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Vol.30, No.28
-FREEwww.advocatenews.net
Free
Every Friday
781-286-8500
Friday, July 16, 2021
Lighting up Revere Beachâ€™s 125th Birthday Celebration
CELEBRATION: Pictured left, revelers watch the fi reworks marking Revere Beachâ€™s 125th birthday
on Tuesday evening. Pictured right, city and state offi cials in attendance, from left to right:
Ward 5 Councillor John Powers, Council President Anthony Zambuto, Councillor-at-Large Steven
Morabito, Ward 1 Councillor Joanne McKenna, State Rep. Jessica Giannino, Council Vice President
Gerry Visconti, Ward 4 Councillor Patrick Keefe, Mayor Brian Arrigo, Robert Lynch, Steven
Plitsch, Giana Losanno, Lynzie Anderson and Katie Oâ€™Donnell. At far right: State Senator Joseph
Boncore and State Rep. Jeff Turco. (Advocate photos by Tara Vocino)
By Tara Vocino
D
espite the incoming fog
and light rain, â€œAmericaâ€™s
First Public Beachâ€ was packed
with birthday revelers on Tuesday
evening to commemorate
Revere Beachâ€™s 125 years as
the fi rst public beach. The city,
in collaboration with the Revere
Beach Partnership and the
state Department of Conservation
and Recreation, celebrated
with fi reworks, a live band, food
and games. Special guest, Governor
Charlie Baker read a Massachusetts
proclamation comCongresswoman
Clark tours site of
future Wonderland Multimodal Connector
Special to Th e Advocate
U.S. Representative Katherine
Clark recently visited the site of
the future Wonderland Multimodal
Connector to tour the facility
and discuss the economic
and social benefi ts of the project.
Construction of the station
will be paid for by a community
project funding request made
by Clark for $4 million that was
CONNECTOR | SEE Page 15
recently included in the Fiscal
Year 2022 budget. Clark, a Democrat
who represents the Fifth
District of Massachusetts, was
memorating 125 years as a public
beach.
Just after 9 p.m. the sky was
lit up with fi reworks after being
postponed a week due to the regionâ€™s
heavy rainy season which
has opened the summer.
Judging from the number of
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U.S. Representative Katherine Clark (center) recently joined Mayor Brian Arrigo and other state and
local offi cials to tour the site of the future Wonderland Multimodal Connector. Pictured from left,
State Senator Brendan Crighton, State Rep. Jeff Turco, city councilors Steve Morabito and Ira Novoselsky,
Mayor Brian Arrigo, Rep. Clark, State Sen. Joe Boncore, State Rep. Jessica Giannino, and
city councilors Ricky Serino and Patrick Keefe. (Courtesy Photo)
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THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, JULY 16, 2021
Permit hearing leads to council raising questions
about alleged hotel activity
By Adam Swift
A
fire protection engineer
tasked with securing a permit
for the storage of fl ammable
liquids for underground parking
at the Avid Hotel on American
Legion Highway got a bit of
a shock last Monday night.
The hotel was seeking the
permit from the City Council
needed for the underground
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parking of vehicles on the
site. But Ward 3 Councillor
Arthur Guinasso took the
hearing as an opportunity
to bring up some less than
ideal goings on; he said heâ€™s
gotten wind of at the new
hotel. â€œThis is the new folks
who came into town with
the thoughts of doing a
good thing for our community
and build a nice structure,â€
said Guinasso. â€œThey
only thing they forgot to do
was put qualifi ed people inside
to manage the hotel to
stop prostitution and other
illegal activities that are occurring
there. This is not germane
to your proposal tonight,
but I want the council
to be aware that this type
of activity is occurring there,
and I am talking about not
one or two or three occasions.â€
Guinasso
said he got
his oil changed at a shop
next to the hotel and asked
about their new neighbor.
â€œBoy, did I get an earful,â€
said Guinasso. â€œThey said â€“
on several occasions â€“ this
type of activity: young girls
running out.â€
City Council President Anthony
Zambuto said he had
to put a stop to Guinassoâ€™s
comments because they
were outside the purview
of the granting of a fl ammables
permit.
Paul Moan, the fi re proARTHUR
GUINASSO
Ward 3 Councillor
tection engineer from Code
Red Consultants in Southborough,
was quick to point
out that Guinassoâ€™s concerns
were outside his customary
role. â€œI am not a lawyer. I am
a fi re protection engineer from
Code Red Consultants. Youâ€™ll
have to forgive me; I have a very
limited context here,â€ said Moan.
Zambuto said he understood
Moan was before the council for
the fl ammables permit and that
he wouldnâ€™t have knowledge of
any alleged criminal activity at
the hotel.
While the council approved
the permit by a 7-4 vote, the issues
raised by Guinasso did give
some councillors pause. In addition
to Guinasso, Councillors
Jessica Ann Giannino, Richard
Serino and George Rotondo
voted against granting the permit,
while Ward 4 Councillor Patrick
Keefe voted for it, but only
after making it clear that the
only issue at hand was the vote
on fi re suppression issues.
Rotondo suggested the council
write to the police chief
about issues at the hotel, and
Guinasso said he spoke to the
chief recently about his concerns.
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Prices subject to
change
Have a Happy &
î€´î‚î‡î† î€´î–îŽîŽî†î“î€‚
FLEET
×‰	Ú 7cassandra://9CmVYhKp5mEciVn9BXbO0gGnDxdJBKsmNuZUH85KChEÍ/­Í`Ì°Í ×`ðÎ{ùŸè>&îŽH×‰EÚ.THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, JULY 16, 2021
Page 3
Silencing the Sound
WIN Waste Innovations offi cial credits a new silencer system with
keeping the noise level down in recent turbine shutdown
By Mark E. Vogler
S
augus Board of Health members
are happy about what
they are hearing â€“ or not hearing
â€“ this summer related to the
noise emanating from the WIN
Waste Innovations trash-to-energy
plant on Route 107 in Saugus.
Usually in the past, the board
would fi eld numerous neighborhood
complaints about disruptive
noise every time a turbine
tripped and had to be shut down
for maintenance at the former
Wheelabrator plant. But things
have been quiet so far this summer
â€“ even after the recent tripping
of a turbine at the plant â€“ an
incident that would draw numerous
neighborhood complaints in
recent years.
The installation of the new silencer
at a cost of $750,000 is responsible
for the lack of noise
from the plant and the absence
of complaints from the neighborhood,
according to WIN Waste Innovationsâ€™
VP of Waste to Energy,
Peter DiCecco. â€œThe newly installed
silencer worked very well
â€“ worked like a charm,â€ DiCecco
told the Board of Health during a
Wednesday night (July 14) meeting
conducted virtually via Zoom
videoconferencing.
DiCecco told the board that
there were â€œno audible sounds
from that silencer.â€
â€œItâ€™s good seeing the investment
there coming to fruition
and doing its job,â€ DiCecco said.
â€œProbably a year ago, you
would probably be talking about
it right now,â€ he added.
Board of Health Chair William
Heff ernan was pleased with the
progress the company has made
in drastically reducing the sound.
â€œKudos to your team,â€ Heff ernan
told DiCecco.
â€œI heard about it,â€ he said of the
recent turbine shutdown.
â€œI did not receive any phone
calls, which is odd when the turbine
seems to go down,â€ Heff ernan
said.
â€œI just want to say â€˜thank youâ€™ to
you and your entire team. That
was a worthwhile investment
and it seems to be paying off already.
So, thank you very much,â€
he said.
A consultant hired by WIN
Waste Innovations determined
that the new silencer installed at
the plant this past spring could
reduce the noise level from 96
decibels to 70 decibels â€“ roughly
the difference between the
sound of a power mower and a
vacuum cleaner. WIN Waste InnoRevereTV
Spotlight
L
etâ€™s introduce RevereTVâ€™s
four summer interns! Arianna
Sweeney is a Revere High
School student who is interning
at the studio to explore her interests
in digital media and television.
Chris Fortin is heading to
Emerson College in the fall, majoring
in Media Production, and
hopes to get some hands-on experience
around the studio this
summer. Isabella Pino, already
a community volunteer at RevereTV,
is studying at UMass Boston
with a major in Communications.
Angelina Gallarelli has
also volunteered at RTV in various
studio and member productions,
and is now pursuing her interests
in fi lmmaking.
RevereTV is a great place to
be introduced to all sorts of production
skills no matter what
route these students hope to
take in the future. All four have
already taken the core production
classes RTV off ers to all community
members. With the new
equipment and studio this year,
even current community members
will need a refresher when
they come back! These classes
include studio directing, fi lm
composition, fi eld production,
and editing.
The RTV interns participated
in a few productions last week.
vations learned of the less-noisy
alternative as a result of an ongoing
consultantâ€™s engineering
study being performed as a condition
of a state Department of
Environmental Protection (MassDEP)
consent order in response
to numerous citizen noise complaints
and enforcement action
initiated by the Saugus Board of
Health about two years ago.
The noise emanating from the
plant generated frequent complaints
from Saugus, Revere and
Lynn. But the Board of Health received
no recent complaints from
people in the three communities
who were irked by the noise in
the past, according to Heff ernan.
In his briefing of Board of
Health members, DiCecco noted
other improvements at the
plant, including a new fi re alarm
system call box that has been
programmed and is scheduled to
be tested next week by the Saugus
Fire Department.
Heff ernan asked DiCecco for
the companyâ€™s explanation of another
recent instance of a company
hauling low level radioactive
wastes to the Saugus plant.
DiCecco deferred to Plant Manager
Chris Bourque for an explanation.
Bourque told the Board of
Health that censors at the plant
detected the presence of a radioactive
material â€“ probably iodine
â€“ and the material was removed
from the truck and processed.
â€œIâ€™ve seen two of these incidents
in the last six months,â€ Heffernan
said.
â€œThe censors worked as necessary,â€
he said.
â€œItâ€™s nice to know that when
something gets in there before
it gets into the plant, that you are
able to fl ag it,â€ he said.
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call The Advocate
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or Info@advocatenews.net
Lawrence A. Simeone Jr.
Attorney-at-Law
~ Since 1989 ~
* Corporate Litigation
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* Zoning/Permitting Litigation
300 Broadway, Suite 1, Revere * 781-286-1560
lsimeonejr@simeonelaw.net
Some were at the Rossetti-Cowan
Senior Center to cover a presentation
about the history of
Revere Beach. Monday, July 12
was actually the 125th Anniversary
of Revere Beach and RTV is
airing a highlight reel from the
100th Anniversary on the Community
Channel for the month
of July. After the senior center
presentation, interns stayed
to cover a musical concert for
the seniors there. Other interns
stayed back at the studio to assist
with producing the weekly
public service announcements
you may have seen playing in
between programming on all
channels. These PSAs are recorded
in four languages, English,
Spanish, Portuguese, and Arabic,
and are posted to the RTV Facebook
and YouTube pages as well.
The Revere Farmers Market
is opening this month. Stay on
the lookout over the next few
weeks for an intern-produced
video package about the Farmers
Market. This takes place on
the lawn of American Legion
Hall on Broadway every Friday in
July and into the fall. These highlights
will soon be posted to RevereTVâ€™s
social media accounts,
and will be playing on the Community
Channel throughout
the week.
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$Page 4
THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, JULY 16, 2021
Welcome back: Bianchiâ€™s Pizza
reopens on Revere Beach
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.
Owner Bobby Bianchi, fourth from left, cuts the ribbon at Bianchiâ€™s At the Sandbar on Thursday
morning. Shown from left to right: Council President Anthony Zambuto, building owner Marianne
Dillon, son Derek Bianchi, owner Robert Bianchi, father Butchie Bianchi, mother Carolyn Bianchi,
Ward 2 Councillor Ira Novoselsky, in back, Ward 5 Councillor John Powers, Mayor Brian Arrigo, Council
Vice President Gerry Visconti, Linda Guinasso, Ward 3 Councillor Arthur Guinasso, niece Cathy
Bowden, John Festa, in back, and Julie DeMauro.
By Tara Vocino
B
ianchiâ€™s At the Sandbar
owner Bobby Bianchi cut
the ribbon on Thursday morning,
joined by Mayor Brian Arrigo
and city offi cials.
The pizzeria, which first
opened in 1952, closed its original
location in 2018 just down
the Boulevard but remained
open at Renzoâ€™s through November
2020. Bianchiâ€™s will be operated
by the Bianchi family and
will be making the same pizza (in
the same four ovens) residents
and Revere Beach tourists have
grown to love over the years.
