×‰?4×B!×‘C‘×˜š Í( Í(Í€u×‰œ”×‰	Ú 7cassandra://vb2M-ihVHQSeQtfO70wMs-v8mz-rxhbCZonF45M1BlsÎ ŸaÍ`ÍœÍ)×‰	Ú 7cassandra://EOIpDCsP_jOKV0RNruAvyEDJOUW0VgbvIprmVHZeHWUÍšÍ`ÍJÍà×‰	Ú 7cassandra://DMxFhp8pirB4STEUYVpFw6SZelWenaWKk4SNzB6hWcEÍ0ÜÍ`Ì°Í ×‰	Ú 7cassandra://LaAbV3fHd8dCw6c7dS6yM-dutKITSwqbmWWw2PzcUcsÎ  ¯ÍU<Í ÍÅÍñ×aCõzƒÕ[Ò8÷‘× ×aCõzƒÕ[Ò8ú Í€Í'Ì¾9×H»http://www.advocatenews.net××Ðˆ×ˆE×aCõzƒÕ[Ò8Ý×‰EÚ	™CELEBRATING 30 YEARS AS REVEREâ€™S LOCAL NEWSPAPER!
Vol.30, No.37
-FREEwww.advocatenews.net
Free
Every Friday
Revere remembers:
20th anniversary of 911
781-286-8500
Friday, September 17, 2021
Cogliandro, Fiore
top Ward primaries
By Adam Swift
T
he longtime Ward 5 City
Councillor faces a challenge
from a former City Council President,
while two well-known
names in Revere will square off
in Ward 3 to replace departing
Councillor Arthur Guinasso. Voters
went to the polls in the primary
for those two races on Tuesday,
with former Councillor Al Fiore
SOLEMN REMEBRANCE: Pictured from left to right: Christopher DeFilippis, legislative aide for
the 16th Suff olk District, Ward 6 Councillor Richard Serino, School Committee member and State
Senate candidate Anthony Dâ€™Ambrosio, Northeast Metro Regional Vocational School Committee
member Anthony Caggiano, Ward 5 Councillor John Powers, Ward 2 Councillor Ira Novoselsky,
Mayor Brian Arrigo, Fire Chief Christopher Bright, Ward 3 Councillor Arthur Guinasso, Council
President Anthony Zambuto, State Rep. Jeff Turco, in back, Ward 1 Councillor Joanne McKenna,
Council Vice President Gerry Visconti, School Committee member
Michael Ferrante and Councillor-At-Large Steven Morabito
during Saturdayâ€™s 911 20th anniversary remembrance at
the fi re station.
ANTHONY
COGLIANDRO
Topped ward 3 primary
REMEMBER | SEE Page 12
City Council praises sisters raising
money for childhood cancer research
By Adam Swift
theyâ€™re still in high school.
Monday night, the City CounS
isters
Kayla and Jordan Martelli
have been making a difference
in Revere for a decade,
and whatâ€™s more amazing is that
cil awarded Certifi cates of Commendation
to Kayla and Jordan
in honor of their holding their
10th annual Alexâ€™s Lemonade
SISTERS | SEE Page 19
JOHN POWERS
Ward 5 Councillor Incumbent
Stand. During that time, the sisters
have raised over $50,000 for
childhood cancer research and
treatment.
ALBERT
TERMINIELLO, JR.
2nd place ward 3
primary fi nisher
topping a four-way fi eld in Ward 5
with more than 50 percent of the
vote. Incumbent Councillor John
Powers garnered enough votes to
face off against Fiore in the general
municipal election on TuesAL
FIORE
Ward 5 Councillor Challenger
VOTE | SEE Page 20
Certifi cates of Commendation: City Council President Anthony Zambuto, Councillor-at-Large Steve
Morabito, sisters Jordan and Kayla Martelli, Ward 4 Councillor Patrick Keefe and Councillor-atLarge
Gerry Visconti.
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THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 2021
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Heated debate: City Council wants
answers on Lincoln School AC
By Adam Swift
A
nearly fi ve-year eff ort
to install air-conditioning
at the Lincoln Elementary
School is nearly complete.
But for several City Councillors,
given heat wave a condition
during the beginning
of the school year, â€œnearly
doneâ€ isnâ€™t good enough.
At the August School
www.eight10barandgrille.com
We Have Reopened for
Dine-In and Outside Seating
every day beginning at 4 PM
Committee meeting, school
Facilities Director Carl
Svendsen said work on the
HVAC system at the school
was nearing completion,
but because of supply chain
issues, delivery of a component
needed to tie the system
into the piping was delayed.
â€œLast year, we updated
the electrical system to
be able to handle the water
chiller system,â€ said Svendsen.
â€œThat was completed,
and it was also an attempt
to lower the electrical use
in the building. We also upgraded
all the lighting to an LED
light system, and thatâ€™s going to
bring down the electrical use to
allow for more capacity for this
[air-conditioning] system to be
installed.â€
At Monday nightâ€™s meeting,
several Councillors said they
want more answers and better
communication from the
school department about the
delay in getting the air-conditioning
running at the Lincoln
School.
â€œI have received numerous
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emails, phone calls, and complaints
about the Lincoln School
in particular, as well as the high
school,â€ said Councillor-at-Large
Giannino said she understands
that the supply
chain issue with parts not
being in because of the
Covid-19 pandemic is the
main issue with the system
not being up and running.
ARTHUR GUINASSO
Ward 3 Councillor
George Rotondo, who made
a motion asking the Mayor
to request Superintendent of
Schools Dr. Dianne Kelly to appear
before the City Council to
address the air-conditioning issues.
â€œI know this is an ongoing
issue, and I know the superintendent
is trying her best, but
these are complaints that are
continuing, and itâ€™s been three
weeks now.â€
Councillor-at-Large Jessica
Ann Giannino said the lack of
air-conditioning at the Lincoln
School has been an ongoing issue.
â€œThe parents are frustrated;
they were told they would have
it,â€ said Giannino.
â€œThatâ€™s a reasonable answer,â€
she said. â€œWhatâ€™s not
reasonable is the lack of
communication. Iâ€™m very,
very disappointed there
was no follow-up from the
School Committee regarding
what was happening in
the school. There was no follow-up
from anyone in the
school department regarding
whatâ€™s going on there.â€
She said the lack of communication
is not a refl ection
on the people doing
the actual work, but on the
administrators further up
the chain. â€œHowever, this is
incredibly frustrating, and
the lack of communication
is glaring, and as a City
Councillor I am frustrated; as
a parent I would be frustrated â€“
itâ€™s completely unacceptable,â€
Giannino said.
Ward 3 Councillor Arthur Guinasso,
whose ward is home to
the school, said the continuing
issues at the school over the past
fi ve years are a major sore spot
for him. â€œFor the past four and
a half years, Iâ€™ve been working
on this, and all Iâ€™ve been getting
is lip service,â€ he said. â€œI was
assured by this administration
that we were going to get relief
for the kids at the Lincoln School
and the educators who have to
do their daily work to educate
our children.â€
Guinasso said the ward 3
school has been left behind
while the city concentrates on
building a new high school and
other projects. â€œWeâ€™re building
everything, but we canâ€™t give
the kids air-conditioning to be
like every other kid in our city,â€
he said. â€œIâ€™m outraged by this,
and it goes no further than the
Mayorâ€™s Offi ce. I fi nd fault that
they canâ€™t fi nd the solution and
the money.â€
Rotondo said there should
have been a focus on other solutions
while the school department
was waiting for the parts
to install the new system. â€œIf you
have children sitting in a classroom
that is hot and wearing
a mask and you donâ€™t have airconditioning
â€¦ whatâ€™s the solution?â€
he asked. â€œThey have portable,
stand-up air-conditioning
systems over at Home Depot,
or over at Amazon online that
could have been used to help
alleviate this problem. Sitting in
a classroom that is 90 degrees
with a mask on your face is no
way to learn.â€
Prices subject to
change
î€§îŠîî î€¶î‘ î€‡ î€´î‚î—î†î€‚
î€§î‚îî îŠî” î€¤îîŽîŠîîˆî€‚
FLEET
×‰	Ú 7cassandra://pd91Q9HY1-kpG2B3_0vqTlz31cZoYeMiuDl4RzYrxIsÍ/iÍ`Ì°Í ×aCõzƒÕ[Ò8ß×‰EÚýTHE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 2021
Page 3
McKenna pushes for
fire safety change to
building code
By Adam Swift
T
he densely packed neighborhoods
of Revere are
especially susceptible to the
spread of deadly and damaging
fi res, as witnessed by recent
blazes on Endicott Avenue and
Hyde Street.
home if there was a fi re next to
JOANNE MCKENNA
Ward 1 Councillor
Ward 1 City Councillor Joanne
McKenna is looking for ways to
help keep the damage from
those fires to a minimum. At
Monday nightâ€™s City Council
meeting, she introduced a motion
asking Revereâ€™s state legislators
to request an amendment
to the state building code
to help improve fi re safety. The
amendment would require residential
structures built within 10
feet of each other use a fi re-rated
cement siding.
â€œI want to educate the public
about fi ber cement siding,
which would probably save your
your house,â€ McKenna said. â€œFiber
cement siding is just like vinyl
siding, but it is made of cement.
It would be the best choice for
Revere residents who are building
or rebuilding and want to
make sure the exteriors of their
homes are fl ame retardant.â€
Fiber cement siding can withstand
extreme heat for hours
before it begins to melt.
â€œIn some parts of Revere, the
houses are less than 10 feet
away,â€ McKenna said. â€œOn the
Endicott and Hyde Street fi res,
the fl ames were so intense that
the exteriors of several houses
melted and some even burned.
There is an opportunity if you
are living in a very dense community
or area and you are remodeling
your house to get a
fi re-resistant siding.â€
Councillor-at-Large George
Rotondo spoke in support of
McKennaâ€™s motion. â€œThis is a
product where the return on
investment is something that
you canâ€™t put a price on when it
comes to someoneâ€™s life,â€ he said.
â€œThe most important factor here
is that it has proven to lessen
mortality during fi res, and this is
what we are trying to do in Revere:
save lives and help people
live a better life. If we can do this
by changing the [building] code,
Iâ€™m all for it.â€
City Council President Anthony
Zambuto said the motion will
be discussed further at a meeting
of the Councilâ€™s Zoning Subcommittee.
Public
Stairways Project
Community Meeting â€“
Sept. 22
T
he cityâ€™s Offi ce of Planning
and Community Development
as well as the Department
of Public Works will host a
community meeting to discuss
the reconstruction of the public
stairways located on Florence
Avenue and Winthrop Avenue
on Wednesday, September 22.
City staff and project engineers
from Wesson & Sampson will
be available to discuss the design
plans, project scope and
construction timeline for these
stairways. Residents and community
members are strongly
urged to attend.
The reconstruction of the
public stairways within the
Beachmont and Shirley Avenue
neighborhoods has been
an ongoing neighborhood and
Capital Improvement Project
since 2019. Three sets of wooden
stairways have been renovated
or reconstructed, with
the last set completed on Hillside
Avenue in the fall of 2020.
Construction of these stairways
was completed through
fundraising from the Beachmont
Improvement Committee,
grant funding from America
Walks, Revere on the Moveâ€™s
mini-grant program and other
city funding. The City of Revere
will begin the reconstruction of
the remaining fi ve sets of concrete
stairways in the spring
of 2022.
For more information about
Revereâ€™s Public Stairways Project,
please contact Julie DeMauro
at jdemauro@revere.org
or Paul Argenzio at pargenzio@
revere.org.
