×‰?4×B!×‘C‘×˜š Í( Í(Í€u×‰œ”×‰	Ú 7cassandra://e6nF5Os5YGU29IwtaAALOkuFDW_lQvAnPxXY_AeIocQÎ zçÍ`ÍœÍ)×‰	Ú 7cassandra://7wdN3xZXhvGFmXL9fh4ORYv6rOSMyKUv4FyxJKJwdhUÍ¡>Í`ÍJÍà×‰	Ú 7cassandra://zX41YPZkh5-IWwXbV9vxfqcZTLmj1i6u2FVKdvVjkHEÍ.’Í`Ì°Í ×‰	Ú 7cassandra://wkOVFVWXGQSdJ89L3pW-9NxlYXNBasr21rbcV3LCE84Î „ÍåFÍ ÍÅÍñ×a“–yð=!‚Šhâ‘× ×a“–yð=!‚Šhå Í€Í'Ì¾9×H»http://www.advocatenews.net××Ðˆ×ˆE×a“•yð=!‚ŠhÈ×‰EÚa Safe & Happy Thanksgiving!
Vol.30, No.47
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Every Friday
Football Pats seek fourth straight
win over Winthrop on Turkey Day
781-286-8500
Wednesday, November 24, 2021
~ EDITORIAL ~
Atlas Auto Body
Victimized by Census
Impropriety
By James D. Mitchell
Publisher
O
ccasionally and fortunately
not often, newspapers
Co-Captains, kneeling from left to right: Augusto Goncalves, Elmahdi El Kaouakibi, Max Doucette
and Wilmer Mejia Rodriguez with Head Coach Louis Cicatelli (fourth from left) and Asst. Coaches Vin Gregorio,
Paul Norton, Scott Wlasuk, Daniel Murphy, Brandon Brito and Daniel DiCristoforo.
By Greg Phipps
A
fter a year impacted by
the COVID-19 pandemic
that led to no fall football season
in 2020, the old rivals Revere
Patriots and Winthrop Vikings
are ready to resume their
annual Thanksgiving Day battle.
The two teams did not play each
other during last springâ€™s abbreviated
campaign. The last Turkey
Day matchup in 2019 ended
with a 46-31 victory in favor of
the Patriots, who completed one
of their best seasons in school
history by going 10-1. The lone
defeat came against Melrose in
the Div. 4 North title game.
After going 3-1 in last springâ€™s
abbreviated season, Revere has
had a pretty solid campaign
this fall, posting a 7-2 overall record.
The Patriots rolled to four
straight wins after losing their
season opener to Peabody. Then
having suff ered a second loss to
Div. 1 Everett back on Oct. 15,
Revere has since collected three
straight wins.
This yearâ€™s effort wasnâ€™t
enough to land the Patriots in
the statewide Div. 3 tournament.
After eight games, the playoff
fi eld of 16 was chosen â€“ part of
a new system installed by the
Massachusetts Interscholastic
Athletic Association before this
season â€“ and Revere was left out,
even though several squads that
made it had less wins.
Patriots Head Coach Lou Cicatelli
told the press last week
that fi nishing 8-2 would say a lot
about the program and would
perhaps encourage officials
who decide the tournament
brackets to reevaluate the process.
â€œI think [fi nishing 8-2] will
open some eyes, and I think the
playoff system should look at a
team that went 8-2 and didnâ€™t
get a playoff berth,â€ he said.
Of course, Revere still has to
earn victory number eight, and
that wonâ€™t be easy. The Vikings
are better than their 5-5 record
might indicate. They made the
PATS | SEE Page 13
need to clarify a story because of
errors that are committed, even
if unintentional. Last weekâ€™s Revere
Advocate front page story
most likely left the mistaken impression
to the reader that Atlas
Auto Body shop in Revere was at
the â€œcenter of a controversyâ€ involving
the census. It may have
inadvertently caused harm to a
long standing, reputable, family
business. It was certainly not
our intention, and for that, we
apologize.
Atlas Auto Body was as much,
if not more of a victim in this
â€œcontroversyâ€ than anyone else.
We donâ€™t know whoâ€™s at fault in
this saga, the people employed
to collect the data, the individuals
who fi lled out the forms, the
folks in charge of compiling the
information or anyone else involved
in the bureaucratic chain
of command. But what the reader
can be sure of is that the owners
of the property that houses
Atlas Auto Body have no culpability
in this fi asco. Just as a census
taker or an individual could
use Fenway Park or Gillette Stadium
as their address on a form,
without the knowledge of the
owners, Atlas is no more responsible
for this situation than the
Red Sox or the Patriots would be
in such a hypothetical.
City officials state
census irregularities lie
with federal government
By Adam Swift
S
ome city councillors are still
not happy with a discrepancy
with U.S. Census numbers
that count people living in empty
blocks or commercial businesses,
but seem satisfi ed that the issues
lie with the federal government
and not city staff .
Early last week, Ward 2 Councillor
Ira Novoselsky, whose ward
takes the heaviest hit in the redistrict
mapping process, brought
up an issue where census figures
seemed to show 67 people
living at a commercial business
on North Shore Road. Later
that week, Reuben Kantor, the
cityâ€™s Chief Innovation Officer
and part of the cityâ€™s redistricting
team, was back before the City
Council to lay out how some of
the census numbers could have
been skewed by the federal government.
â€œI
think I speak for the repreSENIORS:
Kneeling, from left to right: Sylis Davis, Angel Ceja, Steven Ticlayauri, â€œMoeâ€ Hussein, Filipe
Cotta, Hamza Ghoul, Iqbal Butt and Ricardo Goncalves. Standing, from left to right: Head Coach
Louis Cicatelli, Mohammed Laareg, Thomas Desir, Mark Marchese, Anwar Marbouh, Augusto Goncalves,
Wilmer Mejia Rodriguez, Elmahdi El Kaouakibi and Juan Londono-Marin.
cincting team that we were not
expecting the meeting [last]
Monday to go the way it did, so I
apologize,â€ said Kantor.
In addition to providing more
information on how census data
could show people living where
it is obvious no one lives, Kantor
said he wanted to clear up some
issues differentiating between
U.S. Census data and city census
and election data. â€œThere is no relationship
between the U.S. Census
data and Revere voter data
â€“ no connection whatsoever,â€
said Kantor. â€œWe did a full check
of the voter record, and we also
did a check of the city census record,
and there is nobody registered
at that [1605 Northshore
Rd.] address. This is a U.S. Census
data issue only.â€
Kantor said cities and states are
not provided with any of the data
other than the total population
and basic demographic information,
and that the U.S. Commerce
Department would be the only
entity that would be able to audit
the census data.
Additionally, Kantor said that
the Revere Counts staff that operated
through the city was an
outreach operation only, and
that only federal census enuCENSUS
| SEE Page 19
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THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 24, 2021
Results unchanged following councillor-at-large recount
By Adam Swift
T
he results didnâ€™t change following
Saturdayâ€™s recount
of the councillor-at-large race,
but current City Council President
Anthony Zambuto said
heâ€™s glad he went through the
process.
Zambuto fi nished just outside
of the running during the General
Election earlier this month,
35 votes behind Councillor-atLarge
George Rotondo in the
six-person race for five seats.
During the recount, Rotondo
fi nished 33 votes ahead of Zambuto
to maintain his fi fth-place
fi nish. The top four vote getters
â€“ Daniel Rizzo, Steven Morabito,
Attorney Paul Capizzi spoke to recount workers. (Advocate photos by Tara Vocino)
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Marc Silvestri and Gerry Visconti
â€“ remained the same.
Both Rotondo and Zambuto
said there was no animosity
between them and praised the
recount process for going off
smoothly. â€œThis was not an adversarial
situation; we went in
friends and came out friends,â€
said Rotondo. â€œThis is democracy
in action.â€
Zambuto agreed. â€œIt was a
very polite and respectful process,â€
said Zambuto.
During the recount, Zambuto
said, all the ballots looked
to be clean, and that there was
Councillor-at-Large George Rotondo and City Council President/
Councillor-at-Large Anthony Zambuto are shown during Saturday
morningâ€™s recount at the Revere High School gymnasium. Zambuto
fi nished sixth in the Nov. 2 General Election with 2,209 votes,
35 votes behind Rotondo, who fi nished fi fth with 2,244 votes.
Happy Thanksgiving!
We are grateful for your business and trust this year.
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very little ground to dispute ballots
that looked as if they may
have been mismarked where he
could have potentially gained
some ground on Rotondo. â€œEveryone
was completely respectful
and itâ€™s probably the smoothest
recount process Iâ€™ve ever
seen,â€ said Zambuto.
The current City Council president
said he is proud of his 22
years of service to the city, adding
that while there are hundreds
of accomplishments heâ€™s
been a part of during that time,
the two biggest ones are getting
a new police station built
and changing the zoning ordiELECTION
| SEE Page 3
419 BROADWAY. EVERETT, MA 02149
771 SALEM ST. LYNNFIELD, MA 01940
WWW.EVERETTBANK.COM
î€¤î€Ÿî€¥î‚´î€¡î€¦î€¥î‚´î€Ÿî€Ÿî€Ÿî€ž
î€¥î€¦î€Ÿî‚´î€¥î€¥î€¤î‚´î€¢î€¢î€¢î€¢
Member FDIC | Member DIF
City Council Vice President Gerry Visconti and Councillor-at-LargeElect
Marc Silvestri
Prices subject to
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î€§îŠîî î€¶î‘ î€‡ î€´î‚î—î†î€‚
î€§î‚îî îŠî” î€¤îîŽîŠîîˆî€‚
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×‰	Ú 7cassandra://Xu1t9LgfIhWnf3iuQgspl-Ffrf8grndqscX5UjEWgoIÍ+™Í`Ì°Í ×a“•yð=!‚ŠhÊ×‰EÚÌTHE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 24, 2021
Page 3
City Council approves re-precincting maps, with reservations
By Adam Swift
I
n the end, the City Council
determined it would be better
off approving its own new
ward and precinct map rather
than leaving it in the hands of
the Secretary of Stateâ€™s offi ce.