â€œOur secret is to stay family
oriented and off er one simple
product â€” pizza,â€ owner Robert
Bianchi said. â€œOther places
sometimes add unnecessary
menu items.â€
The Sandbar, named after the
famed or infamous establishment
(depending on who you
talk to) from long ago, will off er
alcoholic beverages and sandwiches
inside, as well as bar
seating.
Hours are 11 a.m. to 11 p.m.
daily. Parking is available in the
rear.
Mayor Brian Arrigo awards a citation to Bobby, dad, Butchie and
mom, Carolyn Bianchi on Thursday morning for their grand reopening.
(Advocate photos by Tara Vocino)
From left to right: mother Carolyn Bianchi, father Robert Bianchi, sister Arlene DiGregorio, son Joseph,
son Robert, son Derek and granddaughter Jada Bianchi by the four brick ovens.
Chefs Zachary, Patrick, and Matthew, who are nephews,
with their mother, Cathy Bowden.
Ward 5 Councillor John Powers with
manager Maryann Dillon Wood.
×‰	Ú 7cassandra://O_o6fZ3gXshCfXi-qQbbuR-mK2-3z6QdZgydBzJ36_UÍ.ÂÍ`Ì°Í ×`ðÎ{ùŸè>&îŽJ×‰EÚtTHE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, JULY 16, 2021
Page 5
Resident, councillors spar over
City Council procedures
By Adam Swift
I
t was the kind of City Council
exchange you canâ€™t get on
Zoom when Thorndike Street
resident Wayne Rose squared
off with several councillors over
a proposed ordinance he presented.
It ended with Rose
and several councillors shouting
over each other and one
audience member storming
out, slamming the City Council
Chamber doors and knocking
the clock off the wall as
City Council President Anthony
Zambuto restored order.
Rose proposed an ordinance
which would give the City Council
the right to repeal any municipal
board or commission member
by a majority vote. Zambuto
and several councillors noted
that this is a power the council
isnâ€™t allowed under Massachusetts
General Laws.
â€œI hear many sitting council
members talk about checks and
balances, yet we have no mechanisms
to remove anyone from
any of these commissions or
committees, so I am asking that
you would fi le an appropriate
ordinance to address this,â€ said
Rose last Monday night. He said
Councillor-at-Large George Rotondo
fi led a motion giving the
council some of those powers
in the Legislative Affairs Subcommittee
chaired by Councillor-at-Large
Steven Morabito
that sat in committee. Rose
also criticized how that and other
motions go into subcommittee
and sometimes never get reported
out.
â€œOn that particular motion, actually,
I had surgery and wasnâ€™t
able to go forward with the motion,â€
said Rotondo. â€œBut Councillor
Morabito made a very poignant
statement of fact that if you
do for one you have to do for
all, and so to leave it in committee
and let it die was the appropriate
thing to do. To single out
any one group is incorrect â€¦ the
question is, what is the litmus
test and who decides?â€
Rose asked if anyone did a
criminal background check or
vetted the appointees to the
cityâ€™s boards and commissions.
â€œPeople go onto these committees;
no one knows anything
about them; theyâ€™re just appointed.
You people vote on
them; you donâ€™t vet them; you
donâ€™t CORI [Criminal Off ender
Record Information] them,â€
said Rose. â€œSo whatâ€™s going
on? Why canâ€™t we have a balance
here?â€
Zambuto said that what Rose
was requesting was not possible
by the means he was asking
to do it. â€œThis canâ€™t be done
in an ordinance,â€ said Zambuto.
â€œThis is Mass. General Law. I
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Attorney-at-Law
Is Your Estate in Order?
Do you have an update Will, Health
Care Proxy or Power of Attorney?
The cityâ€™s maintenance staff repairing the clock that was knocked
off the wall of the City Council Chambers. (Advocate photo by Adam Swift)
would suggest â€¦â€
â€œCan you quote the law for me
please?â€ Rose asked.
â€œI would suggest â€¦â€ said Zambuto.
â€œCan
you quote the law for me,
please? Iâ€™m asking you to quote
the law,â€ Rose said. â€œCan I see it? I
would love to see it. Do you have
it in front of you?â€
â€œI donâ€™t have it in front of me,â€
said Zambuto.
â€œOr are you just going to say
you have it?â€ said Rose.
â€œI donâ€™t have it in front of me,â€
said Zambuto.
â€œThen itâ€™s not here,â€ said Rose.
â€œListen,â€ said Zambuto. â€œIâ€™ll
stake my reputation on it.â€
Zambuto said the appointees
are made by the mayor and approved
by the council, and that
the council has no recourse to
remove the appointees.
Rose then began talking over
Morabito as Morabito began
explaining the process for appointing
board and commission
members.
â€œIn these council chambers,
we speak to each other with respect,â€
said Morabito.
â€œThen lower your tone, please,
if you are going to respect me,â€
said Rose.
Zambuto eventually ruled
that the motion by Rose would
be placed on fi le and not moved
forward to subcommittee.
As another resident was addressing
the council on the subject
after Rose spoke, another
audience member stormed out,
slamming the chamber doors
and bringing down the clock.
â€œI guess we need a new clock,â€
said Ward 1 Councillor Joanne
McKenna.
Councillor-at-Large Jessica
Ann Giannino said it was one
of the most embarrassing moments
she has ever experienced
in the City Council Chambers.
If Not, Please Call for a Free Consultation.
14 Proctor Avenue, Revere
(781) 284-5657
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THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, JULY 16, 2021
Chelsea Jewish Lifecare announces vaccine
mandate for all employees
C
helsea Jewish Lifecare,
a highly respected leader
in healthcare with campuses
in Chelsea and Peabody, announced
that it will require all
employees to be vaccinated
against COVID-19. Chelsea Jewish
Lifecare is a founding member
of Legacy Lifecare, a network
of not-for-profi t organizations
that also includes JGS Lifecare of
Longmeadow, Deutsches Altenheim
of West Roxbury and Elizabeth
Seton Residence and Marillac
Residence of Wellesley. The
network is the fi rst long-term
care provider group in Massachusetts
to issue a vaccine mandate
for its employees.
â€œOur top priority is always the
health of our residents and our
staff ,â€ said Legacy Lifecare President
and CEO Adam Berman.
â€œWith over 323 million doses administered
in the United States,
the COVID-19 vaccines have
been proven to be both safe
and eff ective. After consulting
with experts and careful consideration,
we feel strongly that
requiring staff to be vaccinated
is the most important action
we can do to ensure the safety
of our long-term care communities.â€
Chelsea
Jewish Lifecare
and other Legacy
Lifecare affiliates plan
to implement the mandate
once the U.S. Food
and Drug Administration
(FDA) grants final
approval of one of the
three vaccines. Receiving
the COVID-19 vaccine
will be a condition
of employment for all
staff members and volunteers,
with exemptions
limited to religious
and medical reasons.
This is consistent with
the networkâ€™s approach
to the fl u vaccine.
Since last December
when vaccines were
fi rst made available to
health care workers,
Chelsea Jewish Lifecare
and Legacy Lifecare
have conducted an extensive
education campaign
titled â€œSuperheroes Saving
Lives.â€ Over 75% of the approximately
1,800 employees
throughout the Legacy Lifecare
network are currently vaccinated,
achieving the national goal
for long-term care providers. To
further prepare for this mansite
vaccination clinics
to facilitate meeting
this important requirement.
The
organization
thanked its employees
for their incredible
dedication, loyalty,
courage and
compassion. â€œCOVID-19
has been devastating,
especially
for those of us who
care for the most
vulnerable,â€ said Berman.
â€œI am so proud
of our staff and how
they have persevered
throughout these
challenging times.
They are the real heroes
in this story.â€
Berman noted that
ADAM BERMAN
President/CEO of Legacy Lifecare
date, senior leadership will continue
to off er comprehensive information
about vaccine safety
and effi cacy, including encouraging
employees to ask questions
and addressing concerns
on a one-on-one basis. In addition,
all campuses will off er onthe
organization did
not make the vaccine
mandate decision
lightly. â€œSimply
put, implementing this mandate
is the only way we can fully protect
our staff and our residents,â€
said Berman. â€œI absolutely believe
itâ€™s the right decision for us.â€
About Chelsea Jewish Lifecare
Chelsea
Jewish Lifecare is redefi
ning senior care and re-envisioning
what life should be
like for those living with disabling
conditions. The eldercare
community includes a wide array
of skilled and short-term rehab
residences, ALS and MSâ€“
specialized care residences, traditional
and specialized assisted
living options, memory care,
independent living, adult day
health, aging life care, ventilator
care, home care and hospice
agencies that deliver customized
and compassionate care.
About Legacy Lifecare
Legacy Lifecare Inc., a nonprofi
t management resources
collaborative, provides smallto-mid-sized
organizations access
to the infrastructure needed
to succeed in todayâ€™s complex
world. With deep expertise
in strategy, fi nance, operations
and support systems management,
Legacy Lifecare enables
its not-for-profi t affi liates to preserve
their missions and identities
while gaining access to sophisticated
managerial services
and collaborative opportunities
ordinarily only available to larger
organizations.
×‰	Ú 7cassandra://nT8zNvsSf03UTUYrPq7Ew2xHDde4vbuHxvqz7UQ5O4QÍ$…Í`Ì°Í ×`ðÎ{ùŸè>&îŽL×‰EÚ‘THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, JULY 16, 2021
Page 7
Celebrating the Fourth at
Jack Satter House BBQ
Councillor-at-Large Steve Morabito, Ward 5 Councillor John Powers,
Marge Giambrone, Ann Eagan, City Council President Anthony
Zambuto, Jack Satter House Tenants Association President
Joanne Monteforte and Jack Satter House Director Steve Post.
JULY 4TH FUN: Pictured from
left are Shirley Sowsy, Councillor-at-Large
Steve Morabito,
Julie Firicano, Rona Hearn,
Ward 5 Councillor John Powers,
Etta Kelly, Liz Kirby and Paula
Phillips enjoying the festivities
at the July 4th barbeque celebrated
on Sat., July 3 at Jack
Satter House.
Ward 5 Councillor John Powers addressed the residents of Jack
Satter House â€“ senior living housing on Revere Beach Boulevard
â€“ during their July 4th barbeque.
Revere Summer Eats
offers free lunch and breakfast at
sites throughout Revere. Program
runs June 28 through August 13 at
the following sites, Monday-Friday
except where noted
Beachmont School (B +L)
Costa Park (L)
Hill School (B+L)(Mon-Thurs)
Paul Revere School (B+L)(MonThurs)
Sonny
Meyers Park (L)
Revere Beach Pavillion#2 (L)
The following sites will run from
July 6th
to August 13th
Rose St. Recreational Center (L)
Adams Ct (Cooledge St) (L)
Ciarlone Tot Lot Park (L)
Louis Pasteur Park (L)
Revere Farmers Market (L)
(Fridays only)
(B) Breakfast served
(L) Lunch served
Sites are subject to change depending on
participation.
Please check our social media for more
information and updates
https://www.facebook.com/RPSDiningServices
https://twitter.com/RPSDining
Ward 5 Councillor John Powers with Satter House residents Gladys
Galvez (left) and Kiki Alexandratou (Courtesy photos)
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THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, JULY 16, 2021
COVID-19 ambassadors receive Certificates of Merit
Last Monday night, the City Council presented Certifi cates of Merit to all the cityâ€™s COVID-19 ambassadors. The certifi cates were presented by City Council President
Anthony Zambuto and Councillor-at-Large George Rotondo, who made the original motion to award the certifi cates. Rotondo praised the dozens of ambassadors
for spreading the word to residents about the importance of and how to get vaccinated. (Courtesy Photo)
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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€‘
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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
Revere man sentenced
to five years in prison
for fentanyl distribution
J
assiel Ramirez, 25, of Revere,
was recently sentenced
to fi ve years in prison
and four years of supervised release
for distributing 40 grams
or more of fentanyl. In February
2020, Ramirez pleaded guilty to
one count of distribution of and
possession with intent to distribute
fentanyl, one count of
possession with intent to distribute
fentanyl and one count
of possession with intent to distribute
and distribution of 40
grams or more of fentanyl.
Between September and October
2018, Ramirez engaged
in four separate drug sales of
fentanyl to a cooperating witness.
Those sales totaled approximately
110 grams of fentanyl.
For
Advertising with Results,
call The Advocate Newspapers
at 781-286-8500
or Info@advocatenews.net
Summer
is Here!