Councillors want DCR to clean
up Short Beach
By Adam Swift
T
he Department of Conservation
& Recreation (DCR)
has been shirking its responsibility
to clean up Short Beach in
Beachmont for years, and now
City Councillors Gerry Visconti
and Joanne McKenna want the
DCR to do something about it.
At Monday nightâ€™s City Council
meeting, Visconti and McKenna
presented a motion asking the
Mayor to direct DCR to clean up
Short Beach. Part of the ongoing
problem, according to several
councillors, has been the inability
to get a response from DCR
to issues the City of Revere has.
â€œI know that Short Beach is
one of Beachmontâ€™s jewels, and
itâ€™s kind of disappointing,â€ said
Visconti. â€œI was there a couple
of weeks ago, and looking at the
beach, it was disappointing to
see the amount of trash and debris
that was on that beach, and
it looks like it has been there for
quite some time.â€
Visconti said Beachmont residents
are outraged about the
state of the beach in their neighborhood.
â€œWith the meters on
Revere Beach, there is absolutely
no reason the DCR canâ€™t come
down and take care of Short
Beach,â€ he said.
McKenna said it has been next
to impossible to get any help or
response from the DCR about
the issue. â€œItâ€™s been neglected
and overlooked for the past
25 years,â€ she said. â€œThis is not a
new problem; it has been going
on for years.â€ Because it is diffi -
cult getting in touch with anyone
from DCR, McKenna said,
she has relied on voicing her
concerns fi rst to former House
Speaker Robert DeLeo, and now
to State Representative Jeff Turco
to see if they can get a response
from the agency.
In her role as State Representative,
Councillor-at-Large Jessica
Ann Giannino said, she has
also been consistently frustrated
by the DCR during her eight
months in offi ce. â€œI have struggled
getting in touch with them,
and I know that Rep. Turco is
struggling,â€ she said. â€œItâ€™s frustrating
because our residents see it
Lawrence A. Simeone Jr.
~ Since 1989 ~
Attorney-at-Law
DCR | SEE Page 7
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* Real Estate Law
* Construction Litigation
* Tax Lein
* Personal Injury
* Bankruptcy
* Wrongful Death
* Zoning/Permitting Litigation
300 Broadway, Suite 1, Revere * 781-286-1560
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THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 2021
Councillor wants to nip bogus
parking passes in the bud
before its too late
By Adam Swift
G
iven the high level of emotion surrounding
parking in Revere, it was probably only
a matter of time until counterfeit visitor parking
passes started showing up in the city. During last
Monday nightâ€™s City Council meeting, Ward 1
Councillor Joanne McKenna and Councillor-atLarge
Gerry Visconti introduced a motion seeking
a crackdown on counterfeit passes before it
becomes a bigger problem.
â€œParking enforcers are fi nding a lot of bogus visitorâ€™s
passes in peopleâ€™s cars,â€ said McKenna. â€œPeople
are copying them; I guess it is very easy to do.
I just want to warn the public that if you copy a
visitorâ€™s pass, the fi rst off ense is a $100 fi ne, and
the second off ense is they will revoke your privilege
to get a residential sticker, so I wouldnâ€™t do it.â€
The parking department is currently working
with its printer to manufacture a type of visitorâ€™s
parking pass that is harder to reproduce, McKenna
said. â€œ[The parking director] is working hard to
fi nd a new design so it wonâ€™t be easy for people
to copy these visitorâ€™s passes,â€ she said.
Visconti said the time for the city to take action
is now before the problem gets worse. â€œItâ€™s pretty
disappointing to hear that people are trying
to abuse the system, and while it may be a small
percentage right now, Iâ€™d rather nip it in the bud
right now before it gets out of control,â€ said Visconti.
â€œSpeaking to the parking director, there are
some solutions that are coming about, like Councillor
McKenna said. Hopefully, the residents out
there will realize that obviously, if they get caught,
that consequences will happen.â€
In other parking-related business on Monday
night, Ward 2 Councillor Ira Novoselsky asked
GERRY VISCONTI
Councillor-at-Large
that Mayor Brian Arrigo request the Department
of Conservation & Recreation to relax the residential
permit parking on Ocean Avenue to a fourhour
time limit. That limit would be the same as
on Revere Beach Boulevard during the nonoperational
period of the beach paid parking from October
through April.
BOH, Mayor to Hold Webinar to
Address Rodent Issues
M
alden Board of Health Director Chris
Webb and Mayor Gary Christenson will
hold a webinar (the link may also be found on
the Cityâ€™s website) on Wednesday, September
29th at 6 PM to discuss the current uptick in
rodents. Director Webb will provide information
about rodents and their habitats, and why
there has been increased activity this year. He
will discuss typical extermination methods and
issues and what property owners should do
to secure their trash to help alleviate the problem.
City Pest Control Contractor Bob Leon of
General Environmental will be participating in
the webinar.
×‰	Ú 7cassandra://LXp5whcFSHBbXRN06WxAjcsX-gAqwmKcY3O0tg_oS2EÍ/*Í`Ì°Í ×aCõzƒÕ[Ò8á×‰EÚTHE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 2021
Page 5
City of Revere appoints Zachary Babo as Parking Director
Special to Th e Advocate
M
ayor Brian Arrigo on Tuesday
announced the appointment
of Zachary Babo as
Parking Director. The appointment
comes after the retirement
of James Rose this past
May. Zachary Babo, a Revere
High School graduate, is now
raising his children, Zachary Jr.
and Mackenzie, in Revere with
his fi ancÃ© Stephanie. His family
has lived in Revere since 1982.
â€œWhat I am most looking forward
to â€¦ is working with the
community to address their
needs and concerns within this
city related to various parking
issues,â€ said Babo. â€œWe have a
great team working for the Parking
Department that really go
above and beyond to serve the
public and I am excited to work
with them.â€
Babo started working for the
City of Revere in July of 2018,
where he worked for two years
as a Parking Control Offi cer in
the Parking Department. In his
position, he worked with the department
and residents by patrolling
areas to ensure compliance.
It was in this experience
that he learned the importance
of public service and demonstrated
an ability to work with
the residents of Revere. After
working in the Parking Department,
Babo was promoted to
a Code Enforcement Offi cer in
the Inspectional Services Department,
where he performed
inspections and assured health
and sanitary codes were adhered
to.
â€œZachary Babo is a clear example
of a Revere employee who
goes above and beyond for our
residents,â€ said Mayor Brian Arrigo.
â€œBorn and raised in Revere,
heâ€™s a graduate of Revere High
School and is now raising his
Zachary Babo is pictured with his fi ancÃ©, Stephanie, and children,
Mackenzie and Zachary, Jr.
City Council declares
September Hunger
Action Month
By Adam Swift
S
eptember is offi cially Hunger
Action Month in Revere. On
Monday night, the City Council
approved a motion for the proclamation
by Councillor-at-Large
Jessica Ann Giannino.
â€œIf there is one thing that we
noticed during the pandemic,
it was that food insecurity was
prevalent in the city of Revere
and surrounding communities,â€
said Giannino. â€œI think it shines a
light on it that we really havenâ€™t
seen in a while and realized how
many people are struggling that
may not have shown up before.â€
During the pandemic, Giannino
said, the city did step up and
provide relief to those who needed
it, and she noted that there are
still nonprofi ts active in Revere
that are helping those in need
and providing food services.
â€œSome of the people dealing
with these struggles are often
the last to reach out and ask for
help,â€ Giannino said. â€œItâ€™s important
that we are there to support
them, and if anything, use this
opportunity to promote awareness
and education.â€
Councillor-at-Large Steven
Morabito said taking action is the
key to helping address the hunger
issue in Revere and beyond.
â€œFor millions of people around
the world, and in our city, itâ€™s a
choice between food and paying
a utility bill, or food and paying
medical expenses,â€ Morabito said.
Councillor-at-Large George
Rotondo said that the increase in
food insecurity during the pandemic
has added to the burdens
many people in the community
face. But he added that there is
help for those who need it in Revere.
â€œIâ€™ve got to give Mayor [Brian]
Arrigo credit for having a specifi
c group within City Hall working
on SNAP [Supplemental Nutrition
Assistance Program] and
so forth,â€ he said. â€œIf you are at
home and you need help with
food and you need resources,
City Hall actually has a group
that is involved in helping people
get on SNAP so that you can
get food. If anyone has a problem
obtaining food or needs assistance,
I would contact the Mayorâ€™s
Offi ce and have them direct
you to the proper group within
the city.â€
Thank You
Voters of Ward 5
for your Loyal Support
on Primary Day!
Tuesday, November 2, 2021 is
Election Day and I will make every
îˆï‚‡î’î•î— î—î’ îîˆîˆî— î—î‹îˆ î™î’î—îˆî•î– î’î‰ îšî„î•î‡ î€˜
in person to earn your support.
own family in the City. As one
of the most resident-utilized offi
ces in the City, itâ€™s imperative to
appoint someone dedicated to
public service. Zach has proven
himself for this position and we
are all excited to see the work
heâ€™s capable of.â€
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
îšîšîšî€‘îƒ€î’î•îˆî‰î’î•î•îˆî™îˆî•îˆî€‘î†î’î
(Paid Pol. Adv.)
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THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 2021
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ÍTHE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 2021
Page 7
Cogliandro grateful for primary victory
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Proud mom Doreen DiRienzo, with stepfather Roger Blais. (Advocate photos by Tara Vocino)
By Tara Vocino
W
ard 3 council top votegetter
Anthony Cogliandro
said he was relieved after he
received approximately 58 percent
of the votes during Tuesdayâ€™s
primary election.
â€œEven with all the hard work
we put in, nothing is certain,â€ Cogliandro
said. â€œI look forward to
continuing to work hard to earn
votersâ€™ support this fall.â€
Mother Doreen DiRienzo said
he knows the city from his time
at Revere Karate Academy, adding
he really wants to make a
diff erence. His stepfather, Roger
Blais, said itâ€™s the fi rst step toward
a pre-victory, adding he
campaigned the right way.
Long-time Ward 3 Councillor
Arthur Guinasso announced
his retirement this year, freeing
up the seat. Cogliandro will face
runner-up Al Terminiello Jr. in
the November election.
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Pictured in front, Anthony Cogliandro and Maureen Oâ€™Boyle. In back, Michael King, Mark Matheson,
uncle Matthew Cogliandro and Michael LaBerge during his victory party inside the bar at Casa
Lucia Function Facility on Tuesday.
DCR | FROM Page 3
as a refl ection of us and a refl ection
on the ward councillors and
the Mayorâ€™s Offi ce when they request
these things and the DCR
is not responding to us. Itâ€™s not a
matter of a lack of eff ort on behalf
of myself or Rep. Turco or
even the Mayorâ€™s Offi ce; we are
all asking, and we are all trying.â€
Ward 2 Councillor Ira Novoselsky
said he has had better luck
getting DCR issues addressed
by going to the beach manager
and maintenance workers who
work on Revere Beach. â€œSometimes,
if you talk to the guys on
the street, you get things done,â€
he said. Both the Revere Beach
manager and the local DCR
maintenance supervisor have
been able to address some issues
when asked, Novoselsky
said.
â€œI suggest you try to call some
of the worker bees on Revere
Beach to see if they can handle
some of this stuff ,â€ he said.