For the past week, the council
has debated and questioned
the U.S. Census data behind a
new proposed ward and district
map, which is required by
law every 10 years. Last Thursday
night, the councilâ€™s Committee
of the Whole voted against
recommending approval of the
new ward and precinct map presented
by the cityâ€™s redistricting
committee. But after some further
discussion with legal counsel,
who made it clear that not
approving a map would leave
new ward and district lines in
the hands of the state, the council
voted unanimously on Monday
night to accept the proposed
map.
â€œI know I was one of the biggest
opponents to re-precincting
in the city, but I know what
this means to the city, and I donâ€™t
want the state coming in and
telling us how we should make
our district lines,â€ said Novoselsky.
â€œI would say letâ€™s vote for the
best case scenario that we have
in front of us right now.â€
While Novoselsky said he is
for approval of the map in front
of the council, he added that he
would be taking further action
regarding the discrepancies that
came up during the last week. â€œI
will be contacting Senator Markey
and Congresswoman Clark
asking that the Census Bureau
investigate this and their procedures,â€
said Novoselsky, â€œnot
necessarily a criminal investigation,
but as a study to see how
they can improve their processes
moving forward.â€
Ward 6 Councillor Richard
Serino said that this is the fi rst
time he has changed his vote
between how he has voted in
subcommittee and on a final
full council vote. â€œAt the very
end of last weekâ€™s subcommittee
meeting, after we took the
vote, representatives got up
to speak about how if the city
Revere residents named
to Honor Roll at MVRCS
T
he following Revere residents, in grades 7-10,
achieved honors at Mystic Valley Regional
Charter School for the fi rst quarter of the 20212022
academic year.
To be eligible for the Honor Roll, a student must
have no grade lower than a B- for the quarter.
ELECTION | FROM Page 2
nance at the council level so that
the council canâ€™t approve special
permits on the same day as an
initial hearing.
Zambuto said he has received
tremendous support from residents
since the election, with
some people coming up to
him and hugging him to tell
them how sorry they were. He
said some people have said
they regretted not getting out
to vote and voting for him because
they believed he would
easily win reelection. â€œItâ€™s Godâ€™s
will and Iâ€™m okay with the result,â€
said Zambuto. â€œIt wasnâ€™t
meant to be.â€
HONOR ROLL
Grade 10: Kenson Germain and Thalia JeanBaptiste
Grade
9: Maria Alves
Grade 7: Kenny Germain
Because of the support he has
received over the years, Zambuto
said, he did believe he owed
it to his supporters to go forward
with a recount in such a
close race.
The recount process showed
that there were a number of
voters who only voted for one
candidate, or several candidates
and not the fi ve allowed on the
ballot. Zambuto said that Rizzo,
Morabito and Silvestri likely
benefi ted the most from the
bullet voting. The fi nal recount
tally had Rizzo with 3,208 votes,
Morabito with 2,683, Silvestri
with 2,641, Visconti with 2,352,
Rotondo with 2,238 and Zambuto
with 2,205.
does not accept this, the Secretary
of Stateâ€™s offi ce will determine
the lines of the wards and
precincts,â€ said Serino. â€œIn one of
those scenarios, in which they
had already drawn their own
version of the re-precincting
map, someplace like the Point of
Pines would have been split up,
and I donâ€™t want to leave that to
chance. I agree with Councillor
Novoselsky; fundamentally, I still
believe that the census numbers
are inaccurate in some respect,
but we are not voting on the
census numbers â€“ we are voting
on the re-precincting map,
and for the sake of the city, I will
be voting for it.â€
Councillor-at-Large George
Rotondo noted that the proposed
state map would also redraw
Wards 3 and 6 in a way
that would be unfair to Serino
and Ward 3 Councillor-Elect Anthony
Cogliandro, putting them
both in the same ward.
â€œWhile these Committee of
the Whole meetings have been
pretty informative and surprising,
I donâ€™t feel comfortable leaving
it in the stateâ€™s hands,â€ said
Councillor-at-Large Gerry Visconti.
â€œIâ€™m still alarmed about
this re-precincting; Iâ€™m going to
change my vote as well only because
I donâ€™t want to leave it in
the stateâ€™s hands.â€
Lawrence A. Simeone Jr.
Attorney-at-Law
~ Since 1989 ~
* Corporate Litigation
* Criminal/Civil
* MCAD
* Zoning/Land Court
* Wetlands Litigation
* Workmenâ€™s Compensation
* Landlord/Tenant Litigation
* Real Estate Law
* Construction Litigation
* Tax Lein
* Personal Injury
* Bankruptcy
* Wrongful Death
* Zoning/Permitting Litigation
300 Broadway, Suite 1, Revere * 781-286-1560
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City Council President Anthony Zambuto and City Council Vice
President Gerry Visconti â€“ Dan Rizzo, Steven Morabito, Marc Silvestri
and Visconti fi nished in the top four spots to win election
to the City Council.
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THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 24, 2021
Public hearing on improving beach access for people with
disabilities slated for November 30
O
n Tuesday, November 30,
at 10 a.m., the Metropolitan
Beaches Commission and
Save the Harbor/Save the Bay
will convene a Virtual Public
Hearing focused on improving
access for people with disabilities
on the Commonwealthâ€™s
public beaches in Lynn, Nahant,
Revere, Winthrop, East Boston,
South Boston, Dorchester,
Quincy and Hull.
The public is welcome to join
us to share their thoughts on
what is working and what we
can do better. You can register
for the hearing at https://us02web.zoom.us/meeting/regî€°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.
ister/tZUtfuqgrj0sG9TqjeIa1rCNfl
HCx69GR_mF
At the hearing, we expect to
hear from members of the disability
community as well as a
panel of experts including; Ellen
Attaliades, President and
CEO of the Association of Developmental
Disabilities Providers
(ADDP), Kristen McCosh, Commissioner
of the Boston Disabilities
Commission, Coleman Nee,
Chief Executive Offi cer of Triangle,
Inc., Kathy Laff erty, Executive
Director of the South Boston
Neighborhood House and
Laila Soleimani, Outreach Specialist
at DCRâ€™s Universal Access
Program. Acting DCR Commissioner
Stephanie Cooper is also
expected to attend.
Late last spring, the Commission
decided to focus attention
on ways to increase diversity, equity
and inclusion on the Metropolitan
Regionâ€™s public beaches,
to improve access for people
of color, people with disabilities,
and people who may not
speak English as their primary
language. In May, we heard
from a diverse group of civic
leaders and community members
about ways in which we
could increase diversity on the
beaches and in our beach programming.
â€œWe
hope to do for equity,
diversity and inclusion what
we did for management and
maintenance of the Metropolitan
Beaches.â€ said State Senator
Brendan Crighton. â€œWorking together
we will provide DCR and
our communities a blueprint
for improving public access to
take these beaches from good
to great.â€
After the November 30, hearing
on improving access for
people with disabilities, in January
of 2022 the MBC will hold
a hearing on language barriers
that aff ect public safety and enjoyment
on our regionâ€™s public
beaches.
â€œOur state beaches are public
treasures that belong to all
of usâ€ said State Representative
Adrian Madaro. â€œWe need
to advance environmental justice
and center diversity, equity,
and inclusion so that people
of all backgrounds, conditions,
and abilities can enjoy them for
years to come.â€
Following that hearing, the
Commission will host a Virtual
Summit, at which they will
present their preliminary fi ndings
to a broad and diverse audience
of beach users to get their
thoughts and input. Following
the Summit, the Commission
will share a report of their
fi ndings and recommendations
with the Legislature, the Administration,
DCR and the public. It
will serve as a roadmap for improving
access and increasing
diversity, equity and inclusion
on our public beaches going
forward.
â€œThe legislative and the community
members of the Commission
hope that this hearing
will help us better understand
the challenges facing people
with disabilities on the metropolitan
beaches,â€ said Chris Mancini,
executive director of Save
the Harbor/ Save the Bay. â€œWe
are looking forward to working
together with DCR to develop
strategies to improve access to
these spectacular urban natural
resources for everyone.â€
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Page 5
Zoning Subcommittee rejects
proposal that would allow for rental
car facility on Squire Road
By Adam Swift
A
fter working hard to improve
Squire Road, city
councillors said they donâ€™t want
Enterprise Rent-A-Car to turn a
portion of the roadway into a
large car lot.
On Monday night, representatives
from Enterprise were
before the City Councilâ€™s Zoning
Subcommittee asking for a
zoning change that would allow
for an automotive/truck rental
offi ce and storage in the district
along Squire Road by special
permit. Enterprise was looking
to move its longstanding location
at 55 American Legion
Hwy. to 85 Squire Rd. The site is
a former Verizon store between
Wendyâ€™s and IHOP, according to
Nicholas Zozula, the attorney
representing Enterprise.
â€œThey need to move from
American Legion Highway because
the landlord is developing
the property at the existing
location and their lease is up,â€
said Zozula.
The attorney said 85 Squire
Rd. is in a Highway Business district
which does not allow for
the automotive rental offi ce and
storage and that his client was
asking to amend the ordinance
to allow that use by special permit.