×‰	Ú 7cassandra://uoc3BVOfy8MZNMIxHdiG4Dbrd-ea1oMMZhJlGL0TTjIÍ1ðÍ`Ì°Í ×`ðÎ{ùŸè>&îŽN×‰EÚŠTHE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, JULY 16, 2021
Page 9
City Council questions ConCom
resignations
By Adam Swift
L
ast Monday night, the
City Council approved
the appointments of Zachary
Bisconti and Nathalie Pardo
to the Conservation Commission.
But
more pointedly, Ward 3
City Councillor Arthur Guinasso,
chair of the Appointments
Subcommittee, requested
a meeting with Mayor Brian
Arrigo to sort out why there
have been so many recent resignations
from the Conservation
Commission. Chair Nick
Moulaison has resigned from
the commission, and members
David Eatough and Deborah
Santiano-McHatton are
resigning eff ective July 15, according
to mayorâ€™s aide J.D. Jaramillo.
A Conservation Commission
meeting was scheduled
for Wednesday, July 14.
â€œWhatâ€™s going on with the
Conservation Commission is
something so many people
in the community have asked
me and have asked members
of this City Council,â€ said Guinasso.
â€œIn the past couple of
weeks and months, several
members of this commission
resigned. Itâ€™s never happened;
this is my 34th year as a public
servant serving in the capacity
as a city councillor, and
weâ€™ve never had so many resignations
from one committee
representing the people
of Revere.â€
Guinasso said it is the obligation
and responsibility of
the council and the subcommittee
to get the questions
answered about why the Conservation
Commission has
been depleted. â€œWe need to
do something; we need to respond
to people in an intelligent
fashion, and we need to
know what is taking place in
our city,â€ said Guinasso.
Ward 1 Councillor Joanne
McKenna said she has talked
to some of the former Conservation
Commission members,
who stated that they were discouraged
that they had no
real say in the matter of conservation
land. â€œWhatâ€™s happening
is they will get something
in front of them, and
they will go down to the site
to see it, and the production
has already started,â€ said McKenna.
â€œThey are getting fed
up with the process, and they
donâ€™t want to be there anymore
because the process is
not working. This is what I am
hearing, and I think it is my
Child tax credits are
coming â€“ so are the
scammers
F
rom July 15 through December,
for people who
qualify for payments through
the American Rescue Plan Act,
the Internal Revenue Service
(IRS) announced, it is sending
monthly payments by direct
deposit, paper check or
through debit cards. These
payments are an advance
on the child tax credit, which
means eligible people will
get up to half of their child
tax credit in these monthly
payments and the other half
when they fi le their 2021 taxes.
You can go to IRS.gov to see
who qualifi es, how much you
may receive and how to address
any problems. You will
also have the option of unenrolling
from the Advance payments
program.
According to the Federal
Trade Commission (FTC), when
it comes to government being
in the news, the scammers
will likely use their standard
playbook, meaning impostor
scams might appear, with con
artists pretending to â€œhelpâ€
you get your payments earlier,
get more money or commit
identity theft. The Better Business
Bureau (BBB) and the FTC
share these tips:
â€¢ Avoid Impostor scams â€“
government agencies, like the
IRS or Social Security Administration,
will not call, text, direct
message or email you.
â€¢ Do not give out any personal
information, like social security
numbers, bank account information
or credit/debit card
numbers.
â€¢ Eligibility requirements and
payment disbursements are
monitored by the IRS only.
â€¢ When someone is requiring
payments by gift card, wire
transfers or cryptocurrency, it
is likely a scam.
Learn more tips on how to
avoid scams by reading BBBâ€™s
â€œ10 Steps to Avoid Scams.â€ If
you have been the victim of
this or another scam, make
others aware by fi ling a report
on BBB.org/ScamTracker. You
can also report scams to the
FTC at ReportFraud.ftc.gov.
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obligation as a former president
of the Friends of Belle
Isle Marsh to say this out loud.â€
Guinasso said the council
needs to have a meeting with
the mayor as soon as possible.
â€œWe need to know what it is
going on in our city and why
is it going on and why these
people we thought so highly
of a few months ago â€“ one
member who resigned was on
the Conservation Commission
for years, and this guy worked
hard for us,â€ said Guinasso.
â€œKeep in mind, there is no salary
involved; this is good, hardworking
people who work
hard for each and every one
of us to make sure our conservation
laws are held. Itâ€™s important.â€
Guinasso
noted that there
are several major projects, including
the Riverside and Suffolk
Downs redevelopments
that need attention from people
who have knowledge of
conservation law. McKenna
said she believes the City
of Revere and Conservation
Commission should have a
lawyer on staff who is familiar
with the conservation laws.
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THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, JULY 16, 2021
AG Healey joins coalition calling on federal
regulators to act on child car seat safety
A
ttorney General Healey recently
joined a coalition
of 18 attorneys general calling
on the National Highway
Traffic Safety Administration
(NHTSA) to take stronger measures
to protect children while
traveling in car seats, including
stricter testing standards and
labeling measures. Motor vehicle
crashes are the leading
cause of death for children between
one and 13 years of age.
In a letter sent to NHTSA and
the Department of Transportation,
the coalition urged NHTSA
to create and implement
side-impact testing standards
for child car seats as quickly as
possible, after 20 years of delay
that has endangered childrenâ€™s
safety. The coalition also
~ FLASHBACK ~
50th in a series of
î“î‹î’î—î’î– î‰î•î’î î€·î‹îˆ î€¤î‡î™î’î†î„î—îˆ îƒ€îîˆî–
called on NHTSA to require that
all child car seat labels include
clear, concise language conveying
that every child should remain
in their current seat until
exceeding its height or weight
maximum, a practice endorsed
by experts.
â€œCar crashes are the leading
cause of death for young children
and federal regulators
should be doing everything
they can to protect children
from this risk,â€ Healey said. â€œWe
are calling on the NHTSA to prioritize
implementing these critical
requirements, so that we
can ensure our children are safe
while on the road.â€
Congress fi rst called on NHTSA
to adopt side-impact standards
for child car seats in 2000.
More than two decades later,
there are still no such standards
from any federal government
entity. Some manufacturers
do conduct their own sideimpact
testing, but without critical
federal standards in place.
Side-impact crashes cause almost
as many child injuries and
deaths as frontal-impact crashes
and are more likely than any
other types of crashes to cause
serious or fatal injuries.
The coalition also urged NHTSA
to implement labeling standards
that encourage parents to
delay the transition to the next
car seat for as long as possible
depending upon the height
and weight limits of the product.
There are currently three major
categories of car seats: rear-facing
seats with a fi ve-point harness,
forward-facing seats with a
fi ve-point harness, and booster
seats used in conjunction with a
traditional lap and shoulder seat
belt. Determining which seat is
appropriate for a child also depends
on the childâ€™s development
and maturity level. Experts
universally agree that children
should delay transition to the
next seat in the progression for
as long as possible, until they exceed
their current seatâ€™s height
or weight limits.
â€œMotor vehicle crashes are the
leading cause of death for children
aged one to 13. Almost
5,000 children under 15 have
died in car crashes from 2015
to 2019, which equates to about
19 children each week over that
time period,â€ the letter states.
â€œSince their introduction in the
1970s, child car seats have significantly
reduced the risk of injury
to children, and numerous technological
advances have made
them safer over the years. NHTSA
shares credit in this success,
but as the data shows, there
is still room for improvement.
One such area in need of improvement
is making sure that
parents use the most appropriate
car seat given their childâ€™s
weight, height and age.â€
AG Healey sues Google over illegal
app store monopoly conduct
A
2011â€™s Revere Little League banquet watched
Coaches Scott Sullivan and Bill Day present the
Minor League Championship Trophy to their team
the Rangers. î€‹î€¤î‡î™î’î†î„î—îˆ î‚¿îîˆ î“î‹î’î—î’î€Œ
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ttorney General Maura
Healey recently joined a
bipartisan coalition of 37 attorneys
general in fi ling a lawsuit
against Google for using its
market dominance to unfairly
restrict competition within the
Google Play Store for Android
mobile devices, harming consumers
by limiting choices and
driving up app prices. The lawsuit,
which was fi led in the U.S.
District Court of the Northern
District of Californiaâ€“San Francisco
Division, alleges that the
tech giant violated the federal
Sherman Antitrust Act and
various state antitrust and consumer
protection laws with its
exclusionary conduct, which
substantially shut out competing
app distribution channels.
In addition, according to
the complaint, Google requires
that developers off ering apps
through the Google Play Store
use Google Billing, which forces
them to pay Googleâ€™s exorbitant
commission â€“ up to 30
percent â€“ on in-app purchases
made by consumers. This commission
is signifi cantly higher
than commission fees charged
by other competitive payment
processors for digital and nondigital
goods.
â€œSmartphones are a source of
information, entertainment, and
commerce in our daily lives, but
Googleâ€™s abuse of its Android
market dominance has stifl ed
competition and consumer options
for app downloads,â€ Healey
said. â€œWe are fi ling this lawsuit
today to end Googleâ€™s web
of restrictive contracts that have
unlawfully infl ated the cost of
many digital goods, services, upgrades
or other purchases made
through apps downloaded from
the Google Play Store. This lawsuit
seeks to protect both consumers
and innovative app developers
from these unlawful
practices.â€
According to the complaint,
Google had previously promised
app developers and device
manufacturers that it
would keep Android as an â€œopen
sourceâ€ platform (allowing developers
to create compatible
apps and distribute them without
unnecessary restrictions)
but did not keep that promise
â€“ implementing contractual restraints
that both disincentivized
and restricted mobile device
manufacturers and network
operators that adopted the Android
ecosystem from competing
in the relevant market.
The Google Play Store, which
is Googleâ€™s app store, accounts
for over 90 percent of all app
downloads on Android smartphones.
The attorneys general
allege that Google engaged
in the following conduct to enhance
and protect its monopoly
position over Android app
distribution:
â€¢ Imposed technical barriers
that strongly discouraged or
eff ectively prevented third-party
app developers from distributing
apps outside the Google
Play Store
â€¢ Prohibited Android from
being â€œopen sourceâ€ for many
years, effectively cutting off
potential competition; Google
forces mobile device manufacturers
who wish to sell devices
that run Android to enter
into agreements that prohibit
creating or implementing
any variants of the Google-certifi
ed version of Android; this
includes prohibiting changes
that could facilitate the distribution
of apps outside the Google
Play Store.
â€¢ Foreclosed competition by
forcing Googleâ€™s proprietary
apps to be â€œpre-loadedâ€ on essentially
all devices designed
to run on the Android OS and
requiring that Googleâ€™s apps
be given the most prominent
placement on device home
screens
â€¢ Entered into arrangements
with mobile device manufacturers
and network operators that
provided a share of Googleâ€™s
monopoly profi ts in exchange
for not competing with the
Google Play Store
â€¢ Forced app developers and
app users alike to use Googleâ€™s
payment processing service,
Google Play Billing, to process
payments for in-app purchases
of content consumed within
the app, unlawfully tying the
use of Googleâ€™s payment processor,
which is a separate service
within a separate market
for payment processing within
apps, to distribution through
the Google Play Store
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Page 11
VaxMillions Giveaway drawing dates announced
T
he Baker-Polito Administration
and the Massachusetts
State Lottery recently reminded
the public that registration
for the Massachusetts
VaxMillions Giveaway will begin
on July 1 and also announced
the schedule of drawing dates.
The Commonwealth launched
the Massachusetts VaxMillions
giveaway as one of many strategies
to increase awareness of
the availability and effi cacy of
the COVID-19 vaccines and encourage
residents to get vaccinated
to keep themselves, their
families and their communities
safe.
Residents age 18 and older
who are fully vaccinated prior
to each drawing will have the
opportunity to enter to win
one of fi ve $1 million cash prizes.
Residents between 12-17
years of age who are fully vaccinated
prior to each drawing
may enter for the chance to win
one of five $300,000 scholarship
grants. An entry before one
of the weekly entry deadlines
makes you eligible for all of the
weekly drawings that take place
after you register. Residents are
reminded that they have time
to get vaccinated and then enter
the drawings. Residents are
reminded that some COVID-19
vaccines require two doses, and
they must receive all doses before
entering the drawing.
VaxMillions Giveaway Drawings
will be held on Monday
once a week for five weeks
from July 26 through August
23. The first drawing for the
giveaway will occur on Monday,
July 26, with registration
for that weekâ€™s drawing closing
on Thursday, July 22. Winners
will be announced later in the
week following each drawing.
Residents must be fully vaccinated
before registering, but
if they are not vaccinated by
the registration date for a certain
drawing, they still can complete
vaccination and register
for subsequent drawings. Residents
will only have to enter
once to qualify for all drawings
occurring after the date of their
registration. Massachusetts residents
18 years of age and older
who have received two doses
of the Pfi zer or Moderna vaccine,
or one dose of the Johnson
& Johnson vaccine, will have a
chance to win one of fi ve $1 million
cash prizes.