Like us on Facebook
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THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 2021
~ FLASHBACK ~
58th in a series of photos
î‰î•î’î î€·î‹îˆ î€¤î‡î™î’î†î„î—îˆ îƒ€îîˆî–
Leonard Florence Center for Living
resident Eleanor Karp turns 107
E
leanor Karp, a beloved resident
at the Leonard Florence
Center for Living, turned
107 on September 1. Wearing a
festive tiara, Eleanor celebrated
this milestone day with family,
friends, residents and staff at a
socially distanced party.
Born on September 1, 1914,
In September of 2011, the Feast of St. Lucy,
the patron saint of sight was celebrated a little
î‡îŒï‚‡îˆî•îˆî‘î—îîœ î—î‹î„î— îœîˆî„î•î€‘ î€·î‹îˆ îŒîî“î’î•î—î„î‘î— î—î‹îŒî‘îŠ îšî„î– î—î‹î„î—
î–î“îŒî•îŒî—î˜î„îîîœ î‘î’î—î‹îŒî‘îŠ î†î‹î„î‘îŠîˆî‡î€‘ î€·î‹îˆ î€¯î„î‡îœ î’î‰ î€¶îŒîŠî‹î— îšî„î–
remembered in the celebration of mass. Usually
there is an outdoor festival, the coming together of
the parishioners and friends in a gala event of rides
and chance, all to help raise funds for St. Maryâ€™s
î€³î„î•îŒî–î‹î€‘ î€·î‹îˆ î†î„î•î•îœîŒî‘îŠ î’î‰ î—î‹îˆ î–î—î„î—î˜îˆ î’î‰ î€¶î—î€‘ î€¯î˜î†îœ î„î•î’î˜î‘î‡
the parish grounds after the mass celebrated in her
î‹î’î‘î’î•î€‘ î€·î‹îˆ î–î—î„î—î˜îˆ î†î„îîˆ î—î’ î•îˆî–î— îŒî‘ î—î‹îˆ î“îî„î†îˆ î’î‰ î‹î’î‘î’î•
for the evenings festivities in her name.
î€‹î€¤î‡î™î’î†î„î—îˆ î‚¿îîˆ î“î‹î’î—î’î€Œ
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.
in Dorchester, Eleanor was the
youngest of three. She loved
school, dancing and socializing
with her many friends. In fact,
Eleanor met her husband, Henry
Karp, through her girlfriend,
who ultimately turned out to
be her sister-in-law! It was love
at fi rst sight. Eleanor and Henry
married on June 26, 1938.
Before starting a family, Eleanor
worked at Schraff tâ€™s, the
renowned candy company in
Charlestown. After her sons, Michael
and Harvey, were born, Eleanor
devoted her time to running
the household. Celebrations
played a huge role in their
lives. â€œThe Jewish holidays were
legendary in our house,â€ said son
Harvey Karp.
â€œWe had at least 30 people,
with the tables extending into
three rooms,â€ added Harvey.
â€œMy mom is an amazing cook.
Her brisket, matzah ball soup,
gefi lte fi sh and stuff ed knadles
were the best I have ever eaten.
She even made her own horseradish!â€
Eleanor
and Henry lived in
Everett and Malden for most
of their married life. They led a
highly active social life, frequently
entertaining friends and family.
Henry was one of eight siblings
â€“ four boys and four girls
â€“ and Eleanor was extremely
close to all of them. She organized
huge family outings every
summer. Eleanor and Henry
were married for 46 wonderful
years. Sadly, Henry passed
away in 1984 at 74 years of age.
In 2010, Eleanor moved from
the Jack Satter House in Revere
to the Cohen Florence Levine Estates
Assisted Living in Chelsea.
Both staff and residents adored
her! She loved the bus trips and
visits to area restaurants, especially
Jimmyâ€™s Steakhouse,
The Continental and Kowloon.
Meals in the dining room at
Cohen Florence Levine Estates
were the highlight of her day.
Adored by her children â€“ son,
Harvey and wife, Jeanne, and
son, Michael and wife, Charlene
â€“ Eleanor cherishes her
four grandchildren and seven
great-grandchildren. She presides
over the family with love,
warmth and humor. â€œEleanor
is a truly remarkable woman,â€
said Jeanne Karp. â€œShe is generous,
loving, sharp and fun to be
around. Actually, I canâ€™t imagine
having a better mother-in-law.â€
â€œEleanor brings a sense of
warmth to everyone she comes
into contact with,â€ said Leonard
Florence Center for Living Recreation
Program Director Jimmy
Aguilar.
He described Eleanor as always
smiling and full of life. As
he puts it, â€œShe certainly is opinionated
and well-informed, but
so very respectful to everyone.
Truthfully, it is a pleasure to be
around her.â€
When asked the secret to living
such a long life, Eleanor
was quick to respond. â€œWhoever
would have expected me to
live to 107?â€ she asked. â€œBut yet
here I am!â€
Harvey and Jeanne Karp are
thrilled Eleanor is a resident at
the Leonard Florence Center
for Living. â€œWe feel extremely
fortunate she is living in such
a beautiful building with a private
room and bath, but even
more importantly, we are deeply
grateful to the incredible staff
at the Center,â€ said Jeanne Karp.
â€œThey genuinely care about her.â€
Notably, the Leonard Florence
Center for Living will celebrate
another milestone birthday on
September 18, when resident
Rose Pugliese turns 105. â€œItâ€™s
heartwarming to see these centenarians
living life to the fullest,â€
commented Aguilar. â€œLongevity
is in the air!â€
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Page 9
City begins
redistricting process
W
By Adam Swift
ith the results of the 2020
U.S. Census in, the City of
Revere is beginning the sometimes
touchy process of redistricting
and re-precincting.
Reuben Kantor, the cityâ€™s
Chief Innovation Officer, recently
gave an overview of the
re-precinting process and some
of the changes to the cityâ€™s demographics
that came to light
with the latest census results
to the Human Rights Commission.
Kantor said those results
show population growth in all
six of the cityâ€™s wards, and that
Revere is now a majority minority
community, with 55 percent
of the residents identifying as
Black, Indigenous and People
of Color (BIPOC).
â€œRe-precincting happens every
10 years after the U.S. Census
releases the data to the cities
and towns; cities and towns
have the opportunity to account
for where the population
changes have happened
since the previous census,â€ said
Kantor.
Communities must review
and redraw precinct lines since
some of them may no longer
be legal because of changes
in population, according to
Kantor. Each precinct must legally
be within fi ve percent of
each other in total population.
â€œWeâ€™re really trying to get it to
less than that so that all the precincts
are the same and all the
wards are the same,â€ said Kantor.
â€œThatâ€™s going to require
some pretty big changes in
where we draw the boundaries
so we can have these equal
precincts.â€
The deadline for redistricting
is still up in the air because
of a bill in front of the state
legislature that is trying to determine
if the local boundaries
are drawn fi rst, as has typically
been done, or if the state
will redistrict itâ€™s legislative and
congressional districts fi rst. â€œIf
[the state] draws their boundaries
fi rst, we would want to
draw our precincts within those
boundaries, but if we draw our
boundaries fi rst, they will try
to fi t into those precincts,â€ said
Kantor.
Regardless of the outcome at
the state level, Revere is starting
the process of holding public
forums to discuss the redrawing
of local boundaries.
Kantor said the City is putting
together some draft maps of
what redistricting might look
like to get the conversation
started.
Two of the key considerations
in redistricting, Kantor
said, are making sure the new
boundaries donâ€™t lead to either
packing or fragmenting of
communities of color or communities
of interest. â€œPacking is
putting all of a certain community
of interest in a single disREVERE
| SEE Page 15
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€‘
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
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THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 2021
Administration hosts Community Connections BBQ
for Housing Authority tenants
By Tara Vocino
M
ayor Brian Arrigo and other city employees hosted a Community Connections barbecue at the
Revere Housing Authority on Sunday. There was an opportunity to connect with residents at
the RHA and food, infl atables, resources and vaccines.
Pictured from left to right are Revere Recreation Director Michael
Hinojosa, Mayor Brian Arrigo and Revere Recreation Program Coordinator
Adriana Borriello by the grille during Sundayâ€™s Community
Communications BBQ for Housing Authority tenants.
Pictured from left to right: A.C. Whelan Elementary School Family Liaison Hoda Ghodbani, Rumney
Marsh Academy Family Liaison Khadidja Fridjat, Garfi eld Middle School Family Liaison Senndy
Paz, Hill Elementary School Family Liaison Sujeiris Ryan, Susan B. Anthony Middle School Family
Liaison Leslie Clyne-DeCicco, Mayor Brian Arrigo, Beachmont School Family Liaison Carolina Ruiz,
Garfi eld Elementary School Family Liaison Keila Stoff el M. Vieira and Asst. Superintendent of Equity
and Inclusion Dr. LourenÃ§o Garcia. (Advocate photos by Tara Vocino)
Shown from left to right: Housing Authority tenant Janai Ruiz,
10, Housing Stability Offi cer Valentina Moreno and tenant Hayley
Grasso, 7.
Shown from left to right: School Committee Member/Senate candidate Anthony Dâ€™Ambrosio, Revere
311 Director Nicholas Romano, Revere Housing Authority (RHA) Maintenance Director Dean
Harris, RHA Interim Executive Director Trisha Duff y, Mayor Brian Arrigo, Councillor-at-Large Steven
Morabito and Revere Community School Coordinator Fatou Drammeh.
Department of Public Health Director Lauren Buck and Administrative
Assistant Paula Sepulveda administered COVID-19 vaccines.
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Page 11
TRINITY REAL ESTATE
Opens In Malden
MALDEN - Joe Duggan and Ronnie
Puzon, local real estate veterans,
are now the Broker/Owners of TRINITY
REAL ESTATE which is opening
Wednesday, September 1st in Malden,
MA. This offi ce is loaded with
seasoned REALTORSÂ® who have
worked in the industry for years and
are true professionals. TRINITY REAL
ESTATE will serve Malden, the surrounding
communities and beyond.
Joe and Ronnie have 15 yearsâ€™ experience
as Broker/Owners in the real estate
industry and are thrilled to create
their brand in the heart of downtown
Malden
TRINITY REAL ESTATE will off er residential
and commercial sales as well
as residential and commercial leasing
to fulfi ll the communityâ€™s real estate
needs.
â€œWith the increasing demand for
Shown from left to right: Revere Public Library Director Diana
Luongo, Mayor Brian Arrigo, Childrenâ€™s Librarian Krystee Maniscalco
and Hanna Luongo, 2, handed out notebooks, pens, coolers
and Public Library information.
residential and commercial real estateâ€, said Duggan.
â€œWe fi nd it so important to have experts with
a high level of real estate education to assist Sellers
and Buyers in Malden and the surrounding
communities up to the New Hampshire boarder.
TRINITY REAL ESTATE is ready to guide any and
all who seek to sell or buy a home with the ethics
the public should expect from our profession.â€
TRINITY REAL ESTATE is located in downtown
Malden at 339 Pleasant Street, conveniently located
across from the Malden T Station. Built in
1860, the TRINITY REAL ESTATE offi ce is situated
in a historic Victorian building with 2 fl oors of period
details and welcoming designs.
Beginning with a full slate of experienced REALTORSÂ®
and administration, TRINITY REAL ESTATE
also looks to bring on a new slate of agents, ready
to serve the community and looking to align with
an educated and ethical brand of agency.
Please join us to celebrate our grand opening
on Saturday September 25th from 12-2pm at 339
Pleasant Street Malden MA.
For more information about TRINITY REAL ESTATE
or if interested in joining our company,
please visit www.TrinityHomesRE.com or call
781.322.2622.