â€œThis will allow the city to
have major oversight on any
proposal and application in the
HB district,â€ said Zozula. â€œWeâ€™ve
worked with the Planning Board
on very specifi c conditions and
restrictions â€¦ to ensure that this
type of use, which would be allowed
by special permit, does
have protections and oversight
by the city.â€
Ward 3 Councillor Arthur Guinasso
said the proposal is in the
district he represents. â€œWhat this
would do is open up that whole
area â€¦ and make it a huge parking
lot for trucks, and in my opinion,
it is not a good use for the
property,â€ said Guinasso. â€œWeâ€™ve
spent the last 15 to 20 years trying
to beautify that area; we
spent a ton of money fi xing and
beautifying that circle. We try to
work with all the businesses on
that Squire Road, but to put this
there would be an insult to everybody.â€
Guinasso
said an Enterprise
site would only create more
traffi c and congestion, especially
with another Amazon facility
slated to open up the road at the
former Showcase Cinema site.
City Council President Anthony
Zambuto said he agrees that
the Enterprise facility is not part
of his vision for Squire Road.
â€œFrankly, I consider this spot zoning
and Iâ€™m totally against it, Iâ€™m
totally against spot zoning and
Iâ€™m totally against this proposal,â€
said Zambuto.
The Zoning Subcommittee
voted unanimously not to recommend
approval of the zoning
ordinance amendment presented
by Enterprise.
MVES recruiting volunteers for
community meal sites
M
ystic Valley Elder Services
(MVES) is seeking volunteers
who have a passion for giving
back to the community as
well as the skills, knowledge and
temperament (empathy, compassion
and patience) to volunteer
in the meal site program.
Volunteers are essential to the
success of MVES, helping older
adults and adults with disabilities
live independently. MVES
is specifi cally looking for volunteers
to assist at the following
sites: the Medford Senior Center,
630 Salem St. in Malden, 910
Main St. in Melrose, the Revere
Senior Center and the Malden
Council on Aging. Meal site volunteers
work as part of a team
that contributes to the safe independence
of elders living
in the community by helping
them access nutritious and balanced
food as well as opportunities
for socialization. They set
tables and assist with some food
prep, serving and cleanup, as
well as ensure that visitors fi nd a
warm and friendly atmosphere
at any of Mystic Valley Elder Servicesâ€™
sites.
For more information on meal
site volunteer opportunities at
MVES, please call MVES Director
of Community Programs Lauren
Reid at 781-388-2382 or visit
mves.org/volunteer.
Gerry
Dâ€™Ambrosio
Attorney-at-Law
Is Your Estate in Order?
Do you have an update Will, Health
Care Proxy or Power of Attorney?
If Not, Please Call for a Free Consultation.
14 Proctor Avenue, Revere
(781) 284-5657
For Advertising
with Results,
call
The Advocate
Newspapers
at
781-286-8500
or
Info@advocatenews.net
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THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 24, 2021
~ GUEST COMMENTARY ~
The Experience to Change Things
By Anthony Dâ€™Ambrosio
T
he Covid-19 pandemic disrupted
our community in
virtually every way imaginable.
It laid bare all our societyâ€™s vulnerabilities
and inequities, as
well as the ways in which our
leaders are failing in their obligations
to Massachusetts residents.
The pandemic also accelerated
our countryâ€™s shift to online
learning, remote work, and
virtual healthcare and legal services.
Many of these changes
are never going away, and we
need leaders who thoroughly
understand them. I am the
right person to lead this district
forward as we begin to
not only recover from the pandemic
but also rebuild for the
21st century.
At Yale and the University of
Cambridge, I studied how periods
of dramatic technological
change altered Americaâ€™s culture
and economy. My classes
often drew comparisons
between the present day and
the Gilded Age, with our technology
CEOs acting as glorifi ed
robber barons. Those comparisons
are accurate but also inadequate;
the rise of big data and
mega-monopolies within the
technology industry today poses
a truly unprecedented threat
to jobs, privacy, and economic
development. We have never
8 Norwood St.
Everett
(617) 387-9810
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~ www.eight10barandgrille.com ~
Cedar impression half rounds
The Revere Police Department recently announced the addition of Offi cers Jeff Kingston and Taylor
Belschner (center). They are shown with Executive Offi cer Lt. Sean Randall and Police Chief David
Callahan. (Photo Courtesy of the Everett Police Department)
seen anything like this before.
In my private sector career, I
have worked with some of the
most innovative technology
companies in the world. The integration
of technology companies
into our economy grows
exponentially every day, which
is why it is absolutely vital that
we have representation that
understands how these companies
work and how their decisions
impact our communities.
I am the only person in this
race with the experience to secure
a real seat at the table with
the CEOs, Boards of Directors,
and key stakeholders of the
organizations that are driving
change within this state and
country. I have sat across the table
from technology executives
before, and, if elected, I will do
so again to fi ght for the interests
of our residents. The power
of workers will not be ignored.
I also have a deep background
in education. I have
served as an elected member
of the Revere School Committee,
and I played a pivotal role
in guiding the City through the
COVID-19 pandemic. At the
height of pandemic turmoil
last spring, my colleagues and
I posited a data-oriented approach
for determining how
and when to re-open schools.
During the pandemic, I made
it my mission to work directly
with students and school administrators
on developing
new strategies to overcome the
many psychological and physical
challenges that children
face today. I have observed
many of these challenges fi rsthand
while teaching public
school classes on disability and
mental health issues related
to social media and academic
performance. That is why I
joined my School Committee
colleagues in implementing
enhanced districtwide mental
health services for students. It is
clear that many of our children
are suff ering.
On the School Committee, I
also spearheaded the creation
of a citywide Equity Advisory
Board that brings together
parents, teachers, students, and
other community stakeholders
to develop creative solutions to
address educational inequities.
In developing the Board, I drew
on my previous experience as
the leader of Dwight Hall, a
3,500-person nonprofi t organiPANDEMIC
| SEE Page 19
RPD Welcomes Officers Kingston
and Belschner
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×‰	Ú 7cassandra://rFBfPV8dk1s8GNdPhZH7iN_CydagMhllYNjWo2fS7uMÍ/`Í`Ì°Í ×a“•yð=!‚ŠhÎ×‰EÚYTHE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 24, 2021
Page 7
~ LETTER-TO-THE-EDITOR ~
City shouldnâ€™t accept the
Census ghost residents
Dear Editor,
I read the Revere Advocateâ€™s
Page One story about the US
Census count of Ward 2 in Revere
and thought reporter
Adam Swift's take on those 67
"ghost" residents of that auto
body shop is a serious issue and
it would be nice if the city's Director
of Innovation stopped
taking the so-called state deadline
to accept a map as meaning
we must just do it or the
state will get mad. The state
can't force Revere to accept that
there are 67 residents living in an
auto body shop. Revere Director
of Innovation Rueben Kantor
should tell the state offi cials
that Revere has a problem with
the numbers. You only have the
power, you believe you have. If
you believe the state deadline
limits your power, it will.
US Census figures are used
to create Congressional Districts.If
the US Census is counting
"ghosts," then that could
change districts. Which municipalities
are in the 7th district,
the 5th district, etc. depends on
actual verifiable counts. How
many other ghost residents live
in auto body shops across the
Commonwealth and shouldn't
we all care?
I love reading lots of newspapers
and I think the Advocate's
take on the auto body ghosts
was on target. It is a serious issue
that needs more than a call
from a Revere city offi cial who,
by the way, says he's waiting for
a return call, one most likely never
coming.
I also liked that staff report
about Lydia Edwards on her past
endorsements by the Democratic
Socialist of America. The
Advocate is doing its job as a
community newspaper providing
readers with information beRevereTV
Spotlight
A
re you hoping to cook
some homemade meals
for the holidays? Tune in to
RevereTV to follow along with
new recipes from some local
community members. Three
cooking shows are in the lineup
at RTV this week. â€œWhatâ€™s
Cooking Revere?â€ premiered
with C hef Ahmad Karagef from
Safy Mart on Broadway. Ahmad
made a dish he calls â€œUpside
Downâ€ which is made up
of chicken, rice, and vegetables.
He also makes a dessert
called The Sweet Kunafa. This
latest episode will be replaying
on RevereTV throughout
the week, but can be found on
YouTube to view at your convenience.
Jennifer
Keefe of â€œCooking
with the Keefes,â€ was in the kitchen
studio to record a Thanksgiving
themed dessert special. This
episode can be called â€œBaking
with the Keefes!â€ Jennifer made
a few desserts like apple pie,
pumpkin pie, and a pumpkin
pie dip. These recipes came just
in time for a traditional Thanksgiving
meal! If you have been
craving some homemade pie
for your holiday gathering, catch
this rendition of â€œCooking with
the Keefesâ€ on the Community
Channel.
A new episode of â€œCooking
Made Simpleâ€ will be coming
soon. Chef Kelly Armetta recorded
a new episode of his cooking
program on Tuesday. Kelly
always cooks a multicourse
meal with a theme. Maybe heâ€™ll
be showcasing a holiday dinner
fore December 14 Election Day
arrives to know of before choosing
a candidate for state senate.
Keep up the good work and
Happy Thanksgiving day wishes
to you and your staff .
Signed,
Salvatore Giarratani
East Boston
SNOW BLOWER
SALES, SERVICE &
REPAIRS
Pickup/Delivery
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1039 BROADWAY, REVERE
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too! For all cooking shows produced
at RevereTV, tune in to
the RTV Community Channel
which is 8 and 1072 on Comcast
or 3 and 614 on RCN.
Thanksgiving week brings
more football. The Revere versus
Winthrop rivalry is still going
strong after the Annual Powderpuff
Flag Football game on
Saturday. This game is something
many students look forward
to as they become seniors.