Residents between 12 and 17
years of age who have received
two doses of the Pfizer COVID-19
vaccine will have a chance
to win one of five $300,000
scholarship grants via a 529 College
Savings Plan managed by
the Massachusetts Educational
Financing Authority. Funds in a
529 plan can be applied to cover
tuition, room and board and
related expenses at any college,
university or technical or trade
school or other post-secondary
educational institution eligible
to participate in a student aid
program administered by the
U.S. Department of Education.
Winners with a qualifying disability
may elect instead to receive
an equivalent financial
State officials urge public to
take water safety precautions
DCR continues to hire lifeguards, announces pay increases for lifeguards
A
s temperatures continue to
climb and more people visit
waterbodies for a break from
the summer heat, the Baker-Polito
Administration is urging the
public to take additional water
safety precautions while swimming.
Executive Offi ce of Energy
and Environmental Aff airs (EEA)
Secretary Kathleen Theoharides
joined Massachusetts State Police
Colonel Christopher Mason,
Massachusetts Environmental
Police Colonel Shaun Santos,
Department of Conservation &
Recreation (DCR) Commissioner
James Montgomery and elected
offi cials at Pleasure Bay Beach
in Boston to remind the public
of the dangers associated with
swimming and provide water
safety tips. Additionally, DCR announced
a pay increase for lifeguards
to encourage more individuals
to apply and refl ect the
important job DCRâ€™s lifeguards
do to protect the public.
â€œEvery year, Massachusetts
waterfronts and state-managed
pool facilities experience
high numbers of visitors seeking
swimming opportunities for
fun and exercise,â€ said Governor
Charlie Baker. â€œHowever, it is incredibly
important that we all,
regardless of age and skill level,
remain conscious of the very real
dangers water can present and
practice safe swimming precautions
to avoid a tragedy.â€
â€œFrom Wollaston Beach to Chicopee
State Park, there are excellent
waterfronts and facilities
across the Commonwealth
that offer many ways for children,
their families, teenagers
and adults to cool off this summer,â€
said Lieutenant Governor
Karyn Polito. â€œWhether at your
local neighborhood pool or a
coastal beach, we urge all visitors
to stay vigilant, swim safely
and watch children closely at
all times.â€
Safety tips to adhere to when
swimming include:
â€¢ Swim within DCRâ€™s designated
swimming waterfronts; these
areas are clearly marked with
ropes and buoys; swimming
outside of the designated swimming
areas can be dangerous.
â€¢ Swim in the buddy system
and always tell someone where
you are going.
â€¢ Keep a close eye on children
near the water; parents and other
guardians serve as the fi rst
and primary line of safety for
their children.
â€¢ Teach children to always ask
permission before going near
the water.
â€¢ Avoid consuming alcohol or
drugs.
â€¢ Drink lots of water.
â€¢ Do not dive headfirst into
the water.
â€¢ Do not swim during a storm
or when there is lightning.
â€¢ Make sure you know how to
swim; if you canâ€™t swim, keep to
shallow areas or use a U.S. Coast
Guardâ€“approved life jacket.
contribution to a special needs
trust or federally qualifi ed ABLE
account to cover qualifi ed expenses.
Beginning
July 1, Massachusetts
residents will be able to
enter the VaxMillions Giveaway
online. A call center will be available
to support registration for
residents who do not have access
to the internet or require
assistance. Sign up information
and call center contact info and
hours will be made available prior
to July 1.
Only lawful, permanent residents
of Massachusetts who
are fully vaccinated can enter
the drawings. Residents must
have received their vaccine doses
within Massachusetts. Residents
must be fully vaccinated
prior to submitting their entry.
There are over 900 vaccination
locations across the Commonwealth,
with appointments
and walk ins widely available.
Residents seeking a vaccine can
visit mass.gov/COVIDVaccine to
fi nd a vaccine location that is
convenient for them. For more
information on the Mass VaxMillions
Giveaway, visit mass.gov/
VaxMillions.
â€¢ Do not swim beyond your
skill set.
â€¢ If you are caught in a rip current,
donâ€™t swim against it; swim
parallel to the shoreline to escape
it, and then at an angle toward
the beach.
â€¢ When in a boat, wear a U.S.
Coast Guardâ€“approved life jacket.
â€¢
If a person in your group goes
missing, check the water and notify
lifeguard and park staff .
More water safety tips can be
found on the Department of
Public Healthâ€™s website, as well
as tips for safe swimming in natural
bodies of water.
BEACH | SEE Page 20
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THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, JULY 16, 2021
CELEBRATION | FROM Page 1
attendees, the weather wasnâ€™t a factor.
BLAST FROM THE PAST: Pictured from left to right: recent Revere High School alumnae Robert Lynch, Steven Plitsch,
Christian Sawyer, Katie Oâ€™Donnell, Lynzie Anderson and Giana Losanno portray what Revere beachgoers would have
worn 125 years ago.
Marta Valdez, Enriquez Valdez and Geraldo
Valdez play corn hole on the sand.
People lined up to dance to live music.
Gov. Charlie Baker is all smiles greeting revelers
on Tuesday evening. (Courtesy photo, Joann
Rosselli)
The beach was lined with people to see the fi reworks. (Advocate photos by Tara Vocino)
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Page 13
Band and Country played at sunset.
Nelida DiGiovanni takes a selfi e with Gov. Baker. (Courtesy photo, Nelida
DiGiovanni)
State Rep. Jeffrey
Turco was the former
president of the
Revere Beach Partnership.
Gov.
Charlie Baker reads the proclamation commemorating 125
years as a public beach.
State Rep. Jessica Giannino said traditions have
changed over the years from rollercoasters to
open space.
State Senator Joseph Boncore thanked everyone
for working together to make the birthday
celebration possible.
Mayor Brian Arrigo said the birthday celebration is a great testament
to work done to get everyone there, referring to the progress
out of the COVID-19 pandemic.
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THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, JULY 16, 2021
Town of Nahant Invites Community
to Attend â€˜The Wall That Healsâ€™ Exhibit
â€œThe Wall That Healsâ€ exhibit, which is stopping
in Nahant features a three-quarter scale replica
of the Vietnam Veterans Memorial, located in
Washington D.C. (Photo Courtest Town of Nahant)
NAHANT â€“ The Town of Nahant,
in partnership with American
Legion Post 215, invites the
community to visit â€œThe Walls
That Healsâ€ exhibit, a replica of
the Vietnam Veterans Memorial.
The Memorial in Washington,
D.C., bears the names of more
than 58,000 American service
members who made the ultimate
sacrifi ce in Vietnam, and
honors the more than 3 million
Americans who served in
the U.S. Armed Forces in that
confl ict. The touring exhibit is
a three-quarter scale replica of
the Memorial, 375 feet long and
7 1/2 feet at its tallest.
â€œThe Walls That Healâ€ opened
for free public viewing at Nahant
Lowlands Activity Field (across
from Short Beach) beginning on
Thursday, July 15, at 12:01 a.m.
The exhibit consists of the replica,
Mobile Education Center
and information tent. The Centerâ€™s
trailer includes a timeline
called â€œThe War and The Wall.â€
The Mobile Education Center
will occupy the Short Beach
parking lot. The Center also is
free and open around the clock.
A Welcome Home Ceremony
will take place at the Field on
Saturday, July 17, at 6 p.m. The
ceremony will include a selection
of patriotic music, speeches,
a Missing Man Table Ceremony,
and a Sundown Flag Ceremony.
The
exhibit concludes on Sunday,
July 18, at 2 p.m.
All are welcome to attend.
Event parking is available; signs
and attendants will direct visitors
to the event parking areas.
Attendees are asked to not park
on the streets in the area, which
are reserved for local residents
with parking stickers.
CHA Everett Hospital
CHA Cambridge hospital
Recognized for
quality and safety
GR21_171
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Page 15
CONNECTOR | FROM Page 1
joined by Mayor Brian Arrigo,
State Senators Joseph Boncore
and Brendan Crighton, State
Representatives Jessica Giannino
and Jeff rey Turco, city councillors
and local supporters.
â€œFrom the transit benefi ts of
modernizing the Commonwealthâ€™s
commuter rail network,
to the environmental justice impacts
of reducing traffi c and congestion
on our roadways, to the
economic benefits of unlocking
economic growth, itâ€™s essential
that we build the Wonderland
Commuter Rail and Multimodal
Connector in Revere,â€
said Clark. â€œI am proud to have
secured $4 million in community
project funding in the House
Appropriations bill to plan and
design the new commuter rail
and multimodal center at Wonderland,
and am grateful to everyone
who has spent years advocating
for this project.â€
The funding will be used for
planning and design for a new
commuter rail platform and
multimodal transportation connector
in the city, linking the
Newburyport/Rockport commuter
rail line to the MBTA Blue
Line. This project will not only
benefi t Revere but the entire region
by alleviating regional congestion
for commuters going in
and out of Boston and local congestion
along Route 1A.
Pictured from left to right: Ward 2 Councillor Ira Novoselsky, Ward 6 Councillor Richard Serino, Mayor Brian Arrigo, Ward 4 Councillor
Patrick Keefe, Council President Anthony Zambuto, State Rep. Jessica Giannino, State Rep. Jeff Turco, in back, Ward 5 Councillor John
Powers, Asst. Speaker Katherine Clark, Councillor-at-Large Steven Morabito and State Rep. Joseph Boncore. (Advocate photos by Tara Vocino)
Senator Joseph Boncore said theyâ€™re here
to celebrate tomorrow, making public
transit more equitable.
Mayor Brian Arrigo addresses the attendees
at the site of the future Wonderland Multimodal
Connector.
Asst. U.S. House Speaker Katherine
Clark said the project was a â€œyes, yes,
yesâ€.
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THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, JULY 16, 2021
Baker-Polito Administration kicks off
statewide small business tour
LT.
Governor Karyn Polito
joined Housing and
Economic Development Secretary
Michael Kennealy and local
business, community and municipal
leaders on the fi rst stop
of a statewide small business
and downtown conversation
tour. The purpose of the tour is to
celebrate the Commonwealthâ€™s
reopening and discuss the Administrationâ€™s
$2.9 billion proposal
for American Rescue Plan
Act (ARPA) funds to jumpstart
the Commonwealthâ€™s economic
recovery, including $450 million
for economic development.
â€œOur plan for ARPA funding
will provide immediate relief to
help the Commonwealthâ€™s main
streets and downtowns recover
from the COVID-19 pandemic in
a sustainable way,â€ said Governor
Charlie Baker. â€œOur goal with
this tour is to hear directly from
business owners in communities
hit the hardest and highlight
the once-in-a-generation opportunity
to make a signifi cant
impact for so many in need.â€
â€œSmall businesses are fundamental
to the character of our
downtowns and main streets
and our proposal to use federal
funding targets the communities
and neighborhoods hit the
hardest to ensure an equitable
recovery,â€ said Polito. â€œWe look
forward to getting back out into
communities across the state to
engage with and work with our
partners at the local level in order
to restart and re-energize
Massachusettsâ€™ economy.â€
The tour, which officially
launched today, will continue
throughout the summer and
will stop at approximately two
dozen city and town centers
across Massachusetts. Each stop
will include a tour of downtown
and main street businesses and
a roundtable conversation with
business owners, community
leaders, and state and local offi -
cials to engage directly on how
the Administration can continue
to off er necessary support
for economic recovery.
While Massachusetts is known
as a global leader in industries
such as life sciences and
the innovation economy, research
conducted by the US
Small Business Administration
found that prior to the pandemic;
more than 45 percent of the
entire Commonwealthâ€™s workforce
was employed by a small
business.
â€œCOVID-19 created unprecedented
economic pressure on
the small business community
across Massachusetts,â€ said
Kennealy. â€œAs we continue taking
steps to put the eff ects of
this virus behind us, our proposal
to direct $2.9 billion to existing,
proven programs will accelerate
the Commonwealthâ€™s economic
recovery with a focus on
equity and sustainability.â€
In June, the Baker-Polito Administration
fi led a plan to put
$2.9 billion of Commonwealthâ€™s
direct federal aid from the American
Rescue Plan Act to use immediately
through existing,
proven programs to support
key recovery priorities including
housing and homeownership,
economic development and local
downtowns, job training and
workforce development, health
care, and infrastructure. The proposal
expressly targets support
for lower-wage workers and
communities of color.