RIGHT BY YOU
Proud Sponsor of
Bostonâ€™s Wounded Vet Run
Making sidewalk chalk art: Housing Stability Offi cer Valentina
Moreno and tenants Hayley Grasso, 8, Wessal Farris, 12, Malak
Farris, 5 and Aya Farris, 11.
At Everett Bank, we admire the men and women that protect and serve.
Itâ€™s why we were so honored to have State Rep. Joe McGonagle and
îƒ“îƒ¨îƒ¤îƒ±îƒ±îƒ¨ îƒŒîƒµîƒ¬îƒ¶îƒ·îƒ¬îƒ¤îƒ±îƒ² îƒ©îƒµîƒ²îƒ° îƒ·îƒ«îƒ¨ îƒŽîƒ¹îƒ¨îƒµîƒ¨îƒ·îƒ· îƒŸîƒ¨îƒ·îƒ¨îƒµîƒ¤îƒ±î„îƒ¶ îƒ˜î„¤îƒ¦îƒ¨ îƒ­îƒ²îƒ¬îƒ± îƒ¸îƒ¶ îƒºîƒ«îƒ¨îƒ± îƒºîƒ¨ îƒªîƒ¤îƒ¹îƒ¨
îƒ¤ îƒ§îƒ²îƒ±îƒ¤îƒ·îƒ¬îƒ²îƒ± îƒ·îƒ² îƒ‹îƒ²îƒ¶îƒ·îƒ²îƒ± îƒ îƒ²îƒ¸îƒ±îƒ§îƒ¨îƒ§ îƒŸîƒ¨îƒ· îƒ›îƒ¸îƒ± îƒîƒ²îƒ¸îƒ±îƒ§îƒ¨îƒµ îƒŠîƒ±îƒ§îƒµîƒ¨îƒº îƒ‹îƒ¬îƒªîƒªîƒ¬îƒ²î€„
www.EverettBank.com
Mayor Brian Arrigo and Metropolitan Area Planning Council Senior
Planner Josh Eichen
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THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 2021
REMEMBER | SEE Page 12
Reserve Firefi ghter Leann DiCarlo, Ward 5 Councillor John Powers
and Capt. Michael DiCarlo, who responded to 911.
Strength And Unity: Capt. Michael DiCarlo, Fire Chief Chris Bright, Firefi ghter Louis Iovine Jr., Lt. Jack
Carey and Deputy Chief Sean Mannion were among those who responded to the terrorist attacks.
By Tara Vocino
O
n Saturday, Sept. 11, members
and retirees of the Revere
Fire Department gathered
to remember the 20th anniversary
of the horrific events of
9/11/01. The September 11 attacks
were a series of four coordinated
terrorist attacks by the
militant Islamic terrorist group
al-Qaeda against the United
States destroying the World
Trade Center towers in New York
City on the morning of Tuesday,
September 11, 2001.
Chief Christopher Bright was
joined by Mayor Brian Arrigo,
members of the City Council/
School Committee, State Rep.
Turco as well as members of the
Revere Police Department and
Cataldo EMS. Father John Sheridan,
of St. Mary of the Assumption,
led everyone in prayer. On
display was a collection of FDNY
memorabilia, including books,
photographs and other historical
items from that day as well
as news reports about members
of the department, who worked
at Ground Zero in the weeks that
followed.
Councillor-At-Large Steven Morabito thanked Capt. Michael DiCarlo
for digging through the rubble.
Police Honor Guard members, from left to right, are; Sgt. Milton
Alfaro, Sgt. Joseph Internicola, Sgt. Joseph Turner and Off .
Pheachey Chhom. Back row: Sgt. Michael Trovato.
A tribute was inside the station after the ceremony.
(Advocate photos by Tara Vocino)
At right, Firefi ghter David Serino and Police
Offi cer Anthony Matos salute the American
fl ag.
State Rep. Jeff Turco said 911 united
the country, despite terroristsâ€™ mass destruction.
St.
Mary of Assumption Parish Fr. John
Sheridan reads the fi refi ghtersâ€™ prayer.
Mayor Brian Arrigo recalls late resident
Marianne McFarland, 34, who died on
Sept. 11.
Fire Chief Christopher Bright responded
to Ground Zero right after the attacks.
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Page 13
J&
Football Pats lose opener to Peabody
By Greg Phipps
T
he fall 2020 season being eliminated
by the COVID-19 pandemic
likely kept the Revere High School
football team from making a serious
challenge for the Div. 4 state championship
last year. As it turned out,
the Patriots did play an abbreviated
season last spring, competing in four
games and winning three of them.
The lone loss was to mighty Div. I powerhouse
Everett. Over the previous
two seasons under Head Coach Lou
Cicatelli, Revere emerged victorious
in 13 of 15 contests and advanced to
the Div. 4 North title game in 2019.
With several key off ensive players
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ANWAR MARBOUH
Pats QB
Peabody scored a touchdown and extra point in
every quarter to account for its game total. Meanwhile,
the Patriots didnâ€™t hit pay dirt until the fi nal
quarter when they put forth an 80-yard scoring
drive. Running back Davi Barreto took it in from
three yards out to complete the march. Kicker Wilmer
Rodriguez nailed the PAT kick, and it became
a 21-7 contest with over 10 minutes to go. The
hosts couldnâ€™t get any closer, however, as Peabody
answered with a fourth-quarter score of its own.
Revere had an earlier opportunity to get on the
DAVI BARRETO
Pats Running back
now departed via graduation, the Patriots are facing
a remake of sorts this fall, and that showed
last Friday night in the season opener against Peabody
at Harry Della Russo Stadium. During the
preseason, Cicatelli called this yearâ€™s Revere team
â€œa young groupâ€ in the learning stages, and it was
the visiting Tanners who supplied most of the offense
on Friday in a 28-7 victory over the Patriots.
board after blocking a punt late in the fi rst half. But
they were unable to cash in with any points. Barreto
had a memorable opener and was the mainstay
of the Revere off ense, running for 138 yards
on 28 carries (nearly fi ve yards an attempt).
Patriots quarterback Anwar Marbouh attempted
just eight passes and connected on three of
them for 51 yards. Mark Galvez caught one for 28
yards, and Sylis Davis was on the receiving end of
the other two for 23.
The Patriots will look to get in the win column
when they travel to take on Chelsea today (scheduled
6 p.m. start). The Red Devils defeated Salem
in their opener last week.
Talking to loved ones
about life insurance
September is Life Insurance Awareness Month
T
he COVID-19 pandemic
changed consumer perceptions
about life insurance.
And with September being Life
Insurance Awareness Month,
it serves as a time to help consumers
understand the importance
of life insurance and how
it can help protect a familyâ€™s fi -
nancial future.
According to the Life Insurance
Marketing and Research Association,
seven in 10 Americans agree
that the pandemic has been a
î€¬ î„î îˆî†î–î—î„î—îŒî† î—î’ î„î‘î‘î’î˜î‘î†îˆ î—î‹î„î— î€¬ î‘î’îš î‹î„î™îˆ îî’îŒî‘îˆî‡ î—î‹îˆ î’îµ¶î†îˆ
of TRINITY REAL ESTATE in Malden located at 339
Pleasant Street. The name may have changed but the
level of my many years of experience, the knowledge of
the current real estate market and my professionalism
continues on.
As your REALTOR, I will continue to provide a
commitment of loyalty, trust, responsibility and
exceptional service!
At this time, I would like to extend an invite to our
grand opening on Saturday, September 25th at 339
Pleasant Street, Malden from 12:00-2:00. There will
î…îˆ î•îˆî‰î•îˆî–î‹îîˆî‘î—î– î‰î’î• î„îî î„î‘î‡ î„ î–î“îˆî†îŒî„î î‰î•îˆîˆ î•î„îµ·îˆ î€¬ î„î
î’îµµîˆî•îŒî‘îŠ î‰î’î• î„ î€‡î€”î€“î€“î€‘î€“î€“ îŠîŒî‰î— î†î„î•î‡ î„î– î„ î—î’îŽîˆî‘ î’î‰ îîœ
appreciation.
Hope to see you then!
Annemarie Torcivia, REALTOR
CBR, PSA, SRES, SFR, CPRES, ACP
MA Lic #61836
Trinity Real Estate
339 Pleasant Street
Malden, MA 02148
781-983-5266
- Help Wanted -
î€·î•î„ï‚ˆî† î€¶î˜î“îˆî•î™îŒî–î’î•î– î€‹î€¦î•î’î–î–îŒî‘îŠ î€ªî˜î„î•î‡î–î€Œ î‚± î€°î˜îî—îŒî“îîˆ î€³î’î–îŒî—îŒî’î‘î–
City of Malden
î€°î„îî‡îˆî‘ î€³î’îîŒî†îˆ î€§îˆî“î„î•î—îîˆî‘î—î€ î€·î•î„î¯»î† î€¦î’îîîŒî–î–îŒî’î‘
wake-up call to reevaluate their
long-term fi nancial goals, which
may include life insurance. â€œThe
pandemic jolted consumers
awake to the crucial importance
of life insurance,â€ said AIG Life &
Retirementâ€™s President of US Life
Insurance, Timothy Heslin. â€œBy including
life insurance as part of a
holistic fi nancial plan, individuals
and families can begin to prepare
INSURANCE | SEE Page 17
The City of Malden seeks î€³î„î•î— î€·îŒîîˆ î€·î•î„ï‚ˆî† î€¶î˜î“îˆî•î™îŒî–î’î•î–
î€‹î€¦î•î’î–î–îŒî‘îŠ î€ªî˜î„î•î‡î–î€Œ î‚± î€°î˜îî—îŒî“îîˆ î€³î’î–îŒî—îŒî’î‘î–î€‘
Provide safe crossing at crosswalks, as assigned, for pedestrians
and students walking to and from school.
Must be able to stand in one area for 1-hour intervals to monitor and
îˆî‘î–î˜î•îˆ î—î•î„ï‚ˆî† îƒ€î’îš îŒî‘ î„îî î‡îŒî•îˆî†î—îŒî’î‘î– îšî‹îŒîîˆ î“î•î’î™îŒî‡îŒî‘îŠ î–î„î‰îˆ î†î•î’î–î–îŒî‘îŠ î„î— î…î˜î–îœ
intersections throughout the City of Malden.
To see full job description and complete an application please visit:
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THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 2021
Fiore and Cogliandro top ticket in Ward 5 and 3 primaries
V
By Tara Vocino
oters shared who theyâ€™re voting for at the polls
during Tuesdayâ€™s primary. Al Fiore and Anthony
Cogliandro topped the ticket in Ward 5 and 3,
respectively.
Anthony Cogliandro topped the ticket in Ward 3. Pictured here from left to right are Cogliandro and his supporters
â€“ Dawn DeAngelo, girlfriend Andrea Ciocco, Cogliandro, Michael LaBerge, Mark Matheson, Michael Labo and
Roger Blais â€“ at St. Anthonyâ€™s Church on Tuesday. (Advocate photos by Tara Vocino)
Sheila Nestor said she voted for Powers because
he addressed her phone calls about the lack of
parking and drug issues. At left is her son, Conlan
Buckley, 14.
Ward 5 Councillor candidate Ronald Clark with his family â€“ brother Robert and
son Christopher â€“ at Point of Pines Yacht Club.
Al Fiore topped the ticket in Ward 5. Pictured here from left to right are supporter
Nicholas Restuccia, Fiore and supporter Brian Chapman at the Point of Pines
Yacht Club on Tuesday.
