and for special
legislation to prohibit testing
on sentient creatures for cosmetic
purposes in Revere. Both
of those motions remain in the
councilâ€™s Legislative Aff airs Subcommittee.
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1. Theodore Roosevelt
2.
Wallpaper
3. Elephant
4. â€œ57 Varietiesâ€
5. Sonar
6. Charles Lindbergh
7.
Mozzarella
8. Jane Swift of
Massachusetts
9. The Navajo
10. Hogwarts wizarding
exams
11. Sahara
12. The fi rst operable
laser
13. â€œDr. Strangeloveâ€
14.
School segregation
15.
Crane
16. Paul McCartney
17. The Ritz-Carlton
18.
1933
19. Absent WithOut
Leave
20. Lynn
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THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, MAY 13, 2022
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î€©î„îîŒîîœ î’îšî‘îˆî‡ î€‰ î’î“îˆî•î„î—îˆî‡ î–îŒî‘î†îˆ î€”î€œî€—î€™
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î€³îî˜îî…îŒî‘îŠ î€‰ î€«îˆî„î—îŒî‘îŠ
î€µîˆî–îŒî‡îˆî‘î—îŒî„î î€‰ î€¦î’îîîˆî•î†îŒî„î î€¶îˆî•î™îŒî†îˆ
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ADVOCATE
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×‰	Ú 7cassandra://qdWUO_6TC7sOsvGRkmwwn36qd6OcCp4ius4qvcmyiUAÍ6)Í`Ì°Í ×b}˜ÆG¯®f½×‰EÚ|THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, MAY 13, 2022
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COMMERCIAL & RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY SALES & RENTALS
Happy Spring!
A great time to think of selling or buying!
Call today for a free market analysis.
Sandy Juliano
Broker/President
WE KNOW EVERETT!! Call TODAY to sell or buy with the best!
NEW LISTING
UNDER AGREEMENT
THREE FAMILY
UNDER AGREEMENT
TWO FAMILY
46-48 OLIVER STREET
EVERETT
CALL SANDY FOR DETAILS!
129 CLARENCE ST., EVERETT
$779,900
CALL SANDY FOR DETAILS!
617-448-0854
SOLD BY NORMA
AS BUYERâ€™S AGENT
TAUNTON
FOR RENT
EVERETT - FOUR BEDROOM
$2,300/MO. - AVAILABLE MAY 15
CALL NORMA FOR DETAILS
617-590-9143
THREE BEDROOM - $2,200/MO.
CALL NORMA FOR DETAILS
617-590-9143
SOLD BY SANDY!
HUGE 3 FAMILY
21-23 CLEVELAND AVE., EVERETT
$980,000
SOLD BY SANDY!
32 RIDGE RD., READING
$675,000
ONE BEDROOM APT.
ONE CAR - OFF STREET PARKING.
$1,750/MO.
SOLD BY JOE!
6 FAMILY
CHARLES STREET, MALDEN
$1,250,000
CALL JOE FOR DETAILS 617-680-7610
SOLD BY NORMA!
SINGLE FAMILY
20 BAKER RD., EVERETT
$509,900
CONDO UNDER AGREEMENT BY
SANDY AS BUYERS AGENT!
Joe DiNuzzo
Norma Capuano Parziale
- Broker Associate
O D il F
- Agent
Open Daily From 10:00 A.M. - 5:00 P.M.
433 Broadway, Suite B, Everett, MA 02149
www.jrs-properties.com
10 00 A M
5 00 PM
Denise Matarazz
- Agent
Maria Scrima
- Agent
Follow Us On:
617.448.0854
Rosemarie Ciampi
- Agent
Michael Matarazzo
-Agent
Mark Sachetta
- Agent
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THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, MAY 13, 2022
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î€¯îŠ‹îŠ•îŠ–îŠ‹îŠîŠ‰ î€‰ î€¶îŠ‡îŠŽîŠŽîŠ‹îŠîŠ‰
î€²îŠˆîŠˆîŠ‹îŠ…îŠ‡ îŠ‹îŠ î€¶îŠƒîŠ—îŠ‰îŠ—îŠ•
â€œExperience and knowledge
Provide the Best Serviceâ€
î€©î¨’î¨…î¨… î€°î¨î¨’î¨‹î¨…î¨” î€¨î¨–î¨î¨Œî¨•î¨î¨”î¨‰î¨î¨Žî¨“
î€¦îŠƒîŠ”îŠ’îŠ‡îŠîŠ‹îŠ–îŠ‘î€µîŠ‡îŠƒîŠŽî€¨îŠ•îŠ–îŠƒîŠ–îŠ‡î€‘îŠ…îŠ‘îŠ
î€¦
î€µ î€¨
View our website from
your mobile phone!