Included in the Administrationâ€™s
plan is $450 million for
economic development. Of
that total, $100 million will be
allocated specifi cally for downtown
development to concentrate
economic growth activities,
resources, and investments
within local neighborhood areas
in municipalities disproportionally
impacted by COVID;
$250 million will support investments
and regional collaboration
aimed at invigorating
downtowns and main streets
throughout Massachusetts;
and, $100 million will be designated
for eff orts to support cultural
facilities and tourism assets
throughout Massachusetts.
During the pandemic, the
Administration established the
largest state-sponsored business
relief program in the nation
that distributed approximately
$705 million in direct fi -
nancial assistance to over 15,000
small businesses throughout
the Commonwealth. That program,
which was administered
by the Massachusetts Growth
Capital Corporation, awarded
grants based on a combination
factors including demographic
priorities, businesses operating
in the sectors most heavily
impacted by the pandemic
and in Gateway Cities, to ensure
funding was distributed equitably
throughout Massachusetts.
Over the course of the program,
43 percent of grants were
awarded to minority-owned
businesses, and 46 percent of
grants went to women-owned
businesses.
International Faculty Returns
to Brandeis/Israel for Intensive
Summer Program
The Schusterman Center for Israel Studies at Brandeis
University resumes Summer Institute for Israel Studies after
pandemic hiatus
T
he long-running Summer
Institute for Israel Studies
(SIIS), a competitive faculty fellowship
that examines the subject
of Israel in all its complexity,
is resuming after postponing
its 2020 program. When the Covid-19
pandemic precluded travel
and gatherings last summer, organizers
opted to postpone to
2021, rather than move the program
online.
Now in its 17th year, SIIS is the
fl agship program of the Schusterman
Center for Israel Studies at
Brandeis University in Waltham,
MA. The fellowship prepares professors
across the country and
around the world to teach about
Israel in a nuanced way, grounded
in rigorous scholarship, rather
than polemics
The intensive program begins
on the Brandeis campus with a
multidisciplinary two-week seminar
exploring multiple perspectives
on Israeli society, politics
and culture.
During their Brandeis residency,
participants draft a syllabus
to teach at their home institution.
This yearâ€™s group represents disciplines
ranging from dance, art
and visual culture, to business,
literature, religious studies, sociology
and comparative politics.
Next, fellows travel to Israel for
an immersive 10-day study tour.
There they engage with Jewish
and Arab intellectuals, politicians
and community leaders, encountering
diverse voices and viewpoints.
The 2021 fellows have just
begun their Israel study tour.
Schusterman Center director
Jonathan D. Sarna, said he is
thrilled SIIS participants will be
able to meet in person. â€œNever has
teaching about Israel been more
SIIS | SEE Page 17
The Hidden Dangers of
Sleep Apnea
Dear Savvy Senior,
How can you know when someone has sleep apnea? My
husband has become such a terrible snorer that he wakes himself
up at night, and he keeps me up too.
Tired Teri
Dear Teri,
If your husband is a loud snorer
who wakes himself up during
sleep, he probably needs
to be tested for sleep apnea, a
dangerous disorder that aff ects
more than 22 million Americans,
but often goes undiagnosed.
Sleep apnea is a disorder that
causes a person to stop breathing
during sleep, hundreds of
times during the night, for 10
seconds or more at a time. Left
untreated, it can cause extreme
daytime sleepiness, as well as
a host of serious health conditions
like high blood pressure,
heart attack, stroke, diabetes
and dementia. In fact, itâ€™s estimated
that every year, around
38,000 Americans die in their
sleep from a heart attack or
stroke because of sleep apnea.
But the good news is that
sleep apnea is very treatable
and most insurance companies,
including Medicare, cover it.
Who Has It?
There are three types of sleep
apnea: obstructive, central and
mixed. Of the three, obstructive
sleep apnea (or OSA) is by
far the most common and occurs
when the throat muscles
relax during sleep, blocking
the airway.
While anyone can have it,
sleep apnea is most common
in people who are overweight,
male, middle-aged and older.
For women, the risk increases
after menopause.
The symptoms include loud
snoring (however not everyone
who snores has apnea), long
pauses of breathing, gasping or
choking during sleep and daytime
drowsiness. But because
most of these symptoms happen
during sleep, most people
donâ€™t recognize them. Itâ€™s usually
the person theyâ€™re sleeping
with who notices it.
Diagnosing Sleep Apnea
To help you get a handle on
your husbandâ€™s problem, the
American Sleep Apnea Association
has several diagnostic tests
he can take at SleepApnea.org/
treat â€“ click on â€œTest Yourself.â€
If the screening indicates
that he may have sleep apnea,
make an appointment with
his doctor or a sleep specialist
who will probably recommend
an overnight diagnostic sleep
test called polysomnography,
which can take place at a sleep
center lab (see SleepEducation.
com), or at home using a portable
device.
Treatment Options
Your husband is at greater
risk for sleep apnea if heâ€™s overweight,
smokes, and/or consumes
excessive amounts of alcohol.
Excess weight, especially
around the neck, puts pressure
on the airway, which can
cause it to collapse. Smoking
can increase the amount of infl
ammation and fl uid retention
in the upper airway. And alcohol
and sleeping pills can relax
the muscles in the back of his
throat, interfering with breathing.
Addressing these issues, if
necessary, is usually the fi rst line
of treatment.
If that doesnâ€™t do the trick,
mild cases of sleep apnea may
respond to oral devices that fi t
into the mouth like a removable
mouth guard or retainer. These
devices work by positioning
the lower jaw slightly forward
to keep the airway open during
sleep.
Another noninvasive treatment
option to consider is the
new FDA approved eXciteOSA
device (eXciteOSA.com). This
treats sleep apnea and snoring
by improving tongue muscle
function by delivering electrical
stimulation to the tongue
through a mouthpiece thatâ€™s
worn for just 20 minutes during
the day.
If none of these options work,
the most effective and commonly
prescribed treatment for
OBA is a continuous positive airway
pressure (CPAP) device. This
involves sleeping with a snorkel-like
mask thatâ€™s hooked up
to a machine that gently blows
air up the nose to keep the passages
open.
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 17
SOUNDS OF REVERE
J
udging from the buzz going around the local political scene of State Sen. Joe Boncoreâ€™s early
departure for a job at the non-profi t MassBio, candidates are lining up for his seat at the
state house. But one candidate seems to be standing out as reported on the political online
website MassterList on July 14, 2021.
If it opens up, he's running
for it
If the First Suff olk and Middlesex
Senate seat opens up, Revere
School Committee member
Anthony D'Ambrosio says
he's running for it.
"If the seat is open, we will fully
run for it and we will run hard,"
he told MassterList in an interview.
"The group of people I'm
around and myself, we pride
ourselves on being the hardest
working people in the room.
There are always hard-working
people but the one thing we can
control in this race is that we're
going to outwork the other candidates."
Of
course, this all hinges on
whether or not Sen. Joseph Boncore
steps down to take the top
job at the Massachusetts Biotechnology
Council. Boncore
fi led documents Monday with
the State Ethics Commission
disclosing that he is in conversations
with a search committee
"concerning a position at
the council" after it was reported
last week that he had been
telling associates he expected
SIIS | FROM Page 16
urgent,â€ said Sarna, University
Professor and the Joseph H. and
Belle R. Braun Professor of American
Jewish History. â€œToo many
people only view Israel from afar,
through the media. To help students
properly contextualize and
understand contemporary developments
requires well-informed
experts who know Israel at fi rsthand.
So as soon as the opportunity
arose to bring our program
back to Israel, we seized it.â€
The 2021 cohort includes participants
from the Czech Republic
and Switzerland, as well as Hawaii,
Maryland, West Virginia, Colto
get the CEO job.
So who is D'Ambrosio?
Well, he's a 25-year-old son
of immigrants, his father having
come to the United States
in the 1970s from southern Italy.
He's a graduate of Yale University,
earned a master's at the
University of Cambridge in England,
interned for U.S. Sen. Markey,
and has served on the Revere
School Committee member
for the past two years.
"[Markey is] just an incredible
public servant who has given so
much to the state in every single
way possible," D'Ambrosio said.
"And learning the ropes, particularly
with regard to the issue of
constituent service, which is so
often overlooked in public service,
it was just incredibly instrumental
for my development in
a pretty critical time in your life.
So I was able to sort of watch a
master at work during those experiences."
And
where does he put himself
on the political spectrum?
"I would place myself as a
working-class supporting Democrat,"
he said. "My political
orado and Texas, among others.
The Summer Institute has a
truly global impact. To date, the
program has prepared 336 professors
at 235 institutions across
North America and around the
world to teach Israel Studies in
their respective disciplines.
Summer Institute alumni have
taught 1,400 courses about Israel
to more than 33,549 students
worldwide, in countries including
Azerbaijan, Brazil, China, Cyprus,
France, Germany, Hungary, India,
Indonesia, Romania, Poland, Turkey,
the Ukraine and Zimbabwe,
among others.
Public health and safety are
paramount. The Schusterman
views don't align cleanly with
many, if any, establishment fi gures
in the country right now.
And there is an opportunity to
bridge both a generational and
ideological gap that is growing
ever wider as we proceed
forward here. So we are going
full-on supporting the working-class
Democrats in this race."
D'Ambrosio fi led paperwork
with the state's campaign finance
office to begin raising
money to seek the office on
Monday. And while D'Ambrosio
hasn't offi cially announced his
candidacy, he says he wants to
focus on getting people back to
work and educating children.
"I'm an education guy. The
school committee has really
been my life in Revere, sort of
a backbone of my own experience
in the city and one of the
highlights of my life and honors
of my life to serve on it," he said.
'I'm going to extend that work
and eff ort to fi ght to educate
the children of the 21st Century,
for the economy of the 21st
Century, which is the backbone
of this Boston economy."
Center has ensured that all participants
are fully vaccinated, and is
following all national, state, local
and University guidelines in both
countries, such as periodic testing,
social distancing and maskwearing
as advised.
The Schusterman Center for Israel
Studies at Brandeis University,
founded in 2007, is dedicated
to advancing knowledge and
understanding of Israeli history,
politics, culture and society. It is
committed to creating and disseminating
knowledge about the
modern State of Israel to a global
audience. Find recordings of
past events on the Centerâ€™s YouTube
channel.
~ Home of the Week ~
SAUGUS...Move right into this young 2013 built Center Entrance
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If that isnâ€™t enough, there is a 25â€™ family room in the lower level.
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î€‹î€šî€›î€”î€Œ î€•î€–î€–î€î€šî€–î€“î€“
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View the interior
of this home
right on your
smartphone.
MASSHEALTH
SUPERIOR COURT CASE
A
recent Massachusetts
Superior Court Judge
held against MassHealth with
respect to the countability
of assets housed in an irrevocable
Trust. It is well settled
law that for purposes
of determining eligibility for
MassHealth benefi ts, countable
assets include any portion
of the Trust principal that
could under any circumstances
be paid to or for the benefi
t of the applicant. Such circumstances
need not have
occurred, or even be imminent,
in order for the principal
to be treated as countable
assets; it is enough that the
amount could be made available
to the applicant under
any circumstances. This was
set forth in the Heyn case, a
Massachusetts Appeals Court
case decided in 2016.
In this Superior Court case,
the applicant had retained a
limited or special power of
appointment in the Trust that
she created that she could
have exercised during her lifetime
â€œto appoint the remaining
principal and any undistributed
income of the Trust
among the members of the
class consisting of her issue
of all generations or charitable
organizations other than
governmental entities, but no
such power or payment shall
be used to discharge a legal
obligation of the applicantâ€. In
a simple sense, appoint is another
word for distribute and
an example of issue would
be children or grandchildren.
MassHealth argued that if
the applicant appointed Trust
principal to family members,
those family members could
then in turn return the Trust
principal to the applicant to
be used for her benefi t. The
Superior Court once again cited
the Heyn case which stated
that â€œMedicaid does not
consider assets held by other
family members who might,
by reason of love but without
legal obligation, voluntarily
contribute monies toward
the grantorâ€™s supportâ€.
The grantor of the Trust is also
referred to as the Settlor or
Donor, and in this case, was
the applicant for MassHealth
benefi ts as well.
The court also stated that
â€œthe limited power of appointment
is exercisable only
in favor of permissible appointees,
and any attempt to
exercise a limited power of
appointment in favor of an
impermissible appointee (i.e.
to use principal for the personal
benefi t of the grantor),
is therefore invalid.
An appointment to a permissible
appointee is ineff ective
to the extent that it was:
1. Conditioned on the appointee
conferring a benefi
t on the impermissible appointee
2.