Ward 3 Councillor candidate Wayne Rose and his supporters, from left to
right: Gina Castiello, Rose, wife Sherry Rose, in front, and Doreen and Raymond
Rushins.
Frank Gorham campaigned for Ward 5 Councillor candidate Ronald Clark.
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Page 15
Ward 5 Councillor John Powers, in center, came in second place. In front of the Jack
Satter House on Tuesday were supporters Kelly Wareham and Carol Barrett.
Julie, Rafael, 3, and Lucas Villada said they voted for Cogliandro because he
put in an investigation ticket for a reported illegal nail salon and abandoned
sidewalk on their street, Gage Avenue.
Diane Raimondi said she voted for Clark because he has lived in the Point of Pines
neighborhood for more than 30 years, adding that he cares about the neighborhood.
Pat Melchionno campaigned for Fiore outside of the Jack Satter House.
REVERE | FROM Page 9
trict,â€ said Kantor, while fragmenting
is spreading the community out so far
that they have little ability to vote for
their interests. The growth in the city
over the past decade will draw a lot of
conversation and debate, Kantor said.
â€œWe saw growth, especially in the
Hispanic and Latino communities,
across every ward in the city,â€ said Kantor.
Ward 2 saw the biggest increase in
population.
Human Rights Commission memPoint
of Pines resident Karen Andreottola
said she voted for Fiore because he
served in politics in the 1990s, adding
that he is energetic.
Leah Singer voted for Cogliandro because,
she said, heâ€™s the only candidate
who gets things done.
ber Kathi Anne Reinstein asked if
the redistricting would use natural
boundaries, such as major streets
and neighborhoods. Kantor said city
offi cials would try to stick to natural
boundary lines as much as is feasible.
â€œWeâ€™re going to draw some draft
maps just to spark conversation,â€ said
Kantor. He said the feedback from
the public forum â€“ tentatively scheduled
for the end of September â€“ will
be used to adjust the map before it
goes to the City Council and the state
for fi nal approval.
â€œThe current deadline now is that we
need to have the fi nal maps approved
by the end of October; itâ€™s a very tight
deadline,â€ said Kantor. â€œBut if the legislature
does what we think they might
do, that changes the deadline to the
end of December, possibly.â€
More information about redistricting
and an opportunity for online
feedback is available on the cityâ€™s website
at www.revere.org.
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THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 2021
Saugus man, 31,
pleads guilty to
federal drug and
gun charges
Everett and Revere Police assisted in
investigation involving former Malden
man
A
Saugus man pleaded guilty
on Tuesday to federal drug
and firearm offenses. Vinicius
â€œVinnyâ€ Teixeira, 31, of Saugus,
formerly of Malden, pleaded
guilty to possession with intent
to distribute controlled
substances, including marijuana
and psilocin, and being a
user of controlled substances
in possession of a fi rearm and
ammunition. U.S. District Court
Chief Judge F. Dennis Saylor IV
scheduled sentencing for Oct.
25, 2021. Teixeira was indicted
in April 2019.
According to prosecutors, In
March 2019 a search of Teixeiraâ€™s
residence recovered at least one
kilogram of marijuana, over 400
grams of mushrooms (dry) containing
psilocin, drug traffi cking
paraphernalia and an American
Tactical 9mm semiautomatic pistol
containing 11 rounds of 9mm
ammunition.
Acting U.S. Attorney Nathaniel
R. Mendell; the Special Agent
in charge of the FBIâ€™s Boston Division,
Joseph R. Bonavolonta;
the Special Agent in Charge of
Homeland Security Investigations
in Boston, Matthew B. Millhollin;
and Massachusetts State
Police Superintendent Colonel
Christopher Mason made the announcement.
The
Suffolk County Sheriffâ€™s
Department and the Revere, Everett
and Chelsea Police Departments
assisted with the investigation.
Assistant U.S. Attorneys
Corey Steinberg and Kaitlin R.
Oâ€™Donnell of Mendellâ€™s Organized
Crime and Gang Unit are
prosecuting the case.
Public Stairways
Project Community
Meeting â€“ Sept. 22
T
he cityâ€™s Offi ce of Planning
and Community Development
as well as the Department
of Public Works will host a community
meeting to discuss the
reconstruction of the public
stairways located on Florence
Avenue and Winthrop Avenue
on Wednesday, September 22.
City staff and project engineers
from Wesson & Sampson will be
available to discuss the design
plans, project scope and construction
timeline for these stairways.
Residents and community
members are strongly urged
to attend.
The reconstruction of the public
stairways within the Beachmont
and Shirley Avenue neighborhoods
has been an ongoing
neighborhood and Capital Improvement
Project since 2019.
Three sets of wooden stairways
have been renovated or reconstructed,
with the last set completed
on Hillside Avenue in
the fall of 2020. Construction of
these stairways was completed
through fundraising from
the Beachmont Improvement
Committee, grant funding from
America Walks, Revere on the
Moveâ€™s mini-grant program and
other city funding. The City of
Revere will begin the reconstruction
of the remaining fi ve sets of
concrete stairways in the spring
of 2022.
For more information about
Revereâ€™s Public Stairways Project,
please contact Julie DeMauro at
jdemauro@revere.org or Paul Argenzio
at pargenzio@revere.org.
Adult Italian classes
to begin on Sept. 21
A
dult Italian classes will be
off ered by the Appian Club
of Stoneham on Tuesday evenings,
starting September 21.
A class for beginners will start
with the basics (pronunciations,
phrases, etc.) and give you a fi rm
ITALIAN | SEE Page 17
Fiore hosts primary victory party
A
By Tara Vocino
l Fiore scored the most votes for Ward 5 council seat in Tuesdayâ€™s primary. His victory party was
at Sheraton Four Points after the polls ended.
Revere Ward 5 Council top go-getter Al Fiore shakes
hands with Everett Councillor-At-Large/Council President
Wayne Matewsky during his victory party on
Tuesday night at Sheraton Four Points in Revere.
Campaign Chairman Thomas Brown with
Fiore. (Advocate photos by Tara Vocino)
Women For Fiore: Shown from left to right Jane Rizzo, Al Fiore, Joyce DiNunzio and Marcia Carrabes.
foundation for the language.
The eight weeks of classes cost
$150 plus a $20 text.
The instructor is Tiff any Bistocchi
Murphy, who has a bachShown
from left to right: best friend Brian Chapman, campaign staff Anthony Losanno, family
friend Jane Johnson, girlfriend Michele Hurley, family friend Roberta Mason, aunt Connie (Fiore)
Caron and brother Greg Fiore.
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Page 17
September marks the start
of fall hunting
T
he return of cooler weather
means many Massachusetts
sportsmen and women
will head into the woods for the
fall 2021 hunting season. Massachusetts
residents may be wondering
where and when hunting
will be taking place this fall. Early
Canada goose and black bear
hunting seasons open statewide
on September 8, while pheasant
hunting season opens October
17. Archery deer and turkey
hunting seasons begin on October
5 in eastern Massachusetts
and on October 19 in the rest of
the state. Click here to review a
summary of all hunting seasons.
Hunting on Sunday is not permitted
in Massachusetts. Many public
lands are open to hunting including
Wildlife Management Areas,
most state parks, and many
town-owned lands. Research the
property you plan to visit to learn
if hunting is allowed.
Hunting is a safe activity and
non-hunters should feel comfortable
using the woods at any
time of year. Although hunting
accidents are extremely rare,
wearing blaze orange will help
minimize your chances of being
mistaken for game animals during
the hunting season. While
hunters are required to wear
blaze orange during certain seasons,
all outdoor users who are
in the woods during hunting
seasons should wear a blaze orange
hat or vest as a precaution.
Safety tips for non-hunters
â€¢ Be safe, be seen. A brightly
colored orange vest or hat
will help you stay visible. Avoid
wearing any earth-toned or animal-colored
clothing. The use
of blaze orange has dramatically
reduced the number of hunting-related
accidents in the fi eld.
Watch a short video on the Effectiveness
of Blaze Orange. Remember,
hunters are often active
during the early morning
and late afternoon when animals
are most active. Be especially
aware of your own visibility
during these times when
light is dim.
â€¢ Keep pets leashed and visible.
Place a blaze orange vest or
bandana on your pet to keep it
visible.
â€¢ Know when and where
hunting is allowed. Get information
about hunting regulations
and season dates from
our website. Hunting on Sunday
is not permitted in Massachusetts.
Wildlife Management
Areas, Wildlife Conservation
Easements, and Access Areas
are open to hunting. Most
state parks and forests are open
to hunting, and many towns allow
hunting on municipal lands.
Learn about lands open to hunting
in Massachusetts. Research
the property you plan to visit to
learn if hunting is allowed. If being
in the woods during hunting
season makes you uneasy, fi nd
a location where hunting is not
allowed or plan your outing for
a Sunday or another day outside
of hunting season.
â€¢ Make your presence
known. Talk loudly or whistle
to identify yourself as a person.
You may also consider wearing a
bell. If you see someone hunting
or hear shots, call out to them to
identify your location.
â€¢ Be courteous. Once you've
made your presence known,
don't make unnecessary noise
to disturb wildlife or hunting.
Hunter harassment is against
state law. Avoid confrontations
with hunters. If you think you've
witnessed a fi sh or wildlife violation,
report it to the Massachusetts
Environmental Police at
1-800-632-8075.
INSURANCE | FROM Page 13
for the unexpected, today and in
the future.â€
How do you start the conversation?
Having
a conversation about
life insurance with a loved one
can seem unsettling or morbid,
but it does not need to be. AIG
Life & Retirement off ers tips to
help get the conversation started:
â€¢ Find the right opportunity:
Major life events, such as marriage,
having a child or buying
a home, present an appropriate
opportunity to start a conversation.
â€¢
Set aside dedicated time: The
topic of life insurance isnâ€™t something
to bring up lightly, like in
ITALIAN | FROM Page 16
elorâ€™s degree in Italian from
Dickinson College and a masterâ€™s
degree in Italian from Middlebury
College. She has traveled
extensively throughout Italy
and has taken courses there.
The class is casual and interesting,
and the experience will be
enjoyable. If you are traveling
to Italy or just want to relive
your heritage roots, this class
is for you.
Contact coordinator John
Nocella for further details at
the car on the way to the grocery
store. Set aside dedicated time
when both you and your loved
one are at home and relaxed.
â€¢ Do your homework: Do some
online research or speak with a
licensed life insurance representative
who can provide information
on the diff erent types of life
insurance.
â€¢ Approach it as a fi nancial plan:
Rather than making it about
death, frame the conversation
around protecting the family fi -
nancially if one of your paychecks
was to suddenly stop.
If you already have life insurance,
Heslin says, â€œLife Insurance
Awareness Month is a reminder
to reevaluate your policy, because
changing circumstances may
lead to diff erent insurance needs.â€
781-438-5687 or preferably, by
email, at john02180@gmail.
com. Please pass along to other
family members, friends and
neighbors.
The class is sponsored by
the Appian Club of Stoneham,
a nonprofit, social charitable
503(c)(7)organization whose
mission is to promote Italian culture
and heritage.
Italian classes for children will
be suspended this fall due to
COVID-19 and masking issues
with the kids. We hope to resume
the childrenâ€™s classes later
on.
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THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 2021
If you have any questions about this weekâ€™s report,
e-mail us at bob@beaconhillrollcall.com or call us at (617) 720-1562.
THE HOUSE AND SENATE:
There were no roll calls in the
House and Senate last week.