335 Central St., Saugus, MA
781-233-7300
SAUGUS - 1st AD 10 Room Split Entry Ranch offers 3-4 bedrooms, 2 Â½ baths,
2 fireplaces, master with half bath, hardwood flooring, deck, finished lower
level with second kitchen, inground pool, cul-de-sac ......................$710,000.
î€µî€¨î€¹î€¨î€µî€¨ î€ î€”î–î— î€¤î€§ î€ î€³îˆî•î‰îˆî†î—îîœ îî’î†î„î—îˆî‡ î€‰ îî„îŒî‘î—î„îŒî‘îˆî‡ î€·îšî’ î€©î„îîŒîîœî€‘ î€—î€’î€™ î•î’î’îî–î€ î€•î€’î€• î…îˆî‡î•î’î’îî–î€‘
î€•î‘î‡ î‰îî• î˜î‘îŒî— î‹î„î– îšî„îîŽî€î˜î“ î„î—î—îŒî† îšîŒî—î‹ î—îšî’ î„î‡î‡î‚¶îî€‘ î•î’î’îî–î€ î–îˆî“î„î•î„î—îˆ î˜î—îŒîîŒî—îŒîˆî–î€ îî’î—
î„î†î•î’î–î– î—î‹îˆ î–î— îŒî‘î†îî˜î‡îˆî‡ îšîŒî—î‹ îŠî„î•î„îŠîˆ î€‰ î’î‰î‰ î–î— î“î„î•îŽîŒî‘îŠî€‘ î€ªî•îˆî„î— îŒî‘î™îˆî–î—îîˆî‘î—î€„î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘ î€‡î€šî€™î€˜î€î€“î€“î€“î€‘
î€¶î€¤î€¸î€ªî€¸î€¶ î€ î€”î–î— î€¤î€§ î€ î€™ î•îî–î€‘î€ î€– î…îˆî‡î•îî€‘ î€¦î’îî’î‘îŒî„î î’î‰î‰îˆî•î– î€”îƒ² î…î„î—î‹î–î€ îîŒî™îŒî‘îŠ î•îî€‘î€ î‡îŒî‘îŒî‘îŠ î•îî€‘î€
eat-in kit., heated front porch, walk-up attic, nicely located on side street, convenient
î—î’ îˆî™îˆî•îœî—î‹îŒî‘îŠî€„î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‡î€—î€šî€œî€î€œî€“î€“î€‘
î€¶î€¤î€¸î€ªî€¸î€¶ î€ î€·îšî’ î‰î„îîŒîîœ î’ï‚‡îˆî•î– î€™î€’î€— î•î’î’îî–î€ î€–î€’î€• î…îˆî‡î•î’î’îî–î€ î“îî˜î– î„î‡î‡îŒî—îŒî’î‘î„î îîŒî™îŒî‘îŠ î–î“î„î†îˆî€
î–îˆî“î„î•î„î—îˆ î˜î—îŒîîŒî—îŒîˆî–î€ î—îšî’ î‚¿î•îˆî“îî„î†îˆî–î€ î†îˆî‘î—î•î„î î„îŒî•î€ îŒî‘îŠî•î’î˜î‘î‡ î“î’î’îî€ î–î“î•îŒî‘îŽîîˆî• î–îœî–î—îˆîî€ îŠî•îˆî„î—
î‰î’î• îˆî›î—îˆî‘î‡îˆî‡ î’î• îî„î•îŠîˆ î‰î„îîŒîîœî€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‡î€›î€™î€œî€î€“î€“î€“î€‘
SAUGUS - 1st Ad Custom 8 rm, 4 bedrm Cape, 3 Â½ baths, gorgeous granite
îŽîŒî—î†î‹îˆî‘î€ î€”î–î— î‰îî• îî„î–î—îˆî• î–î˜îŒî—îˆî€ î‹î„î•î‡îšî’î’î‡ î‰îî’î’î•îŒî‘îŠî€ î†îˆî‘î—î•î„î î„îŒî•î€ î‰îŒî‘ î€¯î€¯ î’î‰î‰îˆî•î– î“îî„îœî•î
îšîŒî—î‹ î€©î€³î€ î„îî„îîŒî‘îŠ îœî„î•î‡ îšî€’î€¬î€ª î“î’î’îî€ î‰î„î•îîˆî•î‚¶î– î“î’î•î†î‹î€ îŠî„î• î€°î€¬î€±î€· î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‡î€”î€î€•î€“î€“î€î€“î€“î€“î€‘
î€¶î€¤î€¸î€ªî€¸î€¶ î€ î€”î–î— î€¤î€§ î€¦î˜î–î—î’î î€¦î’îî’î‘îŒî„î î‰îˆî„î—î˜î•îŒî‘îŠ î€› î•îî–î€ î€– î…î‡î•îî–î€ î€• î€”î€’î€• î…î„î—î‹î–î€ î€• î†î„î• îŠî„î•î„îŠîˆî€
î‹î„î•î‡îšî’î’î‡ î‰îî’î’î•î–î€ îî„î–î—îˆî• î…î‡î•î îšî€’ î“î•îŒî™î„î—îˆ î…î„î—î‹î€ îŠî„î– î‹îˆî„î—î€ î†îˆî‘î—î•î„î î„îŒî•î€ î˜î“î‡î„î—îˆî‡ î•î’î’î‰î€‘ î€³î€¯î€¸î€¶
î€— î•î’î’îî€ î€” î…îˆî‡î•î’î’î î„î˜ î“î„îŒî• î–î˜îŒî—îˆ îšîŒî—î‹ î–îˆî“î„î•î„î—îˆ îˆî‘î—î•î„î‘î†îˆ î€‰ î–îˆî“î„î•î„î—îˆ îî„î˜î‘î‡î•îœî€‘î€‘î€‘î€‡î€›î€œî€œî€î€œî€“î€“î€‘
WONDERING WHAT YOUR
HOME IS WORTH?