Subject to a charge in favor
of an impermissible appointee
3.
Upon a trust for the benefi
t of an impermissible appointee
4.
In consideration of a benefi
t conferred upon or promised
to an impermissible appointee
5.
Primarily for the benefi t
of the appointeeâ€™s creditor, if
that creditor is an impermissible
appointee, or
6. Motivated in any other
way to be for the benefi t of
an impermissible appointee.
The above six items are
set forth in the Restatement
(Third) of Property and the
Superior Court judge held
that MassHealth cannot argue
that Trust principal could
ever be distributed to a permissible
appointee in order
to benefi t the applicant and
held that none of the Trust
principal was countable. The
applicant then qualifi ed for
MassHealth benefi ts. In the
case at hand, no principal
could under any circumstances
be appointed to the applicant.
The applicant clearly
was not a permissible appointee.
If she was, her retained
right would have been
deemed a general power of
appointment thereby providing
her a right to receive Trust
principal.
Joseph D. Cataldo is an Estate Planning/Elder Law Attorney, Certifi ed
Public Accountant, Certifi ed Financial Planner, AICPA Personal
Financial Specialist and holds a Masterâ€™s Degree in Taxation.
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THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, JULY 16, 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:
Beacon Hill Roll Call records the
votes of local representatives
and senators from the week of
July 5-9.
The House and Senate approved
a $48.1 fi scal 2022 budget.
The
House also approved a
new set of rules under which
the Houser will operate beginning
October 1.
Despite repeated requests
by Beacon Hill Roll Call, Rep. Bill
Galvin (D-Canton), the chair of
the Rules Committee and author
of the new rules package,
did not respond to e-mails asking
him to explain his reasons
for voting against many of the
amendments proposed to the
package. Other representatives
in the Democratic leadership
who did not respond to repeated
requested for a comment on
why they voted against many of
the amendments include Reps.
Claire Cronin (D-Easton), Kate
Hogan (D-Stow), Michael Moran
(D-Brighton), Sarah Peake
(D-Provincetown) and Joe Wagner
(D-Chicopee).
$48.1 BILLION FISCAL 2022
BUDGET (H 4002)
House 160-0, Senate 40-0, approved
and sent to Gov. Charlie
Baker a compromise version of
a $48.1 billion fi scal 2022 state
budget for the fi scal year that
began on July 1. The House and
Senate had approved diff erent
version of the budget and a sixmember
conference committee
hammered out a compromise
version. The state has been
operating on a temporary onemonth
budget approved by the
Legislature and the governor.
Baker now has ten days to use
his veto power to veto any items
in this new budget and send
them back to the Legislature
which can override any of the
vetoes with a two-thirds vote.
The budget is based on new
estimates that tax collections
in fi scal year 2022 will increase
by more than $4.2 billion above
the amount originally predicted
by the governor, the House and
the Senate a few months ago. In
light of the pandemic, elected
offi cials had for months braced
themselves for a substantial decrease
in tax revenues and a cut
in some programs and/or even
a tax increase.
The new estimates also led
to the conference committeeâ€™s
cancellation of a planned withdrawal
from the stateâ€™s Rainy
Day Fund of at least $1.5 billion.
Offi cials also project a $1.1
billion deposit into the fund
which will drive its balance to
$5.8 billion by the end of fi scal
year 2022. It also cancels a plan
to raise fees on Uber and Lyft
rides in order to generate new
money for cities and towns, the
MBTA and other infrastructure
projects.
Other provisions include a
$350 million fund that could
be used in future years to help
cover the cost of the $1.5 billion
school funding reform law
passed in 2019; permanently extending
the stateâ€™s tax credit for
fi lm production companies in
Massachusetts; and a new law
that will provide victims of violent
crime and human traffi cking
enhanced protections. That
provision is based on a bill fi led
by Sen. Mark Montigny (D-New
Bedford).
â€œThe conference report â€¦ upholds
our Senate values, charts
a hopeful path forward for our
commonwealth and more importantly
refl ects our priorities,â€
said Senate Ways and Means
chair Mike Rodrigues (D-Westport)
to lead off the debate on
the Senate fl oor. â€œWe maintain
fi scal responsibility and ensure
our commonwealth maintains
healthy reserves for years to
come. It safeguards the health
and wellness of our most vulnerable
populations and new
supports for children and families.â€
â€œIt
invests in K-12 education,
early education and childcare,
housing, mental health, public
health and other areas to ensure
our citizens and our communities
will benefi t equitably
as we recover from the lasting
impacts of the pandemic,â€ continued
Rodrigues. â€œWe address
long term liabilities and make
down payments to fulfi ll future
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î€˜î€“î€›î€î€•î€œî€•î€î€œî€”î€–î€—
obligations. This fi scally responsible
and forward-looking budget
doubles down on our commitment
to build an equitable
recovery and addresses our critical
needs as we work to getting
back to a new better.â€
Although she ultimately voted
for the budget, Sen. Diana
DiZoglio (D-Methuen) said during
the debate on the Senate
fl oor that she objected to the
fact that legislators were given
only a few hours to read the 434page
bill before voting on it. The
budget was released late Thursday
night and was voted on Friday
afternoon.
DiZoglio said that positioning
members to take a vote on
something they did not get adequate
time to review is not acceptable.
â€œIf we keep doing this
over and over again, itâ€™s not going
to magically become acceptable,â€
she said. â€œThe fact that
we didnâ€™t get even a day to review
this is very disappointing.
But whatâ€™s more disappointing
â€¦ is the fact that those in our
communities who have a stake
in what happens in the bill before
us, those it will impact most
-- our schools, our elderly populations,
those who are coming
from positions of powerlessness,
those folks, probably many
of them, still donâ€™t even know
that weâ€™re taking this bill up today.
And yet we continue to call
what happens in this chamber
part of the democratic process.â€
(A â€œYesâ€ vote is for the budget.)
Sen. Joseph Boncore Yes
Rep. Jessica Giannino Yes
ADOPT NEW HOUSE RULES
(H 3930)
House 129-29, approved a set
of new House rules that will go
into eff ect on October 1, 2021.
Until then, the House will continue
to operate under the
emergency COVID-19 rules it
adopted last year. Without this
bill, the emergency rules would
expire on July 15.
The new rules package includes
requiring both formal
and informal sessions of the
House to be livestreamed; giving
House committee chairs
the ability to allow for both inperson
and virtual hearing testimony
from the public; allowing
any member serving on active
reserve military duty to cast
a House vote remotely; and requiring
committees to publish
names of representatives
who vote against advancing a
bill through committee but not
the names of legislators who
vote in favor of or do not vote
on the matter.
â€œThe challenges over the last
14 months have made us work
and function differently,â€ said
House Rules Committee chair
Rep. Bill Galvin (D-Canton) during
debate on the House fl oor.
â€œThis experience has shown us
a new way to operate and to utilize
technology, both procedurally
and administratively. As we
emerge from the worst of the
pandemic, we have a unique
opportunity to incorporate lessons
learned, thereby providing
for a more effi cient, fl exible and
accessible legislative process.â€
House GOP Minority Leader
Rep. Brad Jones (R-North Reading)
said that the few changes
do not go far enough: â€œI off ered
multiple amendments to help
shed more light on the way the
House of Representatives and
its committees conduct their
business, but those amendments
were struck down, leaving
me with no choice but to reject
the underlying rules package.â€
(A
Yesâ€ vote is for the House
rules package. A â€œNoâ€ vote is
against it.)
Rep. Jessica Giannino Yes
TERM LIMITS FOR SPEAKER
OF THE HOUSE (H 3930)
House 35-125, rejected an
amendment that would reinstate
a 2009 rule that prohibited
any representative from serving
as speaker of the House for
more than eight consecutive
years. The rule was repealed in
2015.
â€œInstituting term limits is
about putting in place the
guardrails to help ensure a
more democratic and responsive
House,â€ said amendment
sponsor Rep. Tami Gouveia (DActon).
â€œOne that fosters fair
and thoughtful competition required
of a strong democratic
entity. It is important to so many
of our constituents across the
state that we bring diverse and
distinct experiences, identities
and geographic representations
to the table and I believe that
term limits for the speaker will
help us do this more eff ectively.â€
â€œWhile I appreciate diff erent
ideas to continuously improve
our Legislature, I do not support
term limits,â€ said Rep. Jim Oâ€™Day
(D-West Boylston). â€œTerm limits
can place the House at a severe
disadvantage during negotiations
with the governor and
other offi cials, which is not benefi
cial for advancing legislation
or for our districts.â€
â€œThe speaker holds the most
powerful office in the House
of Representatives, but all 160
Representatives stand as equals
when it comes to representing
their constituents,â€ said Rep.
Brad Jones. â€œSetting term limits
on the speakerâ€™s offi ce is a
way to prevent too much power
from being consolidated in
the hands of any one individual
over time. Reinstating the
term limits that were repealed
in 2015 would send a powerful
message that the House is committed
to inclusion and the periodic
transition of power.â€
Rep. Jack Lewis (D-Framingham),
speaking on the House
floor during debate, talked
about campaigning, knocking
on doors and asking his constituents
which issues are important
to them. â€œIâ€™ll tell you
what Iâ€™ve never heard when
knocking on those doors: â€˜Jack,
Iâ€™m concerned that there are
no term limits for the Massachusettsâ€™
speaker of the House.â€™
Never once,â€ said Lewis. â€œAnd I
urge all of my colleagues today
to think back to those days â€¦
sometimes meeting our constituents
for the fi rst time. Did any
of you ever hear one of them
ever bring this up as an issue?
Iâ€™m confi dent that nearly universally,
the answer is no.â€
(A â€œYesâ€ vote is for term limits.
A â€œNoâ€ vote is against term
limits.)
Rep. Jessica Giannino No
ALLOW MEMBERS TWO
HOURS TO VOTE IN COMMITTEE
(H 3930)
House 35-124, rejected an
amendment that would give
legislators two hours to vote
electronically when casting a
vote on a bill in committee.
â€œMembers are often given
very little time to respond to
committee polls, even when the
poll involves multiple bills and
complicated issues,â€ said sponsor
GOP House Minority Leader
Brad Jones (R-North Reading).
â€œOne of the more glaring examples
â€¦ was a recent House Ways
and Means poll that gave members
just 16 minutes to review a
38-page supplemental budget
and a separate election reprecincting
proposal. That is simply
not enough time to properly
review and understand
these bills.â€
â€œThe Republican caucus has
consistently pushed for greater
transparency during the rules
debate of the House because
the more information the public
has access to the better,â€ said
Rep. Todd Smola (R-Warren).
â€œHaving a two-hour window
to read and comprehend legislation
before it is voted out of
committee is not asking for the
world. This would help members
digest bills and make informed
decisions on what is before
the House. Poll windows
continue to shrink, and this
practice contributes to the lack
of transparent government for
the peopleâ€™s elected representatives.â€
Opponents
of the amendment
did not offer any arguments
during debate on the
House fl oor. This is one of the
amendments on which Beacon
Hill Roll Call made repeated requests
to reach several representatives
in the House DemoBEACON
| SEE Page 19
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BEACON | FROM Page 18
1. On July 16, 1911, what
dancer was born who was
nicknamed the name of a
spice?
2. What is Maineâ€™s state fruit?
3. What kind of animal is a
joey?
4. In what sport would you
fi nd a peloton?
5. July 17 is World Emoji
Day; from what language is
â€œemoji,â€ which means â€œpicture
wordâ€?
6. What Amherst, Mass., resident
in the 1800â€™s wrote, â€œTo
see the Summer Sky / Is poetry,
though never in a book
it lie â€“ / True Poems fl ee â€“â€?
7. Who wrote the 1842 short
story â€œThe Masque of the Red
Deathâ€?
8. In Japan in July of what
year did the Sony Walkman
â€“ the worldâ€™s first low-cost
personal stereo â€“ go on sale:
1966, 1979 or 1984?
9. On July 18, 1853, the fi rst
North American international
railroad trains began
running between Montreal,
Quebec and what New England
city?
10. In 1876 at Delmonicoâ€™s
Restaurant in NYC, why was
a desert called Baked Alaska?
11. What Frenchman painted
â€œImpression, Sunrise,â€ which
Answers
inspired the name of the Impressionist
movement?
12. On July 19, 1955, the Yarkon
Water Project opened
in the Negev desert of what
country with a water shortage?
13.
What is the worldâ€™s largest
mollusk, which is native
to coral reefs?
14. July 20 is International
Chess Day; in what country
did chess begin: India, Persia
or Scotland?