This week, Beacon Hill Roll Call
reports on the number of times
each representative sided with
Gov. Charlie Baker on his 15
vetoes of mostly state budget
items.
A two-thirds vote is required
to override a gubernatorial veto.
In a full 160-member House, the
governor needs the support of
54 representatives to sustain
a veto when all 160 representatives
voteâ€”and fewer votes
when some members are absent,
or a seat is vacant. Baker
fell short of that goal as 35
votes was the most support he
received on any veto. The House
easily overrode all 15 vetoes, including
one that was overridden
unanimously.
It was mostly the 30 GOP
members who voted with the
Republican governor to sustain
the vetoes but no Republican
representatives voted with Baker
100 percent of the time.
The three GOP members who
voted with Baker the most times
are Reps. Shawn Dooley (R-Norfolk),
14 times (93.3 percent);
Norman Orrall (R-Lakeville), 13
times (86.6 percent); and Brad
Jones (R-North Reading) and
Donald Berthiaume (R-Spencer)
who both voted with Baker
11 times (73.3 percent)
The three GOP members who
supported Baker the least number
of times were Reps. Jim Kelcourse
(R-Amesbury), Marc Lombardo
(R-Billerica) and David Vieira
(R-Falmouth). All three voted
with Baker only six times (40
percent).
The vetoes had little support
among the 129 Democrats in
the House. One hundred and
twenty-fi ve (96.9 percent) did
not support the governor even
once. The other four (3.1 percent)
voted with Baker to sustain
only one veto (6.6 percent).
They are Reps. Nika Elugardo (DJamaica
Plain); Chris Markey (DDartmouth);
Joan Meschino (DHull);
and David Robertson (DTewksbury).
NUMBER
OF TIMES REPRESENTATIVES
SUPPORTED
BAKERâ€™S VETOES
Here is how your representative
fared in his or her support
of Baker on the vetoes in 2021
through September 10, 2021.
The percentage next to the
representativeâ€™s name represents
the percentage of times
the representative supported
Baker. The number in parentheâ€¢
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FOR
RENT
ses represents the actual number
of times the representative
supported Baker.
Some representatives voted
on all 15 roll call votes. Others
missed one or more roll calls. The
percentage for each representative
is calculated based on the
number of roll calls on which he
or she voted and does not count
the roll calls for which he or she
was absent.
Rep. Jessica Giannino
0 percent (0)
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 September
6-10, the House met for a total
of ten minutes while the Senate
met for a total of one hour
and fi ve minutes.
Mon. Sept. 6 No House session
No
Senate session
Tues. Sept. 7 House 11:01
a.m. to 11:06 a.m.
Senate 11:09 a.m. to 11:14 a.m.
Wed. Sept. 8 No House session
No
Senate session
Thurs. Sept. 9 House 11:00
a.m. to 11:05 a.m.
Senate 11:42 a.m. to 12:42 p.m.
Fri. Sept. 19 No House session
No
Senate session
Bob Katzen
welcomes feedback at
bob@beaconhillrollcall.com
Joseph D. Cataldo is an Estate Planning/Elder Law Attorney, Certifi ed
Public Accountant, Certifi ed Financial Planner, AICPA Personal
Financial Specialist and holds a Masterâ€™s Degree in Taxation.
THE NEW 10 YEAR
RULE ON RETIRMENT
PLAN DISTRIBUTIONS
T
he SECURE Act was passed
on December 20, 2019.
One of the biggest changes
to retirement accounts included
in that legislation was the
new provision relating to retirement
plan distributions for
most non-spouse benefi ciaries
of such accounts.
Prior to the passage of the
SECURE Act, all designated
benefi ciaries (living individuals
and qualifying Trusts) were allowed
to use the â€œstretchâ€ strategy
in order to spread out the
distributions from the inherited
retirement account over the
individualâ€™s life expectancy as
well as the life expectancy of
the benefi ciaries of the qualifying
Trust. This was a big win
for the benefi ciary as the inherited
retirement account could
continue to be invested for
the long-term without major
tax bites taken out each year
due to a much smaller required
minimum distribution (RMD).
This was also a loss for the federal
and state governments as
the tax revenue would be received
over a much longer period
of time.
The SECURE Act broke up
the designated benefi ciaries
into two groups: 1. Eligible
beneficiaries and 2. Non-Eligible
beneficiaries. The eligible
beneficiaries are able
to stretch the required minimum
distributions over their
life expectancies. Whoâ€™s in this
group? Surviving spouses, disabled
benefi ciaries, chronically
ill benefi ciaries, minor children
of the decedent account holder
(as well as qualifying Trusts
established for their benefi t),
and beneficiaries not more
than ten years younger than
the decedent account holder.
All other benefi ciaries will be
part of the non-eligible group
and will not be able to stretch
out the RMDâ€™s over their lifetime.
Now, the IRS wins and
this group of benefi ciaries loses.
They have to withdraw the
account in its entirety within a
ten-year period. A 35 year old
benefi ciary of his fatherâ€™s IRA
account who dies will have
to include $50,000 in his or
her taxable income over a 10year
period. This income will
be added to this childâ€™s other
income each year. He or she
could lose $13,500 in each
of those years to federal and
state income taxes assuming
the federal marginal tax bracket
is 22% and the Massachusetts
rate is 5%. Thatâ€™s $135,000
out the window over a tenyear
period for a middle class
American.
The RMD can be taken ratably
over the ten- year period
or the benefi ciary can wait until
the tenth year to take it all
out. If the RMD is not taken out,
a 50% penalty on the shortfall
would be assessed by the IRS.
Under the old rule, the 35
year old beneficiary would
have been able to withdraw
the inherited retirement account
over a period of 48.5
years. The new 10-year rule has
a dramatic aff ect on the net â€œafter
taxâ€ value of an inherited retirement
account.
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Page 19
RevereTV Spotlight
T
1. On Sept. 17, 1787, what
U.S. government document
was signed?
2. What well-known artist
painted â€œCape Cod
Evening,â€ â€œFreight Cars,
Gloucesterâ€ and â€œNighthawksâ€?
3.
What government residence
has a Chocolate
Shop, a Music Room and
a Game Room?
4. Traditionally, on Sept.
18 Oktoberfest starts; although
it was cancelled
this year, what traditional
fest souvenir can you
still buy?
5. What animal does mohair
come from?
6. Doug Emhoff has what
informal title?
7. Reportedly, on Sept.
19, 1982, what type of
keyboard characters related
to emotions were
first used in computerized
communication?
8. What kind of person is
a Luddite?
9. What kind of storm
was the Carrington Event,
which happened in September
1859?
10. On Sept. 20, 1904, in
what city (now having
the Aviation Heritage National
Historical Park) did
Orville Wright make the
first successful circular
airplane fl ight?
Answers
11. Where would you fi nd
a â€œlazy daisyâ€?
12. On Sept. 7, 2021,
which country became
the fi rst to accept bitcoin
as legal tender?
13. Which came fi rst, the
ice cube tray or ice cube
bag?
14. About how many apples
does it take to make
a gallon of cider: 24, 36
or 50?
15. On Sept. 21, 1981,
who became the fi rst female
Supreme Court justice?
16.
In a letter to her sister,
what author of â€œSense
and Sensibilityâ€ wrote
â€œGood apple pies are a
considerable part of our
domestic happinessâ€?
17. On Sept. 22 of the
Third Age (in Shire-reckoning)
what fi ctional father
and son were both
born?
18. In what Latin American
country did ceviche
originate?
19. What crochet design
is named after a family
member?
20. On Sept. 23, 1869,
Irish immigrant â€œTyphoid
Maryâ€ Mallon died; although
she, herself, was
healthy, she was believed
to have carried typhoid in
what state?
hings got a bit busier at
RevereTV this week starting
with the return of â€œThe Senior
FYIâ€! This program is produced
by RTV in partnership
with the Rossetti-Cowan Senior
Center and aims to disperse
information privy to the
senior citizens of Revere. In this
episode, Director of Elder Affairs
Debra Peczka DiGiulio and
guest host Ed Deveau were at
the news desk to talk about
what is going on at the senior
center, including available services
and upcoming events.
You can watch â€œThe Senior FYIâ€
on Mondays at 1 p.m., Thursdays
at 1 p.m. and Fridays at
8:30 a.m. on the RTV Community
Channel.
The Revere High School Football
season has offi cially begun.
RevereTV provided live coverage
of the teamâ€™s home opener
against Peabody and should be
SISTERS | FROM Page 1
Councillors Patrick Keefe, Steve
Morabito and Gerry Visconti,
the cosponsors of the motion
to present the commendation,
praised the Martellis and
their parents for their spirit of
giving back to the community.
But it was Kayla who thanked
the community for its continued
support of their charitable
eff orts.
â€œItâ€™s the community, itâ€™s everyone
who comes to support us
in these past 10 years,â€ said Kayla
when asked about the secret
to her and her sisterâ€™s success
by Keefe. â€œI couldnâ€™t imagine life
without my lemonade stand anat
every game this season. The
games will air live on the RTV
Community Channel, YouTube
and Facebook. If you miss any
of RTVâ€™s live coverage, all football
games will replay on the
Community Channel and will
be posted to the RHS Football
Fall 2021 playlist on YouTube.
Good luck, Revere Patriots!
Soon in the community program
rotation, you will get
to watch a live studio performance
of a local band, Hexx
Head. Band duo Allie Coppola
and Mike Frazier recorded a
performance featuring music
from their upcoming album.
Hexx Head was established a
year ago, an idea put in motion
through the pandemic. Coppola
says the band has electronic,
industrial, techno and
punk elements. Check out Hexx
Headâ€™s performance in the upcoming
weeks on RevereTVâ€™s
ymore. Itâ€™s become something
I really cherish and that I want
to continue as long as I can and
carry it on to my family and the
community â€¦ I want everyone
to start giving back as much as
we do.â€
All three councillors were full
of praise for the sisters as well
as for their parents, Don and Susan.
â€œItâ€™s not just about the lemonade
stand, and itâ€™s not just
about the event to get people
to give a few bucks, itâ€™s about
the awareness they raise and
itâ€™s about how they go about
their days every day in the year,â€
said Keefe.
Keefe noted that the annual
lemonade stand is an event the
entire community looks forward
Community Channel. As a reminder,
that channel is 8 and
1072 on Comcast and 3 and
614 on RCN.
A 9/11 Remembrance Ceremony
was held on Saturday for
the 20th anniversary of the attacks
on 9/11. RevereTV aired
this ceremony on all media outlets.
If you missed it, you can
watch Saturdayâ€™s ceremony on
RevereTV as it replays throughout
the next few weeks â€“ and
also on Facebook and YouTube.
If you missed Revereâ€™s primary
election results for Ward
3 and Ward 5, you can watch
RevereTVâ€™s coverage and guest
host commentary from Tuesday
night on YouTube and
Facebook. This event aired live
on RTV Gov as the results came
in. All city meetings and government
coverage airs on this
channel, which is 9 on Comcast
and 13 and 613 on RCN.
to every year. â€œTheir little lemonade
stand has been a legitimate
community event,â€ he said. â€œWe
look forward to it every year,
and itâ€™s become a social event
for the entire community from
morning until night. The fi re department
comes by, representatives
from the police department
come by and almost every
councillor comes by.â€
Morabito said the Martellis
understand how important it is
to give to the community and
to people in need. â€œThese girls
make a diff erence, and itâ€™s very
important that you girls know
you are role models,â€ he said.
â€œIf you can make a diff erence in
one personâ€™s life, then you have
done a great job.â€
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1. The Constitution
(Sept. 17 is
annual Constitution/Citizenship
Day.)