The players practice for months
for this one game. If you missed
the game or would like to watch
a replay, RTVâ€™s coverage is posted
to YouTube and is playing on
television throughout the week.
If you missed the RHS Thanksgiving
Football Game yesterday,
the recording of the game will
also stay posted to social media
and replay on television.
The Revere City Council met
every week this month, particularly
to discuss the precinct
and ward remapping of the city.
If you would like to learn more
about the proposed plans for
the new precinct lines, you can
fi nd all of these meetings posted
to RTVâ€™s YouTube page. RevereTV
has also been airing recordings
of the School Committeeâ€™s
RHS Building Meetings
on RTV Gov. These meetings
include discussions of the
proposed plans for a new high
school. All city meetings air live
on TV and social media as they
happen, and replay on TV in the
following weeks. RTV Gov Channel
is 9 on Comcast and 13 and
613 on RCN.
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ÁPage 8
THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 24, 2021
~ POLITICAL ENDORSEMENT ~
Anthony Dâ€™Ambrosio endorsed by citywide elected officials
Mayor Arrigo is joined by current, future and previous citywide elected offi cials in endorsing
Dâ€™Ambrosioâ€™s campaign for State Senate
W
inthrop, Mass. â€“ With
his latest round of major
endorsements, Anthony
Dâ€™Ambrosio continues an unprecedented
campaign that has
united activists, elected offi cials
and leaders from across Revere.
â€œWhen I fi rst announced this
campaign, I was determined
to unite the City of Revere in a
way it hasnâ€™t been in over a generation,â€
said Dâ€™Ambrosio. â€œThe
overwhelming support that we
have received from every corner
of Revere has allowed us to work
throughout this district to bring
our unifying message to voters
who are tired of politicians beholden
to special interests. We
will work until the last minute on
Election Day to ensure that the
voices being ignored on Beacon
Hill have an advocate for them in
their next State Senator.â€
Mayor Brian Arrigo: â€œAs the
Mayor of Revere and someone
that has worked in the State
Senate, I know the transformaAnthony
Dâ€™Ambrosio and Councillor Gerry Visconti
tional impact our legislators can
have on a community. Anthony
D'Ambrosio has a unique blend
of experience and ideas that will
benefi t each and every resident
of this district. I am proud to call
him a friend and colleague and I
will do everything I possibly can
to help him be victorious in this
special Democratic Primary."
Former Mayor of Revere and
Councillor-at-Large-Elect Dan
Rizzo: â€œAs a former Mayor of Revere
and an At-Large City Councilor
I know fi rst-hand how important
it is to have colleagues
in the Legislature that will fi ght
tirelessly for their communities.
Anthony Dâ€™Ambrosio is the
clear choice in this race when it
comes to knowing how to get
things done and bring people
together for the betterment of
us ALL.â€
Councillor-at-Large Steven
Morabito: â€œAnthony Dâ€™Ambrosio
is the environmental candidate
in this race. He knows that
our next State Senator must protect
Revere Beach and our coastlines
throughout the district. He
will hold Wheelabrator, Logan
Airport and the many industries
that call our district home
accountable for the noise, air
and traffi c pollution they create.â€
Councillor-at-Large George
Rotondo: â€œAnthony Dâ€™Ambrosio
is a unifying voice that has
brought people from all walks
of life together to get big things
accomplished here in Revere. I
canâ€™t wait to see what he can do
as our next State Senator.â€
Councillor-at-Large-Elect
Anthony Dâ€™Ambrosio and Mayor Brian Arrigo
Anthony Dâ€™Ambrosio and former city councillor John
Correggio
Anthony Dâ€™Ambrosio and Councillor-Elect Dan Rizzo
×‰	Ú 7cassandra://P2CZ4501MP4v7YLeSmhXwqvHU20bdaCEqMNvUyEfCdsÍ/öÍ`Ì°Í ×a“•yð=!‚ŠhÐ×‰EÚýTHE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 24, 2021
Page 9
Mark Silvestri: â€œOver the last few
years, Iâ€™ve had an opportunity to
endorsing Anthony Dâ€™Ambrosio
for State Senate."
Member Peter Martino, former
Revere City Councillor Charlie
Patch and Chelsea City Councillor
Leo Robinson.
About Anthony: Anthony
Anthony Dâ€™Ambrosio and Councillor-Elect Marc Silvestri
Dâ€™Ambrosio is a graduate of
Yale and Cambridge Universities.
He is currently a member
of the Revere School Committee,
where he led the creation
of a districtwide Equity Advisory
Board, led the implementation
of a districtwide mental
health audit with enhanced services
for students and fought for
union and labor rights. He has
managed a 3,500-person nonprofi
t organization that provided
community-based services
ranging from early childhood
education to homelessness relief,
and he taught public school
classes on disability and mental
health issues related to social
media and academic performance.
Professionally, he has advised
on the technology sector
and growth strategies for some
of the worldâ€™s most innovative
technology companies.
Anthony Dâ€™Ambrosio and
Councillor Steve Morabito
Anthony Dâ€™Ambrosio and Councillor George Rotondo and son
Councillor-at-Large Gerry Visbuild
a professional & personal
relationship with Anthony. Anthony
is committed to continuing
to support our districtâ€™s veterans
and address the public
health issues of addiction and
homelessness. Anthonyâ€™s passion
for service is exactly what
the 1st Suff olk and Middlesex
District needs. That is why I am
conti: â€œIt has been over 30 years
since the City of Revere had a
State Senator call our community
home. Anthony Dâ€™Ambrosio
has unifi ed Revere like I have
never seen before. Together, we
can send him to the State Senate
to be the voice we need in these
uncertain times.â€
Former Councillor-at-Large
John Correggio: â€œOur next State
Senator needs to be someone
who stands with working families
and organized labor. Anthony
Dâ€™Ambrosio will be the advocate
we need in the State Senate
giving a voice to those struggling
to be heard.â€
Dâ€™Ambrosio has previously
been endorsed by the following:
the Revere Teachers Association,
Revere Fire Fighters Local
926, Winthrop Fire Fighters
Local 1070, State Representative
Jessica Giannino, former
State Representative RoseLee
Vincent, Northeast Metro Vocational
School Committee Member
Anthony Caggiano, Revere
School Committee Members
Carol Tye, Michael Ferrante
and Susan Gravellese, Revere
School Committee Member-Elect
John Kingston, former
Revere School Committee
425r Broadway
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Located adjacent to Kohls Plaza Rt. 1 South
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OUR DOORS ARE OPEN
The PETER A. ROSSETTI INSURANCE AGENCY would like to thank our
customers for their patience and loyalty during these challenging times.
î€ºîˆ î„î•îˆ î‹î„î“î“îœ î—î’ î„î‘î‘î’î˜î‘î†îˆ î’î˜î• î’ï‚ˆî†îˆ îŒî– î‘î’îš î’î“îˆî‘ î—î’ î—î‹îˆ î“î˜î…îîŒî†î€ î…î˜î— îšîˆ
will continue to practice social distancing and requiring masks.
î€©î’î• î—î‹î’î–îˆ î’î‰ îœî’î˜ îšî‹î’ î„î•îˆ î‘î’î— î‰î„îîŒîîŒî„î• îšîŒî—î‹ î’î˜î• î„îŠîˆî‘î†îœî€ î‘î’îš îŒî– î„ îŠî’î’î‡ î—îŒîîˆ
î—î’ î†î’îîˆ îŒî‘ î„î‘î‡ îîˆîˆî— î’î˜î• î–î—î„ï‚‡î€‘ î€«î’î“îˆ î—î’ î–îˆîˆ îœî’î˜ î–î’î’î‘î€„
436 Lincoln Ave, Saugus * (781) 233-1855 * www.rossettiinsurance.com
Wednesday
Thursday
Friday
Saturday
Private Parties
Private Parties
4-11 p.m.
$8.50
Everyone must pay admission after 6 p.m.
12-11 p.m.
$8.50
Everyone must pay admission after 6 p.m.
Sorry No Checks
Inline Skate Rentals $3.00 additional
Roller skate rentals included in all prices
BIRTHDAY & PRIVATE PARTIES AVAILABLE
www.roller-world.com
School Vacation Weeks 12-8 p.m.
$10.00
Sunday
Monday
Tuesday
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THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 24, 2021
Hereâ€™s wishing you a Thanksgiving holiday complete
with all the trimmings - good food, good friends, and good times.
City Councillor-at-Large &
State Representative
Jessica
Ann
Giannino
City Council President
Anthony
Zambuto
School Board Member
Carol Tye
School Board Member
Michael
Ferrante
Ward 4 Councillor
Patrick
Keefe
Ward 2 Councillor
Ira
Novoselsky
Mayor
Brian
Arrigo
& Family
School Board Member &
candidate for State Senate
Anthony
Dâ€™Ambrosio
Ward 6 Councillor
Richard â€œRicky
Serino
Councillor-at-Large
Steven
School Board Member
Morabito
Susan
Gravellese
Ward 1 Councillor
Joanne
McKenna
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Page 11
Hereâ€™s wishing you a Thanksgiving holiday complete
with all the trimmings - good food, good friends, and good times.
Visconti
Councillor-at-Large
Gerry
Councillor-at-Large-Elect
Marc
Silvestri
Wishing you the best
for a healthy and happy
Thanksgiving.
BOSTON â€“ The MBTA is aggressively
hiring new employees
to join its dynamic workforce.
It takes many people
to move over a million trips
a day, and the 6,500-person
MBTA is redoubling eff orts to
hire hundreds of open positions
â€“ from train and trolley
operators, to administrative
and technical positions, and
especially bus drivers who are
in high demand to transport
Massachusetts residents to
work, play, and everywhere in
between. Prospective candidates
looking for a rewarding
career where they can have a
positive impact on the entire
region should visit mbta.com/
careers for more information
on open positions and to learn
about the MBTAâ€™s many benefi
ts and incentives.