15. In what penguin species,
which is the heaviest and tallest
of the penguins, does the
male incubate the egg?
16. On July 21, 1959, Elijah
Jerry â€œPumpsieâ€ Green became
the fi rst African American
to play for what baseball
team?
17. What fruit is native to
sand dune areas on the East
Coast?
18. In 1952 what author and
minister wrote the book â€œThe
Power of Positive Thinkingâ€?
19. What word that is the
fourth letter of the Greek alphabet
is also used to describe
a virus variant?
20. On July 22, 1940, who
was born who hosted the TV
shows â€œThe 128,000 Questionâ€
and â€œJeopardy!â€?
cratic leadership for a comment
on why they voted against it.
Representatives not responding
include Reps. Bill Galvin, Claire
Cronin, Kate Hogan, Mike Moran,
Peake and Joe Wagner.
(A â€œYesâ€ vote is for giving two
hours to vote. A â€œNoâ€ vote is
against giving two hours).
Rep. Jessica Giannino No
POST HOW REPRESENTATIVES
VOTED ON BILLS IN
COMMITTEE (H 3930)
House 38-121 and 41-117, rejected
two similar amendments
that would require that committees
make public how each legislator
on the committee voted
on whether or not to favorably
report a bill to the House.
This would replace a section of
the proposed rules that would
only post the names of legislators
who voted against the bill
and list the aggregate vote tally
without names, of members
voting in the affi rmative or not
voting.
â€œThe public has a right to
know where their legislators
stand on the issues being debated
in committee, and it
makes absolutely no sense to
identify by name only those
members who vote no at an
executive session or on a poll,â€
said Rep. Brad Jones, sponsor
of one of the amendments.
â€œWhen we vote in the House
chamber, our individual votes
are displayed for all to see, and
legislative committees should
be held to the same standard
by providing full disclosure of
where each member stands on
a given issue.â€
â€œI believe every resident of
Massachusetts has the right to
hold their elected state representative
accountable,â€ said Rep.
Erika Uyterhoeven (D-Somerville),
the sponsor of the other
amendment. â€œUnder current
rules, there is no accountability
on the votes we take in committee.
This amendment ensures
that every vote taken in
committee is available to the
public, including when bills are
sent to study.â€
Rep. Joe Wagner (D-Chicopee)
opposed the listing of which
representatives vote yes or did
not vote. â€œThe names of votes of
those voting in the negative being
there for everyone to see is
Page 19
suffi cient in terms of transparency,â€
said Wagner during the
debate on the House floor. â€œI
have always been concerned,
and Iâ€™ve chaired committees
for about 20 years, and I have
been always concerned that
when we take votes in committee,
the votes that we take
to advance legislation does not
refl ect necessarily, when an affi
rmative vote is taken, the support
for the matter as it is before
the committee.â€
Wagner continued, â€œSo for example,
there are points at which
members will vote affi rmatively
to move a matter from a committee
because they support
the idea conceptually of a particular
piece of policy or legislation.
But with that support
affi rmatively, if that was a fi nal
form that the legislation may
take. And so I think that where
a vote in the negative is very
clear, a vote in the affi rmative
is less clear. And there are interest
groups and there are people
frankly who may have agendas
and would use a vote in the affi
rmative, if a memberâ€™s name
were attached in that way, to
try and discredit a member perhaps
or potentially misconstrue
a memberâ€™s position on a particular
issue.â€
(Both roll calls are listed. On
both roll calls, A â€œYesâ€ vote is for
the amendment. A â€œNoâ€ vote is
against it.)
Rep. Jessica Giannino
No/No
EXTEND THE EMERGENCY
RULES FOR COVID-19 (H
3929)
House 130-30, approved a
measure that would extend until
October 1, 2021, the emergency
rules under which the
House has been operating since
the COVID-19 pandemic began
more than a year ago. There was
no debate on the proposal.
House Speaker Ron Mariano
(D-Quincy) told reporters his
team wanted to keep temporary
rules in place â€œuntil we were
sure the pandemic was over.â€
â€œThe House of Representatives
has been operating under
emergency rules throughout
the COVID-19 pandemic
in response to the many public
health and safety issues surrounding
the coronavirus, and
those temporary rules should
be allowed to expire as planned
on July 15,â€ Rep. Brad Jones told
Beacon Hill Roll Call. â€œNow that
more than four million Massachusetts
residents are fully vaccinated,
and the rest of the state
has opened up, I cannot see any
valid reason why the House
should continue to operate under
a diff erent standard than
the rest of the commonwealth.â€
(A â€œYesâ€ vote is for extending
the emergency rules. A â€œNoâ€
vote is against the extension).
Rep. Jessica Giannino Yes
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 July 5-9,
the House met for a total of 15
hours and 45 minutes while the
Senate met for a total of three
hours and 19 minutes,
Mon. July 5 No House session
No
Senate session
Tues. July 6 House 11:02
a.m. to 1:21 p.m.
Senate 11:21 a.m. to 11:26
a.m.
Wed. July 7 House 11:00
a.m. to 6:40 p.m.
No Senate session
Thurs. July 8 House 11:00
a.m. to 1:39 p.m.
Senate 1:16 p.m. to 1:34 p.m.
Fri. July 9 House 1:01 p.m.
to 4:08 p.m.
Senate 1:16 p.m. to 4:12 p.m.
Bob Katzen
welcomes feedback at
bob@beaconhillrollcall.com
1. Ginger Rogers
2. Blueberries
3. A baby kangaroo
4.
Bicycle racing:
It is the main
group of riders in
a race.
5. Japanese
6. Emily Dickinson
7.
Edgar Allan Poe
8. 1979
9. Portland,
Maine
10. In honor of
the U.S. government
purchase of
Alaska in 1867
11. Claude Monet
12. Israel
13. Giant Clam
14. India
15. Emperor
16. Boston Red
Sox
17. Beach plum
18. Norman Vincent
Peale
19. Delta (COVID-19)
20.
Alex Trebek
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OBITUARIES
Frederick J. Ambrosino
(Retired Lt RPD)
THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, JULY 16, 2021
BEACH | FROM Page 11
â€œThis time of year serves as
O
f Revere on
July 8, 2021
at the age of
98. Born in Boston
on December 13, 1922 to
the late Alfonzo and Genieve
(Dâ€™Amore). Beloved husband
of 64 years to the late Margaret
(Margareci). Devoted father
of Paul Ambrosino and
his wife Joan of Peabody, and
Thomas Ambrosino and his
partner Laurie Giardella of Nahant.
Cherished grandfather
of Brianna, Brittany, and Alexandra.
Adored great grandfather
of Olivia and Eva Sweezey.
Dear brother of Gilda â€œGailâ€
Hagstrom of Revere, and the
late Mary Alba, Violet Finamore
and Phillip, Louis, Anthony
and Alphonse Ambrosino.
Also survived by many loving
nieces and nephews. Frederick
was a Revere High Class
of 1940 graduate. He proudly
served his country in the United
States Army during WWII
under General Patton in the
3rd Army. His group was engaged
in battle in the European
Theatre and Battle of the
Bulge where he would go on
to receive the European African
Middle Eastern Theatre
Campaign Ribbon, Good Conduct
Medal, American Theatre
Campaign Ribbon, the Victory
Medal and the French Legion
of Honor Medal. Upon his return
to Massachusetts Frederick
became a Revere Police Offi
cer retiring in 1987 as a Lieutenant
after 35 years of service.
He will be sorely missed by all
who knew him. In lieu of fl owers
donations may be made in
Frederickâ€™s name to Immaculate
Conception Church, 133
Beach St., Revere, MA 02151.
a great opportunity to explore
Massachusettsâ€™ many waterfronts,
but as is clear from the
tragic number of water-related
accidents the Commonwealth
has seen so far this year, it is critical
that all visitors be diligent
about water safety to help keep
everyone safe,â€ said Theoharides.
â€œThe health and safety of Massachusetts
residents and visitors is
the Baker-Polito Administrationâ€™s
top priority, and we are continuing
and increasing eff orts to inform
the public about dangerous
places to swim at state parks,
as well as safe, fun alternatives to
swim and cool off .â€
â€œSummer is here and this highly-anticipated
season is bringing
more and more people to DCR
waterfronts, where we all must
be diligent in our eff orts to ensure
a fun, safe visit,â€ said Montgomery.
â€œWe ask that all visitors
heed park signs, staff direction,
and todayâ€™s water safety recommendations.
Additionally, DCR
continues to interview, train,
and hire candidates to serve as
agency lifeguards throughout
the state, and we are proud to
announce that we are increasing
pay for these incredibly imSKATING
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portant members of our staff .â€
As part of DCRâ€™s commitment
to the safety of beachgoers
and appreciation for the agencyâ€™s
lifeguard staff , DCR has announced
a $3 pay increase for
all DCR lifeguards, who will now
receive $20 per hour (or $21 per
hour for head lifeguards). Additionally,
lifeguards who remain
committed for the entire season
with DCR will also receive a $500
bonus at the end of the season.
DCR lifeguards are professional
rescuers who are trained to prevent
injuries and respond in the
event of an emergency to help
save a life. As part of a team,
lifeguards must work together
calmly and effi ciently to manage
crisis situations.
â€œWe know that most drownings
occur in the summer
months, particularly July and August,â€
said Acting Public Health
Commissioner Margret Cooke.
â€œDrowning is swift and silent â€“
there may be little splashing or
cries for help and it can take as
few as 20 seconds to sink below
the water. It is so important to
learn to swim as early as possible,
to only swim where swimming
is allowed, and to follow
safety tips while enjoying water
whether around a pond, lake, river,
ocean, or pool this summer.â€
â€œThe range of victims whose
losses we have endured in the
last few weeks shows that water-related
tragedies play no favorites.
From an infant in Wrentham,
to two boys in Brockton,
to an adult male earlier this week
in Shrewsbury, to the teenager
who drowned in Turtle Pond in
Hyde Park, to Police Offi cer Manny
Familia, who made the ultimate
sacrifi ce trying to save another
teenage boy in a Worcester
pond â€“ among numerous
other victims â€“ every drowning
incident has left loved ones and
friends with irreparable holes in
their hearts and their lives,â€ said
Mason.
â€œThe American Red Cross has
developed a variety of water
safety and Learn-to-Swim programs
that our aquatic training
providers offer. Programs are
available for a variety of ages and
abilities including our Parent and
Child Aquatics and Preschool
Aquatics courses. Many providers
also off er courses for adults,â€
said American Red Cross of Massachusetts
CEO Holly Grant.
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
buyer1
Foley, Patrick
buyer2
seller1
Viviano, Maureen R Constant, Murray Viviano, Stephen D
Surf Side RT
Sica, Andrew J
Lin, Jianwei
Montonio, Richard
Fay, Leslie
SELLER2
seller2
ADDRESS
address
57 Bates St
Jimenez, Alfonso R Rodriguez, Daniel A Berger, F Maxwell Berger, Alysha 105 Eliot Rd
Sica, Daniel V
Zhen, Jieya
46 Green St
54 Jones Rd
DATE
date
PRICE
Revere
price
25.06.2021 $ 800 000,00
Dicesare, Vincent 10 Ocean Ave #310 25.06.2021 $ 400 000,00
23.06.2021 $ 310 000,00
21.06.2021 $ 630 000,00
16.06.2021 $ 711 000,00
DCR continues to actively recruit
lifeguards at its inland and
coastal waterfronts and deep
water swimming pools in the
Boston Region (including Cambridge
and the surrounding
towns), the North Region (specifi
cally Saugus, Nahant and East
Boston), the South Region (specifi
cally Sandwich and Westport)
and the Central Region (Metro
West to Worcester County). In
order to be considered for a DCR
lifeguard position, applicants
must be at least 16 years of age,
have completed lifeguard training
and be certifi ed in fi rst aid
and cardiopulmonary resuscitation
(CPR). Furthermore, candidates
must be able to complete
both of the following:
â€¢ Timed 500-yard swim
â€¢ Recover 10-pound object in
nine to 12 feet of water
Please note that all interested
candidates must register with
the DCR aquatics staff to be
placed in the appropriate course
before arriving. Interested individuals
can apply online and
are strongly encouraged to call
James Esposito at 857-214-0400
or visit the DCRâ€™s lifeguarding
webpage, where application information
and lifeguard requirements
can be found.
The DCR off ers free Learn to
Swim programs at 12 locations
statewide starting on Monday,
July 5 for people of all ages.
For information about lessons,
please visit the agencyâ€™s website
and call your local facility.