2.
Edward Hopper
3.
The White
House
4. The offi cial Oktoberfest
mug
5. The Angora
goat
6. Second Gentleman
7.
Emoticons
(similar to emoji)
8. One who resists
technological
change
9. A solar fl are/
geomagnetic
storm causing
visible auroras
worldwide and
damaging telegraph
systems
10. Dayton, Ohio
11. It is the name
of an embroidery
stitch.
12. El Salvador
13. Ice cube tray
(1933)
14. 36
15. Sandra Day
Oâ€™Connor
16. Jane Austen
17. Bilbo Baggins
(in 2890)
and Frodo Baggins
(in 2968)
18. Peru
19. Granny
squares
20. New York
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THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 2021
OBITUARIES
Lucille (Steele)
Ferruzzi
F
erruzzi, Lucille (Steele) of
Marshfi eld formerly of Revere
passed away surrounded
by her loving family on September
11, 2021 at the age of
100. Born in Henderson, KY to
the late Thomas and Iris (Madden)
Steele. Beloved wife of the
late Albert A. Ferruzzi. Devoted
mother of Laura Haskell and
her husband Russ of Norwell,
and James Ferruzzi and his wife
Donna of FL. Cherished grandmother
of Monique Sullivan
and her husband Kevin of Scituate,
Christopher Mancini and
his wife Stacie of CA, Christine
Walsh and her husband Tim of
CA, Amanda Pedecine and her
husband Christopher of NJ, Andria
Ferree of FL, Kimberly Ferruzzi
and her husband Matteo
Migliori of London, and the late
Thomas Ferruzzi. Adored great
grandmother of 13. Dear sister
of James Steele and his wife
Joan of TX, and the late Marvin,
VOTE | FROM Page 1
day, Nov. 2. In Ward 3, the race to
replace Guinasso comes down to
Anthony Cogliandro, who easily
topped the ticket with just under
58 percent of the vote, and
Albert Terminiello, Jr., whose 25
percent of the vote was enough
to fend off Wayne Rose and Michael
Roncevich.
Powers said he is in the race to
stay and that bumping up the
turnout is the key to the general
election. About 1,150 of the more
than 5,000 voters turned out to
the polls on Tuesday.
Powers noted that he has come
back from a primary defeat to win
the general election against a Fiore
before. â€œI ran against Al Fioreâ€™s
brother in 2000, and he beat me
in the primary by 129 votes, and
I came back in the general elecIlene,
Laura, Thomas, and Bobby.
Also survived by many loving
nieces and nephews. A visitation
will be held at the Paul Buonfi
glio & Sons-Bruno Funeral
Home 128 Revere St, Revere on
Thursday September 16, 2021
from 10:30am to 11:30am followed
by a Funeral Mass at St.
Anthonyâ€™s Church in Revere at
12:00pm. Relatives and friends
are kindly invited. Interment
Woodlawn Cemetery. In lieu of
fl owers donations may be made
in Lucilleâ€™s name to the American
Diabetes Association, P.O.
Box 7023, Merrifi eld, VA 221167023
or at www.diabetes.org. To
live stream Funeral Mass please
visit https://my.gather.app/remember/lucille-ferruzzi
Lillian
C. Borgosano
Borgosano and his late wife Diana.
Cherished grandmother
of John Borgosano Jr., Danielle
Borgosano, and Frankie Borgosano.
Adored great grandmother
of Lianna Borgosano. Also
survived by her loving nieces
Brenda and Diana Borgosano.
A visitation will be held at the
Paul Buonfi glio & Sons-Bruno
Funeral Home 128 Revere St,
Revere on Monday, September
13, 2021 from 9:30am to
11:30am followed by a Funeral
Mass at 12:00pm at St. Anthonyâ€™s
Church in Revere. Relatives
and friends are kindly invited.
Interment Woodlawn Cemetery.
For guest book please visit
www.buonfi glio.com
Ann Marie (Toscano)
Raffaele
Raff aele. Cherished mother of
Christopher Raffaele and his
wife Rachel of Lynn, and the late
John Paul Raff aele. Loving wife
of 25years to Alphonse Marano
of Revere. Adored grandmother
of Christopher and Vincent
Raff aele. Dear sister of Karen Toscano
of Pepperell, and the late
Vincent Toscano. Beloved aunt
to Kristina Pereira, James Toomey,
and the late Anthony Toomey.
Also survived by many loving
nieces, nephews, and countless
friends. A visitation will be
held at the Paul Buonfiglio &
Sons-Bruno Funeral Home 128
Revere St, Revere on Wednesday
September 22, 2021 from
10:00am to 11:30am followed
by a 12:00pm Mass at St. Anthonyâ€™s
Church in Revere. Interment
will be held privately for the immediate
family.
Margaret
(Dâ€™Apice) Rossi
R
B
orgosano, Lillian C. of East
Boston passed away on
September 8, 2021 at the age
of 80. Born in Boston on April
8, 1941 to the late Gaetano
and Mary (Oâ€™Leary) Borgosano.
Cherished mother of John
Borgosano Sr. of Woburn. Dear
sister of Mary M. Borgosano of
Revere, and the late Anthony
tion and won by 39 votes,â€ said
Powers.
With more than 4,000 potential
votes still at play in the ward, Powers
said he will be kicking up the
campaigning and working to get
information out to the voters. â€œIâ€™m
not going anywhere,â€ he said. â€œMy
commitment is here in this ward.â€
Powers said Fiore touched
on two hot-button issues during
the primary: the building of
the new Point of Pines fi re station
and overdevelopment in the
ward and city, especially by outside
developers. Powers noted
that the old fi re station has been
demolished and the new station
will soon be under construction,
adding that a large municipal
project like the station cannot be
completed overnight. In addition,
he said that to help pay for projects
like the fi re station and the
R
aff aele, Ann Marie (Toscano)
of Revere and formerly
of East Boston passed away
on September 11, 2021 at the
age of 60. Born in Boston on
July 22, 1961 to Maryann (Barone)
and the late Vincent Toscano.
Wife of the late Carmen
new high school, the city needs
to bring in new growth through
smart development. â€œWhere are
we going to get [the money]?â€
he asked. â€œWe are either going to
get it from the taxpayers or from
growth.â€
Fiore said he believes that there
are many people in the ward who
feel like they havenâ€™t had representation
for years, and that many
residents in the Point of Pines feel
like they have been lied to about
the Point of Pines fire station.
He noted that while the old station
has been demolished, it is
a plan that has been delayed for
years, and the city still needs to
purchase part of the land for the
building from the MBTA. â€œThe issues
really are overdevelopment,
special permits for special people,
having outside developers running
the city and overdevelopossi,
Margaret (Dâ€™Apice) of
Peabody formerly of Revere
on September 10, 2021 at
the age of 101. Born in Revere
on February 22, 1920 to the late
Gerald and Nicoleta (Capozzi)
Dâ€™Apice. Beloved wife of the late
Louis R. Rossi. Devoted mother
of Mathew Rossi and his wife
Ruth of Revere. Dear sister of
Edna Loungo of East Boston,
and the late Carmen Dâ€™Apice,
Rose Mastone, Julia Festa, Jennie
Dâ€™Apice, Helen Ruggiero, Carmella
Stanchi, Michelle Sulprizio,
and Louise Clabo. Also survived
by many loving nieces and
nephews. A Memorial Visitation
ing apartments, and the parking
meters,â€ said Fiore.
Fiore said the ins and outs of
campaigning havenâ€™t changed
much in the two decades since he
was on the City Council. He said
it is still about getting out and listening
to the concerns of the voters.
â€œGenerally speaking, with the
political shenanigans, charades
and double-talk, people have had
enough,â€ Fiore said.
In Ward 3, Cogliandro credited a
hardworking team of volunteers
with helping him top the ticket. â€œIt
was a complete team eff ort right
out of the gate,â€ he said. â€œThere
were amazing people who believed
in me and volunteers who
put in so much work.â€
Like Powers, Cogliandro said
he was a little disappointed in
the turnout for the primary and
hoped to see more voters come
Copyrighted material previously published in Banker & Tradesman/The Commercial Record, a weekly trade newspaper. It is reprinted with permission
from the publisher, The Warren Group. For a searchable database of real estate transactions and property information visit: www.thewarrengroup.com.
BUYER1
REAL ESTATE TRANSACTIONS
SELLER1
BUYER2
Daher, Nicholas
Hilliard, Scoî†© J
SELLER2
ADDRESS
Rodriguez, Figueroa M Rodriguez, Mirta R Mangiero, David Mangiero, Carol R 235 Vane St
DATE
PRICE
Revere
228 Bellingham Ave 23.08.2021 $ 595 000,00
02.08.2021 $ 625 000,00
In Loving Memory of
Justeen Marie Doherty
April 18, 1993
September 20, 2019
Twenty-Eight Years
Miss you, love you and
always thinking of you.
Love,
Nana & Family
will be held at the Paul Buonfi -
glio & Sons-Bruno Funeral Home
128 Revere St, Revere on Saturday
September 18, 2021 from
9:00am to 10:30am followed by
a Prayer Service in the Funeral
Home at 10:30am. Relatives and
friends are kindly invited. Private
Interment. In lieu of fl owers donations
may be made to St. Jude
Childrenâ€™s Research Hospital, 510
St. Jude PL, Memphis, TN 381059959.
For guest book please visit
www.buonfi glio.com
to the polls on Nov. 2. In Ward 3,
only 426 votes were cast.
As he has been campaigning,
Cogliandro said, many of the concerns
he has heard about from
voters revolve around quality of
life issues, such as the state of the
wardâ€™s sidewalks and streets.
If elected, Cogliandro said, he
will work to get as many people
involved in the political process
as possible and listen to the concerns
of all residents.
Terminiello, Jr. congratulated
Cogliandro for topping the ticket
and thanked Rose and Roncevich
for putting in the eff ort to run for
offi ce. â€œIt takes a lot of work and
heartbreak to try to do the right
thing,â€ he stated.
In addition to in Wards 3 and 5,
there will also be contested races
for Ward 2, Councillor-At-Large
and School Committee.
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”THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 2021
Page 21
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Huffi ng and Puffi ng
Dear Huffi ng,
Yes. COPD, or chronic obstructive
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î€¶î„î˜îŠî˜î–î€ î€°î€¤ î€“î€”î€œî€“î€™
î€‹î€šî€›î€”î€Œ î€•î€–î€–î€î€šî€–î€“î€“
î€¹îŒîˆîš î„îî î’î˜î• îîŒî–î—îŒî‘îŠî– î„î—î€ î€¦î„î•î“îˆî‘îŒî—î’î€µîˆî„îî€¨î–î—î„î—îˆî€‘î†î’î
View the interior
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î€˜î€“î€›î€î€•î€œî€•î€î€œî€”î€–î€—
Many people mistake shortness
of breath as a normal part
of aging, or a result of being
out of shape, but thatâ€™s not
necessarily the case. COPD â€“ a
term used to describe a variety
of lung diseases including emphysema
and chronic bronchitis
â€“ develops slowly, so symptoms
may not be obvious until
damage has occurred.
Symptoms can include an
ongoing cough or a cough
that produces a lot of mucus,
lack of energy and/or shortness
of breath especially during
physical activity, wheezing
and chest tightness, blue
lips or fi ngernails, or swelling
in your feet, ankles or legs.