â€œThe MBTA plays an integral
and essential role in keeping
Massachusetts moving. The T
is a diverse and exciting place
to work, and weâ€™re actively
hiring and training new employees,
especially bus drivers,
right now to join our ranks
and play a signifi cant part in
revitalizing the region post
pandemic,â€ said MBTA General
Manager Steve Poftak. â€œThe
MBTA is being proactive in recruiting
new individuals to join
our team and fast-tracking the
hiring process, and will continue
to work closely with local
and state career centers and
our community partners to
recruit new individuals to join
our team. We off er a variety of
growth opportunities to employees
and encourage members
of the public to visit our
website to learn more about
our many open positions and
beginning their career at the T.â€
The MBTA has gone to over
20 online and in-person career
fairs across the region this
fall and is updating the way
it hires to make it easier and
faster to start a T career, including
Commercial Driverâ€™s
License (CDL) permit â€œeventsâ€
at Registry of Motor Vehicle
locations (CDL permits are
encouraged in applying for
bus operator positions), a revamp
of the interview process,
streamlining the application
process, and more. The T has
also launched an aggressive
recruitment campaign, more
than doubling the size of its
Councillor-at-Large
George
Rotondo
Ward 5 Councillor-Elect
Al
Fiore
100 Salem Turnpike, Saugus, MA 01906
win-waste.com
Start the New Year with a New Career at the MBTA
Human Resources recruiting
department since Labor Day
2021 with more anticipated to
join soon. A Human Resources
team was also recently created
that is dedicated to vehicle
operator hiring, especially
MBTA bus operators.
The MBTA off ers competitive
salaries, extensive healthcare
benefi ts, free public transit,
training programs, tuition
assistance, employee assistance
programs, and an emphasis
on diversity, equity, and
inclusion. MBTA employees
also receive attractive retirement
plans, paid vacation, holidays,
and sick time, and fl exible
spending accounts. Members
of the public can view
open positions online and visit
the MBTA website for more
information on insurance and
other benefi ts.
The MBTA envisions a thriving
region enabled by a bestin-class
transit system. The
MBTAâ€™s mission is to serve the
public by providing safe, reliable,
and accessible transportation,
and holds core values
built around safety, service,
equity, and sustainability.
Each employee that works for
the MBTA performs their roles
based on our vision, mission,
and values. The MBTA is an Affi
rmative Action/Equal Opportunity
Employer.
For full information on starting
a career at the T, visit mbta.
com/careers, or connect with
the T on Twitter @MBTA, Facebook
/TheMBTA, or Instagram
@theMBTA.
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THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 24, 2021
Introducing the RHS Powder Puff Lady Patriots
Off ense, pictured from left to right: First row: Carolina Carvalho-Bettero,
Skyla DeSimone, Amara Ruzzo, Rhayssa de
Souza Novo and Isabely Usero; second row: Maressa Nunes
Oliveira, Michelle Carvajal Jimenez, Maajda Louaddi, Lillian
Murcia Calderon, Gianna Mahoney and Lorina Tran.
Captains, shown from left to right: Skyla DeSimone,
Maressa Nunes Oliveira, Rhayssa de Souza Novo and Ana
Santos. (Advocate photos by Tara Vocino)
Starting Lineup: Quarterback Amara Ruzzo and
Center Rhayssa de Souza Novo during Saturdayâ€™s
Powder Puff game against Winthrop at
Miller Field
Defense, pictured from left to right: First row: Ana Santos, Trinity Sim, Amira Sekkat
and Lina Tran; second row: Isabella Correia, Dianne Mancio, Mariana Chavarriaga,
Maressa Nunes Oliveira, Gianna Mahoney, Astrid Noriega and Angela Huynh.
The Revere High School Powder Puff Patriots during their game against the Winthrop Vikings on Saturday, pictured from left to right: fi rst row: Trinity Sim, Amara
Ruzzo, Skyla DeSimone, Ana Santos, Astrid Noriega, Lina Tran and Angela Huynh; second row: Mariana Chavarriaga, Gianna Mahoney, Amira Sekkat, Maressa Nunes
Oliveria, Rhayssa de Souza Novo, Dianne Mancio and Isabella Correia; third row: Asst. Coaches Jason Torrey and Erin Tucker, Carolina Carvalho-Bettero, Lillian Murcia
Calderon, Lorina Tran, Maajda Louaddi, Michelle Carvajal Jimenez, Isabely Usero, Head Coach Becky Coots and Asst. Coach Justin Pezzuto.
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Page 13
PATS | FROM Page 1
Div. 6 playoff s and blew away
Western Mass. opponent South
Hadley in the opening round.
Winthropâ€™s postseason ended
with a very close 37-34 loss to
Rockland in the quarterfi nal.
The Thanksgiving contest is
set for 10 a.m. at Harry Della
Russo Stadium. Revere is looking
for its usual strong off ensive
performances from quarterback
Anwar Marbouh, running backs
Davi Barreto and Mark Marchese
and receivers Sami El Asri and
Domenic Boudreau. On defense,
Augusto Goncalves and Max
Doucette, who both were recognized
by the media for their
strong eff orts in last weekâ€™s 28-0
win over Belmont, and linebacker
Chris Cassidy help lead a Patriots
defense that has surrendered
just 12 points in the last
three contests.
The Revere-Winthrop Thanksgiving
game is one of the oldest
in the state. It dates back to 1913
(more than a century), with the
Vikings owning a resounding
56-31 series advantage. There
have been three ties.
In recent years, the Patriots
have come out on top. Revere
has four straight victories going
back to 2016. A victory on
Thanksgiving would mean a
second four-game win streak for
Revere this season, sandwiched
around its two defeats.
Cicatelli said his squad will
RB/LB Mark Marchese
Quarterback Anwar Marbouh
be ready to go. â€œItâ€™s going to
be a good football game. [Winthrop]
is very good,â€ he said. Entering
the game, Revere sports
an overall 20-4 record since
2019.
Meet the 2021-2022 Revere Patriots Football Team: Pictured in no particular order: Freshmen Jesus Ascencio, Nico Aguirre and Isaiah DeCrosta. Sophomores: Carlos
Rizzo Jr., Ahmed Bellemseih, Ilyass Lfalaki, Zaraius Degamwalla, Javan Close, Sachin Neapane, Patrick Keefe, Rafael Teixeira, Brayan Lemus and Adam Aguaouz. Juniors:
Davi Barreto, Sami El Asri, Max Doucette, Domenic Boudreau and Jason Shosho, Christopher Cassidy, Samuel Palacio, Adam Aguaouz, Michael Toto and Juelz
Acevedo, and seniors Sylis Davis, Angel Ceja, Steven Ticlayauri, â€œMoeâ€ Hussein, Filipe Cotta, Hamza Ghoul, Iqbal Butt and Ricardo Goncalves. Standing, from left to
right: Head Coach Louis Cicatelli, Mohammed Laareg, Thomas Desir, Mark Marchese, Anwar Marbouh, Augusto Goncalves, Wilmer Mejia Rodriguez, Elmahdi El Kaouakibi
and Juan Londono-Marin. The team is coached by: Head Coach Louis Cicatelli (fourth from left) and Asst. Coaches Vin Gregorio, Paul Norton, Scott Wlasuk, Daniel
Murphy, Brandon Brito and Daniel DiCristoforo.