Additionally, many YMCAs
across the Commonwealth offer
swimming lessons for children,
teens and adults. If you live
in the Boston area, view the list
of YMCA Boston swim classes. If
you live outside Boston, please
visit the Alliance of Massachusetts
YMCAs' â€œFind Your Yâ€ website
to locate a YMCA near you.
Furthermore, the American Red
Cross off ers swimming lessons
for children, teens and adults at
several of its locations in Massachusetts.
The Red Cross also
off ers a wide selection of CPR/
automated external defibrillator
(AED), fi rst aid, lifeguarding,
swimming and water safety,
caregiving, disaster response
and emergency preparedness
training. Visit the Red Cross for
the â€œLearn to Swimâ€ provider list
and select â€œMassachusettsâ€ for
more information.
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THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, JULY 16, 2021
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THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, JULY 16, 2021
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Call Gary: 978-210-4012
MassFiscal urges Speaker Mariano to
open up, starting with the rules debate
A
month ago, on June 1, the
Massachusetts Fiscal Alliance
(MassFiscal) urged Speaker
of the House Ron Mariano to
open the Massachusetts State
House and vote on the rules
of the House. Mariano ignored
MassFiscalâ€™s call for transparency,
and the Speakerâ€™s emergency
House rules are set to expire
on July 15. In early January, the
newly elected Speaker took the
controversial measure of extending
emergency House rules
that were originally enacted at
the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic.
The temporary House
rules delayed debate and roll call
votes on the permanent House
rules, which outline the parameters
of operation and govern
debate in the House of Representativeâ€™s
two-year legislative
session. Despite Speaker Marianoâ€™s
opaqueness and gamesmanship,
Senate President Karen
Spilka and the State Senate
passed their rules in February.
MassFiscal Spokesperson/
Board Member Paul Craney said,
â€œMarianoâ€™s Speakership has operated
under a cloud of secrecy
in which the House doesnâ€™t even
have its own rules voted on. No
democracy can endure this level
of prolonged secrecyâ€¦Under
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Speaker Marianoâ€™s lawless leadership,
heâ€™s passed several controversial
bills and he is planning
to spend billions of dollars in the
budget process and from federal
COVID relief money. How can
the public, or rank and fi le House
members, be expected to weigh
in if the State House is closed to
the public and there are no permanent
rules for the House? The
answer is that they arenâ€™t.â€
â€œBy now itâ€™s clear to anyone
carefully watching that Speaker
Mariano is most frightened of
transparency. He will go to great
lengths to keep it as far away as
possible,â€ said Craney.
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Page 23
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WE KNOW EVERETT!! Call TODAY to sell or buy with the best!
NEW LISTING BY SANDY!
UNDER AGREEMENT!
UNDER AGREEMENT
TWO FAMILY
111-113 CHESTNUT ST., EVERETT
$849,900
LISTED BY SANDY
NEW PRICE!
CALL NORMA FOR DETAILS!
617-590-9143
LISTED BY NORMA
TWO FAMILY - 123 BUCKNAM ST., EVERETT
$849,900
CALL QUAZI FOR DETAILS!
617-447-1989
SOLD!
UNDER AGREEMENT
4 FAMILY
TWO FAMILY
141 GARLAND ST., EVERETT
$925,000
CALL SANDY FOR DETAILS: 617-448-0854
EVERETT RENTAL
1 BEDROOM
$1,650/MO.
WALK TO EVERETT SQUARE
CALL NORMA FOR DETAILS
617-590-9143
EVERETT RENTAL
2 BEDROOM
CALL NORMA FOR DETAILS
617-590-9143
Joe DiNuzzo
- Broker Associate
www.jrs-properties.com
O
D il
F
10 00 A M
5 00 PM
Norma Capuano Parziale
- Agent
Open Daily From 10:00 A.M. - 5:00 P.M.
433 Broadway, Suite B, Everett, MA 02149
Denise Matarazz
- Agent
Maria Scrima
- Agent
Follow Us On:
617.544.6274
756 BROADWAY, EVERETT
$859,900
CALL NORMA FOR DETAILS!
617-590-9143
UNDER AGREEMENT BY SANDY
3 BEDROOM SINGLE
NORTH READING
EVERETT RENTAL
WOODLAWN AREA
3 BEDROOM
$2,400/MO.
MOVE IN READY
CALL NORMA FOR DETAILS
617-590-9143
EVERETT RENTAL
2 BEDROOM
$2,500/MO.
CALL NORMA
FOR DETAILS
617-590-9143
CHELSEA RENTAL - RENTED!
1 BEDROOM
$1,400/MO.
CALL JOE FOR DETAILS
617-680-7610
Rosemarie Ciampi
- Agent
Michael Matarazzo
-Agent
Mark Sachetta
- Agent
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THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, JULY 16, 2021
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1
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
î€¶î€¤î€¸î€ªî€¸î€¶ î€ î€”î–î— î€¤î€§ î€ î€¼î’î˜î‘îŠ î€¦î€¨ î€¦î’îî€‘ î’ï‚‡îˆî•î– î€š î•î’î’îî–î€ î€– î…îˆî‡î•î’î’îî–î€ î€•îƒ² î…î„î—î‹î–î€ î€•
îŠî„î– î‚¿î•îˆî“îî„î†îˆî–î€ î‹î•î‡îšî‡î€‘ îƒ€î’î’î•îŒî‘îŠî€ î…îˆî„î˜î—îŒî‰î˜î îŽîŒî—î€‘ îšî€’ îî„î•î…îîˆ î†î’î˜î‘î—îˆî•î—î’î“î–î€
îî„î–î—îˆî• î–î˜îŒî—îˆî€ î‡îˆî†îŽî€ î†îˆî‘î—î€‘ î„îŒî•î€ î‚¿î‘îŒî–î‹îˆî‡ îî’îšîˆî• îîˆî™îˆîî€ 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€œî€î€œî€“î€“î€‘
î€¯î€¼î€±î€± î€ î€”î–î— î€¤î€§ î€ î€·î€«î€µî€¨î€¨ î€©î€¤î€°î€¬î€¯î€¼ î’ï‚‡îˆî•î– î€˜î€’î€˜î€’î€– î•î’î’îî–î€ î€•î€’î€•î€’î€” î…îˆî‡î•î’î’îî–î€
î‹î„î•î‡îšî’î’î‡ îƒ€î’î’î•îŒî‘îŠî€ îî’î—î– î’î‰ î˜î“î‡î„î—îˆî–î€ î–îˆî“î„î•î„î—îˆ î˜î—îŒîîŒî—îŒîˆî–î€ îî’î†î„î—îˆî‡ îšîŒî—î‹îŒî‘
îšî„îîŽîŒî‘îŠ î‡îŒî–î—î„î‘î†îˆ î’î‰ î…îˆî„î†î‹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€œî€î€“î€“î€“î€‘
SAUGUS - 1st AD - EXTREMELY RARE Opportunity to develop
î€·î€ºî€² î…î˜îŒîî‡îŒî‘îŠ îî’î—î–î€„ î€¯î’î—î– î„î•îˆ 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‡ îŒî–
îî’î†î„î—îˆî‡ î’î‘ î‰î˜î—î˜î•îˆ î†î˜îî€î‡îˆî€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€˜î€î€“î€“î€“î€‘
SAUGUS - Perfectly located 8 room Split Entry Ranch, 3 bedrooms,
î€”îƒ² î…î„î—î‹î–î€ îî„î•îŠîˆ îˆî„î—î€îŒî‘ îŽîŒî—î†î‹îˆî‘î€ î‡îŒî‘îŒî‘îŠ î•î’î’îî€ î‚¿î•îˆî“îî„î†îˆ îîŒî™îŒî‘îŠ î•î’î’îî€
î‰î„îîŒîîœ î•î’î’î îšîŒî—î‹ î‚¿î•îˆî“îî„î†îˆî€ î†îˆî‘î—î•î„î î„îŒî•î€ î‹î„î•î‡îšî’î’î‡ îƒ€î’î’î•îŒî‘îŠî€ î–î˜î‘î•î’î’îî€
îŠî„î•î„îŠîˆî€ îî„î•îŠîˆ îî’î—î€ î†î˜îî€î‡îˆ 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€œî€“î€“î€‘
î€¶î€¤î€¸î€ªî€¸î€¶ î€ î€²î‘îˆî€î’îšî‘îˆî• î€¦îˆî‘î—îˆî• î€¨î‘î—î•î„î‘î†îˆ î€¦î’îî’î‘îŒî„îî€ î€› î•îî–î€‘î€ î€— î…î‡î•îî–î€‘î€
î€• î‰î˜îî î…î„î—î‹î–î€ î–î“î„î†î€‘î€ î‚¿î•îˆî“îî„î†îˆ îî™î•îî€‘î€ îˆî„î—î€îŒî‘ îŽîŒî—î€‘î€ î‡î‘î•îî€ î€”î–î— îƒ€î•î€‘ î‰îî•îî€‘î€
î‹î•î‡îšî‡î€‘ îƒ€î’î’î•îŒî‘îŠ î—î‹î•î’î˜îŠî‹î’î˜î—î€ î—îšî’ î†î„î• îŠî„î•î„îŠîˆî€‘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€œî€î€œî€“î€“î€‘
î€°î€¨î€·î€«î€¸î€¨î€± î€ î€™ î•îî€‘ î€¹îŒîîî„ î„î— î—î‹îˆ î€µîˆîŠîˆî‘î†îœî€„ î€™ î•îî–î€‘î€ î€• î…î‡î•îî–î€‘î€ î’ï‚ˆî†îˆî€ î€• î…î„î—î‹î–î€
îŠî’î˜î•îîˆî— îŽîŒî—î€‘ îšî€’ îŠî•î„î‘îŒî—îˆî€ î–î– î„î“î“îîŒî„î‘î†îˆî–î€ î’î“îˆî‘ î—î’ îŠî•îˆî„î— î•îî€‘ îšî€’ îŠî„î– î‚¿î•îˆî“îî„î†îˆî€
wall of windows w/ atrium door to oversized deck w/ natural gas grill &
î‚¿î•îˆ î“îŒî—î€ î‰î’î•îî„î î‡î‘î•îî€‘î€ îî„î–î—îˆî• î…î‡î•îî€‘ î’ï‚‡îˆî•î– î“î•îŒî™î„î—îˆ î…î„î—î‹î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‡î€™î€—î€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
NEW TO MARKET
COMING SOON
NEW TO MARKET
FOR SALE- 3 BED 3 BATH OVERSIZED
CAPE WITH OVERSIZE LOT MELROSE
$1,049,000 CALL DEBBIE 617-678-9710
NEW TO MARKET
COMING SOON- NEW CONSTRUCTION
TOWNHOMES 3 BED, 2.5 BATH
WAKEFIELD CALL KEITH 781-389-0791
UNDER AGREEMENT
FOR RENT
FOR SALE- 3+ BED 2 BATH CAPE GREAT
LOCATION RENOVATED LYNNFIELD
$775,000 CALL DEBBIE 617-678-9710
NEW TO MARKET
FOR SALE- OVERSIZE SPLIT
INDIAN VALLEY SAUGUS $649,900
CALL KEITH 781-389-0791
CONDO
FOR SALE - 3+ BED 1 BATH CAPE
2 CAR GARAGE GLOUCESTER
$499,900 CALL DEBBIE 617-678-9710
FOR SALE- ONE BEDROOM CONDO
NORTH READING $229,900
CALL RHONDA 781-708-0842
FOR RENT 4 ROOM - 2 BEDROOM
BOSTON $1,850
CALL RHONDA 781-706-0842
FOR RENT
FOR RENT 4 ROOM -1 BEDROOM
LYNN - $1500
CALL RHONDA 781-706-0842
INVESTMENT
OPPORTUNITY
FOR SALE- FOUR FAMILY - INVESTMENT
PROPERTY PEABODY $1,250,000
CALL RHONDA 781-706-0842
FOR SALE -BRAND NEW MANUFACTURED
MOBILE HOMES. FOUR CUSTOM UNITS
LEFT. ALL UNITS ARE 2 BED, 1 BATH TITAN
HOMES WIH QUALITY THROUGHOUT
12 X 52. HEATED BY PROPANE GAS,
FULL, SIZE LAUNDRY HOOKUPS, AND
STAINLESS STEEL APPLIANCES.
PEABODY $199,900
CALL ERIC 781-223-0289
FOR SALE- 3 BED 1.5 BATH RANCH
SAUGUS $549,900 CALL ERIC 781-223-0288
LET US SHOW YOU OUR
MARKETING PLAN TO
GET YOU TOP DOLLAR
FOR YOUR HOME!
LITTLEFIELDRE.COM
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
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