CALL US FOR A FREE
OPINION OF VALUE.
781-233-1401
38 MAIN STREET, SAUGUS
FOR SALE
COMING SOON
LET US SHOW YOU OUR
MARKETING PLAN TO
GET YOU TOP DOLLAR
FOR YOUR HOME!
LITTLEFIELDRE.COM
624 SALEM STREET, LYNNFIELD
UNDER CONTRACT
COMING SOON - 4 BED, 2 BATH COLONIAL
NEW ROOF GREAT LOCATION ! MALDEN
$599,900 CALL KEITH 781-389-0791
FOR SALE
FOR SALE -LOCATED WITHIN THE SOUGHT AFTER MONTROSE NEIGHBORHOOD, THIS HOME HAS BEEN
TASTEFULLY DESIGNED AND IS FILLED WITH EXQUISITE FEATURES ON ALL 3 LEVELS & BOASTS THE FLEXIBILITY
& AMENITIES TO TODAYâ€™S LIFESTYLE. THE 1ST FLOOR CONSISTS OF A GENEROUS SUN FILLED KITCHEN,
INCLUDING DINING AREA WHICH IS OPEN TO THE LIVING ROOM WITH WOOD STOVE. A SLIDER TO THE DECK
IS READY FOR BARBECUES AND OVERLOOKS A TRANQUIL PRIVATE YARD AND CONSERVATION LAND. FORMAL
FAMILY ROOM WITH CATHEDRAL CEILING, FORMAL DINING ROOM, 1/2 BATH AND LAUNDRY ROOM COMPLETE
THE 1ST FLOOR. THE 2ND FLOOR OFFERS A MASTER SUITE, 2 GENEROUS SIZE BEDROOMS, FULL BATH AND
A BONUS ROOM THAT CAN BE EASILY USED AS A 4TH BEDROOM. THE EXTENSIVE LOWER LEVEL IS GREAT
FOR THE EXTENDED FAMILY. AMENITIES INCLUDE A 2 CAR ATTACHED GARAGE , BEAUTIFUL LANDSCAPING SO
MUCH MORE $1,180,000 WAKEFIELD CALL KEITH 781-389-0791
LOOKING TO
BUY OR SELL?
CALL
JOHN
DOBBYN
FOR ALL YOUR
REAL ESTATE
NEEDS!
617-285-7117
FOR SALE - 4 FAMILY INVESTMENT PROPERTY
NEAR DOWNTOWN ALL SEPARATE ENTRANCES
WITH GREAT RENTAL HISTORY $1,100,000
PEABODY CALL RHONDA 781-706-0842
FOR SALE - 2 BED, 1 BATH WITH ADDITION IN
DESIRABLE PARK. PEABODY $79,900
CALL ERIC 781-223-0289
FOR SALE -BRAND NEW MANUFACTURED MOBILE HOMES.
FOUR CUSTOM UNITS LEFT. ALL UNITS ARE 2 BED , 1 BATH
12 X 52. DANVERS $199,900 CALL ERIC 781-223-0289
FOR SALE
FOR SALE - 2 FAMILY WITH GREAT 4-5 BED
OWNERâ€™S UNIT, SMALLER 1 BED RENTAL UNIT,
$899,900 REVERE CALL DEBBIE 617-678-9710
UNDER CONTRACT
FOR SALE - 3 BED 2 BATH COLONIAL WITH LARGE
GRANITE KITCHEN, FP LIVING RM. GREAT SETTING
$619,900 SAUGUS CALL RHONDA 781-706-0842
FOR SALE
FOR SALE - 5 ROOM END UNIT TOWNHOUSE
2 BEDROOM, 2 FULL BATH $409,900 LYNN
CALL RHONDA 781-706-0842
FOR SALE
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