î…î¨î„
1
2
3
4
6
8
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
27
28
30
î…î€„î„î€œ
Goncalves, Ricardo
Davis, Sylis
El Asri, Sami
Merida, Addison
Barreto, Davi
î„î„‚î†Œî„î…½î†µî…šî• î€„î…¶î‡î„‚î†Œ
î„î„‚î†Œî„î…šî„žî†î„žî• î„î„‚î†Œî…¬
Rizo Jr., Carlos
Londono-Marin, Juan
Bellemsieh, Ahmed
î€¾î„¨î„‚î…¯î„‚î…¬î…î• î…¯î…¯î‡‡î„‚î†î†
Ticlayauri Agudelo, Steven
18 Goncalves, Augusto- Captain
î€˜î„žî€’î†Œî…½î†î†šî„‚î• î€¯î†î„‚î…î„‚î…š
Cassidy, Christopher
Boudreau, Domenic
Ghoul, Hamza
î€„î†šî…½î†µî…î• î€„î„î„î„‚î†
2021 â€“ REVERE HIGH SCHOOL PATRIOTS
POS
6â€™2â€ 200 TE/DE SR
5â€™7â€ 145 TB/DB SR
5â€™10â€ 165 WR/DB JR
5â€™7â€ 160 RB/DB SR
5â€™10â€ 175 TB/DB JR
7 Rodriguez Mejia, Wilmer- Captain 5â€™8â€ 165 TB/DB SR
î€’î…½î†©î„‚î• î€¦î…î…¯î…î†‰î„ž
YR î…î¨î„
31
32
33
35
42
44
î…î€„î„î€œ
Bilmoria, Zaraius
Close, Javan
Acevedo, Juelz
î€‘î†µî†©î• î€¯î†‹î„î„‚î…¯
5â€™7â€ 180 TB/LB SR 50
5â€™9â€ 180 QB/LB SR 52
5â€™10â€ 175 RB/LB SR 54
5â€™10â€ 185 QB/LB SO 55
6â€™0â€ 155 TE/DE SR
î„î„‚î†Œî†Ÿî…¶î„žî‡Œ î€§î„‚î†Œî„î…î„‚î• î€˜î„žî†Œî„žî…¬
Neaupane, Sachin
Hussein, Mudathir
Shosho, Jason
58
5â€™7â€ 140 RB/DB SO 59
5â€™9â€ 170 TE/DE SO 60
5â€™7â€ 140 WR/DB SR
6â€™1â€ 200 TE/DE SR
5â€™8â€ 145 WR/DB FR
5â€™7â€ 145 RB/LB JR
5â€™10â€ 150 RB/LB JR
Laareg, Mohammed Amine 6â€™3â€ 155 QB/DB SR
6â€™1â€ 210 TE/DE SR
î€‘î„žî…¶î…¬î…î†Œî„‚î…¶î„žî• î¿î„‚î…¬î„‚î†Œî…î„‚
Smith, Chase
î„î„‚î„šî†Œî…î…î„‚î…¯ î„î„‚î†Œî†Ÿî…¶î„žî‡Œî• î€˜î…î„žî…î…½
Chahid, Youness
5â€™7â€ 160 RB/LB SO 73
5â€™7â€ 140 RB/DB SO 81
5â€™7â€ 140 QB/LB SO 83
5â€™7â€ 140 WR/DB SO 84
5â€™7â€ 140 WR/DB FR
61
62
63
65
66
67
70
î€˜î…½î†µî„î„žî†©î„žî• î„î„‚î‡†î² î€’î„‚î†‰î†šî„‚î…î…¶
î€¼î„žî„žî„¨î„žî• î—î„‚î†šî†Œî…î„î…¬
î¤î„žî…î‡†î„žî…î†Œî„‚î• îšî„‚î„¨î„‚î„žî…¯
Lemus, Brayan
Rodriguez, Walter
î³î„‚î†î†‹î†µî„žî‡Œî• î€ºî…½î„žî…¯
Aguaouz, Adam
î„î„žî†šî„‚î‡î„žî„‚î• î€„î„šî„‚î…µ
î€’î„‚î†Œî„‚î„î„‚î…¯î…¯î…½î• î€ºî…½î†Œî…î„ž
Franco Palacio, Samuel
Ceja, Angel
Ascensio Hernandez, Jesus
î€œî…¯ î€¼î„‚î…½î†µî„‚î…¬î…î„î…î• î€œî…¯î…µî„‚î…šî„šî…î² î€’î„‚î†‰î†šî„‚î…î…¶
î„î„‚î…¯î…¬î…î• î€¬î„‚î…¬î…î…µ
Vilme, Richard
Rodriguez, Randy
HT. î´î¤î˜
HT. î´î¤î˜
POS
YEAR
5â€™7â€ 140 RB/DB SO
6â€™1â€ 155 WR/DB so
5â€™7â€ 145 RB/DB JR
5â€™9â€ 170 G/LB SR
5â€™8â€ 145 WR/DB FR
5â€™7â€ 130 WR/DB SO
5â€™10â€ 230 G/DT SR
5â€™9â€ 215 G/LB JR
6â€™1â€ 210 G/LB JR
5â€™10â€ 260 OT/DT SO
5â€™8â€ 160 OT/DT SO
5â€™8â€ 160 OT/DT SO
5â€™10â€ 165 OT/DT SO
5â€™10â€ 225 OT/DT FR
5â€™8â€ 160 C/DT SO
5â€™8â€ 150 G/DT FR
6â€™0â€ 185 OT/DT JR
5â€™9â€ 215 OT/DT SR
5â€™8â€ 165 G/LB SR
5â€™7â€ 170 OT/DT FR
6â€™3â€ 295 OT/DT SR
5â€™8â€ 155 TE/LB SO
6â€™1â€ 160 WR/DE SO
5â€™8â€ 140 WR/DB FR
Head Coach: Louis Cicatelli
î€„î†î†î†šî˜ î€’î…½î„‚î„î…šî„žî†î— î³î…î…¶ î€§î†Œî„žî…î…½î†Œî…î…½î• î—î„‚î†µî…¯ î…î…½î†Œî†šî…½î…¶î• îžî„î…½î†© î´î…¯î„‚î†µî†î…¬ î€˜î„‚î…¶ î„î†µî†Œî†‰î…šî‡‡î•
î€‘î†Œî„‚î…¶î„šî…½î…¶ î€‘î†Œî…î†šî…½î• î€˜î„‚î…¶î…¶î‡‡ î€˜î„žî€’î†Œî…î†î†šî…½î„¨î…½î†Œî…½
î€„î†šî…šî…¯î„žî†Ÿî„ î€˜î…î†Œî„žî„î†šî…½î†Œî— î„î†Œî˜ î€¦î†Œî„‚î…¶î…¬ îžî…šî„žî„‚
î—î†Œî…î…¶î„î…î†‰î„‚î…¯î— î€ºî…½î…šî…¶ î—î„žî†Œî„žî…¯î…¯î„‚
îžî†µî†‰î„žî†Œî…î…¶î†šî„žî…¶î„šî„žî…¶î†šî— î€˜î†Œî˜ î€˜î…î„‚î…¶î…¶î„ž î€¼î„žî…¯î…¯î‡‡
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THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 24, 2021
Massachusetts Unemployment & Job Estimates for October
BOSTON, MA - The stateâ€™s October
total unemployment rate
increased by one-tenth of a percentage
point at 5.3 percent, the
Executive Offi ce of Labor and
Workforce Development announced
Friday.
The Bureau of Labor Statisticsâ€™
preliminary job estimates
indicate Massachusetts gained
25,000 jobs in October. This follows
last monthâ€™s revised gain of
13,500 jobs. The largest over the
month private sector job gains
were in Professional, Scientifi c,
and Business Services, Leisure
and Hospitality, and Educational
and Health Services. Since December
2020, Massachusetts
has gained 186,500 jobs.
From October 2020 to October
2021, BLS estimates Massachusetts
gained 197,200 jobs.
The Largest over the year gains
occurred in Leisure and Hospitality;
Professional, Scientific,
and Business Services; and
Trade, Transportation and Utilities.
The
October unemployment
rate was 0.7 percentage point
above the national rate of 4.6
percent reported by the Bureau
of Labor Statistics.
The labor force increased by
5,600 from 3,720,700 in September,
as 1,600 more residents
were employed and 4,000 more
residents were unemployed
over the month.
Over the year, the stateâ€™s seasonally
adjusted unemployment
rate was down by 3.2 percentage
points.
The stateâ€™s labor force participation
rate â€“ the total number
of residents 16 or older who
worked or were unemployed
and actively sought work in the
last four weeks â€“ was up onetenth
of a percentage point at
66.0 percent. Compared to October
2020, the labor force participation
rate is up 0.7 percentage
points.
October 2021 Employment
Overview
Professional and Business
Services gained 9,700 (+1.6%)
jobs over the month. Over the
year, 43,400 (+7.6%) jobs were
added.
Leisure and Hospitality
gained 4,900 (+1.6%) jobs over
the month. Over the year, 51,100
(+19.7%) jobs were added.
Education and Health Services
gained 4,900 jobs (+0.6%)
jobs over the month. Over the
year, 26,000 (+3.5%) jobs were
added.
Trade, Transportation and
Utilities gained 4,600 (+0.8%)
over the month. Over the year,
26,300 (+4.9%) jobs were added.
Manufacturing gained 1,100
(0.5%) jobs over the month.
Over the year, 9,400 (+4.1%) jobs
were added.
Information gained 700
(+0.8%) jobs over the month.
Over the year, 7,000 (+8.1%) jobs
were added.
Construction gained 500
(+0.3%) jobs over the month.
Over the year, 11,300 (+7.2%)
jobs were added.
Other Services gained 200
(+0.2%) jobs over the month.
Over the year, 5,100 (+4.5%) jobs
were added.
Financial Activities lost 700
(+0.3%) jobs over the month.
Over the year, 1,500 (+0.7%) jobs
were added.
Government lost 900 (-0.2%)
jobs over the month. Over the
year, 16,100 (+3.8%) jobs were
added.
Labor Force Overview
The October estimates show
3,529,400 Massachusetts residents
were employed and
196,900 were unemployed, for
a total labor force of 3,726,300.
The unemployment rate was
up one-tenth of a percentage
point at 5.3 percent. Over the
month, the October labor force
was up by 5,600 from 3,720,700
in September, with 1,600 more
residents employed and 4,000
more residents unemployed.
The labor force participation
rate, the share of working age
population employed and unemployed,
was up by 0.1 percentage
point at 66.0 percent.
The labor force was up 38,000
from the October 2020 estimate
of 3,688,300, as 156,100 more
residents were employed and
JOBS | SEE Page 17
The Naughty List: BBBâ€™s 12 Scams of Christmas
W
hile 2021 is winding down,
scams targeting the public
continue to cause trouble. Consumers
should watch out for any
fraudulent schemes aimed at
swiping their cash and stealing
personal information.
The Better Business Bureau
(BBB) has a Naughty List with
the top 12 scams of Christmas
that are most likely to catch consumers
and donors off guard
during this season. Many of the
scams on this list are facilitated
through emails and social media
platforms; however, the latter is
where most people are vulnerable.
Exercise caution when coming
across social media ads about
discounted items, event promotions,
job opportunities and donation
requests, as well as direct
messages from strangers. If you
are asked to make a payment or
donation by wire or e-transfer,
through third parties, by prepaid
debit or gift cards, treat this
as a red fl ag.
Be mindful of these scams that
could cut into your holiday cheer
and BBBâ€™s tips to avoid them:
1. Misleading Social Media
Ads: As you scroll through your
social media feed, you often see
items for sale from a small business.