Those most at risk are smokers
or former smokers over age
40, and people who have had
long-term exposure to other
lung irritants like secondhand
smoke, air pollution, chemical
fumes and dust. There is also a
rare genetic condition known
as alpha-1-antitrypsin, or AAT
defi ciency that can increase
the risks.
If youâ€™re experiencing any
of the aforementioned symptoms,
you need to get tested
by your doctor. A simple
breathing test called spirometry
can tell if you have COPD,
and if so, how severe it is. Early
screening can also identify
COPD before major loss of
lung function occurs.
If you do indeed have COPD,
you need to know that while
thereâ€™s no cure, there are
things you can do to help
manage symptoms and protect
your lungs from further
damage, including:
â€¢ Quit smoking: If you
smoke, the best thing you
can do to prevent more damage
to your lungs is to quit. To
get help, the National Cancer
Institute offers a number of
smoking cessation resources
at SmokeFree.gov or call
1-800-QUIT-NOW. Or ask your
doctor about prescription antismoking
drugs that can help
reduce your nicotine craving.
If you smoke marijuana for a
medical condition, talk to your
doctor about edible versions.
â€¢ Avoid air pollutants: Stay
away from things that could irritate
your lungs like dust, allergens
and strong fumes. Also,
to help improve your air quality
at home, remove dust-collecting
clutter and keep carpets
clean; run the exhaust
fan when using smelly cleaning
products, bug sprays or
paint; ban smoking indoors;
and keep windows closed
when outdoor air pollution is
high (see AirNow.gov for daily
air-quality reports).
â€¢ Get vaccinated: The coronavirus
and fl u can cause serious
problems for people who
have COPD, so if you havenâ€™t
already done so, get vaccinated
for COVID-19 and get a fl u
shot every fall to help avoid
getting sick. Also ask your doctor
about getting the pneumococcal
immunizations for
protection against pneumonia.
â€¢
Take prescribed medications:
Bronchodilators (taken
with an inhaler) are commonly
used for COPD. They help relax
the airway muscles to make
breathing easier. Depending
on how severe your condition,
you may need a short-acting
version only for when symptoms
occur, or a long-acting
prescription for daily use. Inhaled
steroids may also help
reduce infl ammation and mucus
and prevent fl are-ups.
For more information, visit
the COPD Foundation at COPDfoundation.org
or call the
COPD information line at 866316-2673.
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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Page 23
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THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 2021
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#
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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•
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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
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î€¨î€¹î€¨î€µî€¨î€·î€· î€ î€– î€©î€¤î€°î€¬î€¯î€¼ î’ï‚‡îˆî•î– î€˜î€’î€˜î€’î€˜ î•î’î’îî–î€ î€• î…îˆî‡î•î’î’îî–î€ î€” î…î„î—î‹ îˆî„î†î‹ î˜î‘îŒî—î€
î•îˆî„î• î“î’î•î†î‹îˆî–î€ î–îˆî“î„î•î„î—îˆ î˜î—îŒîîŒî—îŒîˆî–î€ î‘îˆîš î‰î•î’î‘î— î–î—î„îŒî•î–î€ î†î’î‘î™îˆî‘îŒîˆî‘î—îîœ îî’î†î„î—îˆî‡ îî˜î–î—
î’î˜î—î–îŒî‡îˆ î’î‰ î€ªîîˆî‘î‡î„îîˆ î€¶î”î˜î„î•îˆ î‚± î€ªî•îˆî„î— î’î“î“î’î•î—î˜î‘îŒî—îœî€„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€šî€˜î€î€“î€“î€“î€‘
î€µî€¨î€¹î€¨î€µî€¨ î€ î€”î–î— î€¤î€§ î€ î€– î…îˆî‡î•î’î’îî€ î€• î…î„î—î‹ î€µî„î‘î†î‹ î–î—îœîîˆ î‹î’îîˆ î’ï‚‡îˆî•î–
î‚¿î•îˆî“îî„î†îˆî€ îîŒî™îŒî‘îŠ î•î’î’îî€ îˆî„î—î€îŒî‘ îŽîŒî—î€ î–î˜î‘î•î’î’îî€ îšî„îîŽî€î˜î“ î„î—î—îŒî†î€ î‹î„î•î‡îšî’î’î‡î€
î†îˆî‘î€‘ î™î„î†î€‘î€ î•îˆî“îî„î†îˆîîˆî‘î— îšîŒî‘î‡î’îšî–î€ î˜î“î‡î„î—îˆî‡ î‹îˆî„î— î„î‘î‡ îˆîîˆî†î—î•îŒî†î€
î€ºîˆî–î— î€µîˆî™îˆî•îˆ îî’î†î„î—îŒî’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€¤î€¸î€ªî€¸î€¶ î€ î€”î–î— î€¤î€§ î€ î€µîŒî™îˆî•î–îŒî‡îˆ î€¦î’î‘î‡î’ î’ï‚‡îˆî•î– î€— î•îî–î€ îîŒî™îŒî‘îŠ î•î’î’î îšîŒî—î‹
î–îîŒî‡îˆî• î—î’ î‡îˆî†îŽ î’î™îˆî•îî’î’îŽîŒî‘îŠ î€¶î„î˜îŠî˜î– î€µîŒî™îˆî•î€ î€• î…î‡î•îî–î€‘î€ î’ï‚‡ î–î—î•îˆîˆî— î“î„î•îŽîŒî‘îŠî€
î†î’îŒî‘î€î’î“ îî„î˜î‘î‡î•îœî€ î–î—î’î•î„îŠîˆî€ îŠî•îˆî„î— î—î’î“ îƒ€î’î’î• î˜î‘îŒî—î€ î‘îˆîˆî‡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€µî„î‘î†î‹ î–î—îœîîˆ î‹î’îîˆ î’ï‚‡îˆî•îŒî‘îŠ î€™ î•îî–î€‘î€ î€• î…î‡î•îî–î€‘ î„î‘î‡
î€” î€”î€’î€• î…î„î—î‹î– îŒî‘ î‘îˆîˆî‡ î’î‰ î˜î“î‡î„î—îŒî‘îŠ î„î‘î‡ î€·î€¯î€¦î€ î’î™îˆî•î–îŒîîˆî‡ î‡îˆî—î„î†î‹îˆî‡ îŠî„î•î„îŠîˆî€’
î…î„î•î‘ î–î—î•î˜î†î—î˜î•îˆî€‘ î€¯î„î•îŠîˆ îî’î— îšîŒî—î‹ î‰î•î’î‘î—î„îŠîˆ î’î‘ î—îšî’ î–î—î•îˆîˆî—î–î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‡î€˜î€šî€œî€î€œî€“î€“î€‘
î€³î€¨î€¤î€¥î€²î€§î€¼ î€ î€”î–î— î€¤î€§ î€ î€¶î“î„î†îŒî’î˜î– î€› î•îî€‘ î€¦î’îî’î‘îŒî„î î’ï‚‡îˆî•î– î€— î…î‡î•îî–î€‘î€ î€• î…î„î—î‹î–î€
îŠî•î„î‘îŒî—îˆ îŽîŒî—î€‘î€ î‡îŒî‘îŒî‘îŠ î„î•îˆî„î€ î‚¿î•î–î— îƒ€î’î’î• î‰î„îîŒîîœ î•î’î’îî€ î‹î„î•î‡îšî’î’î‡ îƒ€î’î’î•îŒî‘îŠî€ î€•î‘î‡
îƒ€î’î’î• îî„î˜î‘î‡î•îœî€ îšî„îîŽî€î˜î“ î„î—î—îŒî†î€ î‘îˆîšîˆî• î‰îˆî‘î†îˆî‡ îŒî‘ îœî„î•î‡ îšîŒî—î‹ î“î„î—îŒî’î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‡î€˜î€—î€œî€î€“î€“î€“î€‘
î€¶î€¤î€¸î€ªî€¸î€¶î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€”î€” î€¸î‘îŒî— î€¥î˜îŒîî‡îŒî‘îŠî€‘ î€¦îîŒî‰î—î’î‘î‡î„îîˆ î€¶î”î˜î„î•îˆî€‘ î€³î•î’î“îˆî•î—îœ
î†î’î‘î–îŒî–î—î– î’î‰ î—î‹î•îˆîˆ î–î—î’î•îˆ î‰î•î’î‘î—î– î€‰ î’î‘îˆ î‰î•îˆîˆî€î–î—î„î‘î‡îŒî‘îŠ î…î˜îŒîî‡îŒî‘îŠî€ î–îˆî™îˆî‘
î•îˆî–îŒî‡îˆî‘î—îŒî„î î˜î‘îŒî—î–î€‘ î€¤îî î–îˆî“î„î•î„î—îˆ î˜î—îŒîîŒî—îŒîˆî–î€‘ î€¤îî î˜î‘îŒî—î– î‡îˆîîˆî„î‡îˆî‡î€ î„îî“îîˆ î’ï‚‡
î–î—î•îˆîˆî— î“î„î•îŽîŒî‘îŠî€ î€¬î€±î€¦î€µî€¨î€§î€¬î€¥î€¯î€¨ î’î“î“î’î•î—î˜î‘îŒî—îœî€‘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€‘
WONDERING WHAT YOUR
HOME IS WORTH?
CALL US FOR A FREE
OPINION OF VALUE.
781-233-1401
38 MAIN STREET, SAUGUS
UNDER CONTRACT
COMING SOON
LET US SHOW YOU OUR
MARKETING PLAN TO
GET YOU TOP DOLLAR
FOR YOUR HOME!
LITTLEFIELDRE.COM
UNDER CONTRACT
COMING SOON- BEAUTIFUL TWO FAM NEAR
SAUGUS LINE 3 BED 1 BATH IN EACH UNIT
$699,900 LYNN CALL DEBBIE 617- 678- 9710
FOR RENT
COMING SOON- NEW CONSTRUCTION
TOWNHOMES 3 BED, 2.5 BATH WAKEFIELD
CALL KEITH FOR PRICING 781-389-0791
OFFICE FOR
RENT
1ST FL 2 BED 2 BATH HEAT, HOT WATER & ELEC
INCL., LAUNDRY IN UNIT PARKING, NO PETS
SAUGUS $1850 CALL RHONDA 781-706-0842
LOOKING TO
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CIPRIANO
FOR ALL YOUR
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781-953-7870
COMING SOON- BEAUTIFUL 4 BED 2.5 BATH
3380 SQFT HOME ON CUL-DE-SAC LRG YARD
$719,900 SAUGUS CALL DAWN 978-880-8425
FOR RENT
FOR ALL YOUR REAL ESTATE NEEDS CALL
KEITH - 781-389-0791
DEBBIE - 617-678-9710
BRANDI - 617-462-5886
JULIEANNE - 781-953-7870
DANIELLE - 978-987-9535
RHONDA - 781-706-0842
JOHN - 617-285-7117
ERIC - 781-223-0289
MATT - 781-484-8541
DAWN - 978-880-8425
INVESTMENT
OPPORTUNITY
FOR RENT OFFICE CONDO 890 SQFT
SAUGUS $1400CALL RHONDA 781-706-0842
FOR RENT
FOR RENT 2 BED FIRST FLOOR NEAR TUFTS GREAT
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MEDFORD $1900 CALL RHONDA 781-706-0842
FOR RENT SUNNY & BRIGHT 2-3 BED FULL KITCHEN
WITH LAUNDRY IN UNIT. OFF ST PARKING FOR
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FOR SALE
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FOR SALE
FOR SALE 2 BED 1 BATH SINGLE WIDE
LOTS OF UPDATES SAUGUS $169,900
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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
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