Sometimes the business
even claims to support a charity
to try to get you to order, or they
off er a free trial. BBB Scam Tracker
receives reports of people paying
for items that they never receive,
getting charged monthly
for a free trial they never signed
up for or receiving an item that
is counterfeit or much diff erent
from the one advertised. The
2020 BBB Scam Tracker Risk Report
found that online purchase
scams were the most common
cons reported to Scam Tracker
and the category with the most
victims. Do your homework and
research the company before ordering.
Check out the business
profi le on BBB.org and read the
reviews.
2. Social Media Gift Exchanges:
Each holiday season this
scheme pops back up, and this
year is no diff erent. A newer version
of this scam revolves around
exchanging bottles of wine; another
suggests purchasing $10
gifts online; another twist asks
you to submit your email into
a list where participants get to
pick a name and send money
to strangers to â€œpay it forward.â€
There is even a twist about â€œSecret
Santa Dogâ€ where you buy
a $10 gift for your â€œsecret dog.â€
In all of these versions, participants
unwittingly share their
personal information, along
with those of their family members
and friends, and are further
tricked into buying and shipping
gifts or money to unknown individuals.
And â€“ itâ€™s an illegal pyramid
scheme.
3. Holiday Apps: Appleâ€™s App
Store and Google Play list dozens
of holiday-themed apps where
children can video chat live with
Santa, light the menorah, watch
Santa feed live reindeer, track his
sleigh on Christmas Eve or relay
their holiday wish lists. This holiday
season, like last year when
COVID-19 caused children to
skip the traditional in-person visit
with Santa, apps may play a more
important role than ever. Review
privacy policies to see what information
will be collected. Be wary
of free apps, as they can sometimes
contain more advertising
than apps that require a nominal
fee. Free apps can also contain
malware.
4. Alerts About Compromised
Accounts: BBB has been receiving
reports on Scam Tracker
about a con claiming your Amazon,
PayPal, Netfl ix or bank account
has been compromised.
Victims receive an email, call or
text message which explains
that there has been suspicious
activity on one of their accounts,
and it further urges them to take
immediate action to prevent
the account from being compromised.
Be extra cautious
about unsolicited calls, emails
and texts.
5. Free Gift Cards: Nothing
brings good cheer like the
word free. Scammers have been
known to take advantage of
this weakness by sending bulk
phishing emails requesting personal
information to receive
free gift cards. In some of these
emails, scammers impersonate
legitimate companies, like Starbucks,
and promise gift cards
to loyal customers who have
been supporting their business
throughout the pandemic. They
might also use pop-up ads or
send text messages with links
saying you were randomly selected
as the winner of a prize.
If you have received an unsolicited
email with gift card off ers,
do not open it. Instead, mark it as
Spam or Junk. However, if you
opened the email, do not click
on any links.
6. Temporary Holiday Jobs:
Retailers typically hire seasonal
workers to help meet the demands
of holiday shoppers.
Shippers and delivery services
are top holiday employers this
year because of the increase in
online orders and the need to
get most of these packages delivered
before Christmas. These
jobs are a great way to make
extra money, sometimes with
the possibility of turning into
a long-term employment opportunity;
however, jobseekers
need to be wary of employment
scams aimed at stealing money
and personal information from
job applicants. Keep an eye out
for opportunities that seem too
good to be true.
7. Look-Alike Websites: The
holiday season brings endless
emails off ering deals, sales and
bargains. Be wary of emails with
links enclosed. Some might lead
to look-alike websites created by
scammers to trick people into
downloading malware, making
dead-end purchases and sharing
private information. If you
are uncertain about the email,
do not click any of the links. Instead,
hover over them to see
where they reroute.
8. Fake Charities: Typically,
40 percent of all charitable donations
are received during the
last few weeks of the year; however,
due to the COVID-19 pandemic,
many organizations had
to cancel their usual fundraising
events and awareness campaigns
and are now inviting donors
to support online. Donors
are advised to look out for fraudulent
charities and scammers
pretending to be individuals in
need. Avoid impromptu donation
decisions to unfamiliar organizations.
Responsible organizations
will welcome a gift tomorrow
as much as they do today.
Verify a charity at BBBâ€™s give.
org. Where possible, donate to
the charity through their website
and use a credit card.
9. Fake Shipping Notifications:
More consumers are making
purchases online; there is
also an increase in the number
of notifi cations about shipping
details from retailers and carriers.
Scammers are using this new
surge to send phishing emails
with links enclosed that might
allow unwanted access to your
private information or download
malware onto your device. They
might also try to trick people
into paying new shipping fees.
10. Pop Up Holiday Virtual
Events: This year many local
in-person events, such as popup
holiday markets or craft fairs,
have moved online. Scammers
are creating fake event pages,
social media posts and emails
â€“ charging admission for what
used to be a free event. The goal
is to steal credit card information.
Confi rm with the organizer
of the event if there is an admission
fee. In the cases where there
is a charge, use a credit card. If
the event is free, watch for scammers
trying to claim otherwise.
11. Top Holiday Wish List
Items: Low or ridiculously priced
luxury goods, jewelry, designer
clothing, and electronics are
almost always cheap counterfeits
and knockoffs. This year
the Galactic Snackinâ€™ Grogu Animatronic
(aka Baby Yoda) and
game consoles are some of the
items in high demand. Be very
cautious when considering purchasing
these high-value items
from individuals through social
sites.
12. Puppy Scams: Many families,
especially those with children,
might be considering to
add a furry friend to their household
this year; however, you
could fall victim to a pet scam,
which are on the rise this year.
Request to see the pet in person
before making a purchase.
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Page 15
Does Medicare Cover
Mobility Scooters or
Wheelchairs?
Dear Savvy Senior,
I have arthritis in my hips and knees and have a diffi cult time
getting around anymore. What do I need to do to get a Medicarecovered
electric-powered scooter or wheelchair?
Need a Ride
Dear Need,
If youâ€™re enrolled in original
Medicare, getting an electricpowered
mobility scooter or
wheelchair thatâ€™s covered by
Medicare starts with a visit to
your doctorâ€™s offi ce.
If eligible, Medicare will pay
80 percent of the cost, after
youâ€™ve met your Part B deductible
($203 in 2021). You will be
responsible for the remaining
20 percent unless you have supplemental
insurance. Hereâ€™s a
breakdown of how it works.
Schedule an Appointment
Your fi rst step is to call your
doctor or primary care provider
and schedule a Medicare required,
face-to-face mobility
evaluation to determine your
need for a power scooter or
wheelchair. For you to be eligible,
youâ€™ll need to meet all of the
following conditions:
Your health condition makes
moving around your home very
diffi cult, even with the help of a
cane, crutch, walker or manual
wheelchair.
You have signifi cant problems
performing activities of daily living
like bathing, dressing, getting
in or out of a bed or chair,
or using the bathroom.
You are able to safely operate,
and get on and off the scooter
or wheelchair, or have someone
with you who is always available
to help you safely use the
device.
If eligible, your doctor will determine
what kind of mobility
equipment youâ€™ll need based on
your condition, usability in your
home, and ability to operate it.
Itâ€™s also important to know
that Medicare coverage is dependent
on your needing a
scooter or wheelchair in your
home. If your claim is based on
needing it outside your home, it
will be denied as not medically
necessary, because the wheelchair
or scooter will be considered
a leisure item.
Where to Buy
If your doctor determines you
need a power scooter or wheelchair,
he or she will fi ll out a written
order or prescription. Once
you receive it, youâ€™ll need to
take it to a Medicare approved
supplier within 45 days. To fi nd
Medicare approved suppliers
in your area, visit Medicare.gov/
medical-equipment-suppliers or
call 800-633-4227.
There are, however, circumstances
where you may need
â€œprior authorizationâ€ for certain
types of power wheelchairs. In
this case, youâ€™ll need permission
from Medicare before you
can get one.
Financial Aid
If you have a Medicare supplemental
(Medigap) policy, it
may pick up some, or all of the
20 percent cost of the scooter or
wheelchair thatâ€™s not covered by
Medicare. If, however, you donâ€™t
have supplemental insurance,
and canâ€™t aff ord the 20 percent,
you may be able to get help
through Medicare Savings Programs.
Call your local Medicaid
offi ce for eligibility information.
Or, if you fi nd that youâ€™re not
eligible for a Medicare covered
scooter or wheelchair, and you
canâ€™t afford to purchase one,
renting can be a much cheaper
short-term solution. Talk to a
supplier about this option.
For more information about
power mobility devices call
Medicare at 800-633-4227 or
visit Medicare.gov/coverage/
wheelchairs-scooters.
Medicare Advantage
If you happen to have a Medicare
Advantage plan (like an
HMO or PPO), youâ€™ll need to call
your plan to fi nd out the specific
steps you need to take to get
a power-wheelchair or scooter.
Many Advantage plans have
specific suppliers within the
planâ€™s network theyâ€™ll require
you to use.
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.
Public Hearing on Improving
Beach Access for People With
Disabilities on November 30
Floating wheelchairs and mobility mats made it possible for the Wallis family to enjoy a day at the
beach this summer thanks to Save the Harbor/Save the Bayâ€™s Better Beaches Program and Triangle,
Inc.
O
n Tuesday, November 30, at
10:00 AM, the Metropolitan
Beaches Commission and Save
the Harbor/Save the Bay will
convene a Virtual Public Hearing
focused on improving access
for people with disabilities
on the Commonwealthâ€™s public
beaches in Lynn, Nahant, Revere,
Winthrop, East Boston, South Boston,
Dorchester, Quincy and Hull.
The public is welcome to join
us to share their thoughts on
what is working and what we
can do better. You can register for
the hearing by following this link
https://us02web.zoom.us/meeting/register/tZUtfuqgrj0sG9TqjeIa1rCNfl
HCx69GR_mF
At the hearing we expect to
hear from members of the disability
community as well as a
panel of experts including; Ellen
Attaliades, President and CEO of
the Association of Developmental
Disabilities Providers (ADDP),
Kristen McCosh, Commissioner
of the Boston Disabilities Commission,
Coleman Nee, Chief Executive
Offi cer of Triangle, Inc., Kathy
Lafferty, Executive Director of
the South Boston Neighborhood
House and Laila Soleimani, Outreach
Specialist at DCRâ€™s Universal
Access Program. Acting DCR Commissioner
Stephanie Cooper is
also expected to attend.
For more information about
the MBC or the hearing, please
contact Save the Harbor's Executive
Director Chris Mancini by
email to mancini@savetheharbor.org
or on his cell at (617) 9096667,
or their Director of Strategy
& Communications Bruce Berman
by email to bruce@bostonharbor.com
or on his cell at 617293-6243.
About
the Metropolitan
Beaches Commission
The Metropolitan Beaches
Commission is a permanent Commission
charged with making
fi ndings and recommendations
to the Legislature and the Department
of Conservation & Recreation
(DCR) on ways to improve
the metropolitan region's public
beaches. It was established by
the Massachusetts Legislature in
2006 and is led and managed by
Save the Harbor/Save the Bay. You
can fi nd more information about
the MBC on Save the Harbor/Save
the Bay's website, and download
copies of our previous reports at
https://www.savetheharbor.org/
mbc-archives.
Late last spring the Commission
decided to focus attention
on ways to increase diversity, equity
and inclusion on the Metropolitan
Regionâ€™s public beaches,
to improve access for people
of color, people with disabilities,
and people who may not speak
English as their primary language.
In May, we heard from a diverse
group of civic leaders and community
members about ways in
which we could increase diversity
on the beaches and in our beach
programming.
â€œWe hope to do for equity, diversity
and inclusion what we
did for management and maintenance
of the Metropolitan Beaches.â€
said Commission Co-Chair
Senator Brendan Crighton of
Lynn. â€œWorking together we will
provide DCR and our communities
a blueprint for improving
public access to take these beaches
from good to great.â€
After the November 30th
hearing
on improving access for people
with disabilities, in January of
2022 the MBC will hold a hearing
on language barriers that aff ect
public safety and enjoyment on
our regionâ€™s public beaches.
â€œOur state beaches are public
treasures that belong to all of usâ€
said Commission Co-Chair Representative
Adrian Madaro of
East Boston. â€œWe need to advance
environmental justice and center
diversity, equity, and inclusion so
that people of all backgrounds,
conditions, and abilities can enjoy
them for years to come.â€
Following that hearing, the
Commission will host a Virtual
Summit, at which they will present
their preliminary fi ndings to
a broad and diverse audience of
beach users to get their thoughts
and input. Following the Summit,
the Commission will share a report
of their fi ndings and recommendations
with the Legislature,
the Administration, DCR and the
public. It will serve as a roadmap
for improving access and increasing
diversity, equity and inclusion
on our public beaches going
forward.
â€œThe legislative and the community
members of the Commission
hope that this hearing
will help us better understand
the challenges facing people
with disabilities on the metropolitan
beaches,â€ said Chris Mancini,
Executive Director of Save
the Harbor/ Save the Bay. â€œWe
are looking forward to working
together with DCR to develop
strategies to improve access to
these spectacular urban natural
resources for everyone.â€
For more information about
the MBC or the hearing, please
contact Save the Harbor's Executive
Director Chris Mancini by
email to mancini@savetheharbor.org
or on his cell at (617) 9096667,
or their Director of Strategy
& Communications Bruce Berman
by email to bruce@bostonharbor.com
or on his cell at 617293-6243.
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THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 24, 2021
What you should know about
deer and COVID-19
T
he Massachusetts Division
of Fisheries and Wildlife
(MassWildlife) has been receiving
inquiries from hunters
and others regarding COVID-19
and its eff ect on deer and other
wildlife. While experts are still
learning about this virus, currently
there is no evidence that
wildlife might be a source of infection
for people in the United
States, and there is no evidence
that you can get COVID-19
by preparing or eating
food, including hunted wild
game meat.
Research
As a novel emerging disease,
research is ongoing for COVID-19
and its impacts on wildlife.
Multiple studies have found
COVID-19 antibodies in wild
North American mammals, including
white-tailed deer. New
studies are showing that wild
deer have contracted multiple
strains of COVID-19 from humans,
and Ohio State University
recently found active infection
in wild Ohio deer using
polymerase chain reaction
(PCR) tests. Experimental
research with captive deer
has shown that COVID-19 can
spread among deer; however,
deer are only contagious for a
short duration (less than seven
days).
Transmission risks
The risk for transmission from
deer to humans is likely very
low due to the outdoor aspect
of hunting and the short period
of time deer are contagious
with the virus. COVID-19 is primarily
transmitted by inhaling
aerosolized droplets. These
droplets can come from respiration
or from the digestive tract.
Currently:
â€¢ The transmission mode from
humans to white-tailed deer is
unknown.
â€¢ There have been no known
cases of humans contracting
COVID-19 from deer.
â€¢ There is no evidence people
can contract COVID-19 by eating
wild game.
Tips for handling and preparing
game
To minimize the transmission
risk of diseases, MassWildlife
always recommends hunters
use best practices for processing
game:
â€¢ Avoid handling or consuming
wild animals that appear
sick or those found dead.
â€¢ Wear gloves and a face
shield when handling, field
dressing, and processing game.
â€¢ When possible, process your
game outdoors or in a well-ventilated
location.
â€¢ Use caution and minimize
contact with the brain or spinal
tissues. Out of an abundance of
caution for COVID-19, additional
preventative measures include
avoiding the head, lungs
and digestive tract.
â€¢ Handle knives carefully to
prevent accidental cuts.
â€¢ Wash hands thoroughly
with soap and warm water after
handling carcasses and before
and after handling meat.
â€¢ Thoroughly sanitize all tools
and work surfaces used during
processing with a bleach solution
(one tablespoon of bleach
to one gallon water). Consider
keeping a separate set of
knives used only for butchering
game.
â€¢ Cook game meat thoroughly
to an internal temperature of
165 degrees to kill pathogens.
AG Healey co-leads
nationwide investigation
into Instagramâ€™s impact
on young people
M
assachusetts Attorney
General Maura Healey
recently announced that she
is co-leading a bipartisan, nationwide
investigation into
Meta Platforms, Inc., formerly
known as Facebook, for providing
and promoting its social media
platform Instagram to children
and young adults despite
knowing that such use is associated
with physical and mental
health harms. Attorneys general
across the country are examining
whether the company violated
state consumer protection
laws and put the public at risk.
â€œFacebook, now Meta, has
failed to protect young people
on its platforms and instead
chose to ignore or, in some cases,
double down on known
manipulations that pose a real
threat to physical and mental
health â€“ exploiting children in
the interest of profi t,â€ said Healey.
â€œAs Attorney General it is
my job to protect young people
from these online harms. I am
co-leading a nationwide coalition
to get to the bottom of this
companyâ€™s engagement with
young users, identify any unlawful
practices, and end these
abuses for good. Meta can no
longer ignore the threat that
social media can pose to children
for the benefi t of their bottom
line.â€
Her investigation targets,
among other things, Metaâ€™s
techniques to increase the frequency
and duration of engagement
by young users and
the resulting harms caused by
such extended engagement.
The announcement follows recent
reports revealing that Metaâ€™s
own internal research shows
that using Instagram is associated
with increased risks of physical
and mental health harms
on young people, including depression,
eating disorders and
even suicide.
Healey has long been conRISK
| SEE Page 17
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Page 17
A half century of progress in
â€œwar on cancerâ€
1. On Nov. 26, 1966, in
Brittany, what European
president opened the
fi rst tidal power station in
the world?
2. In what country did
apple pie originate?
3. What sex of turkey
gobbles?
4. What one-word 1978
disco song title has four
periods?
5. On Nov. 27, 1955, what
engineer and author was
born who had a PBS series
about science?
6. Which U.S. state has
the most pumpkin acreage:
California, Illinois or
New Mexico?
7. What U.S. bridge has
been â€œsoldâ€ by con artists
at least three times (one
ending up in Sing Sing)?
8. On Nov. 28, 1967, the
fi rst pulsar was discovered;
what is a pulsar?
9. What is a supreme (or
supreme â€“ highest degree
of quality) of poultry?
10.
On Nov. 29, 1972, Atari
released what video
game?
11. Where do wild turkeys
sleep?
12. What is the fi rst recorded
year when Cape
Cod cranberry bogs
were flooded and frozen
for a better harvest:
1732, 1838 or 1907?
Answers
13. On Nov. 30, 1872, the
first-ever international
soccer match took place
in Glasgow; what two
countries competed?
14. In the 1893 play â€œA
Woman of No Importance,â€
who wrote, â€œAfter
a good dinner, one can
forgive anybody, even
oneâ€™s own relationsâ€?
15. On Dec. 1, 1878,
who installed the first
telephone at the White
House?
16. On Nov. 23, 1921,
The Baltimore Sun reported
that what took
an airplane to the White
House â€œwearing an aviation
helmet and goggles
and clad in a black
and gold sweater held
on by a pink bowâ€ (and
also a train ride after it
got sick)?
17. December 2 is International
Day for the Abolition
of Slavery; what
U.S. stateâ€™s constitution
(1777) was the fi rst U.S.
document to abolish
slavery?
18. What country produces
the most cranberries?
19.
Can turkeys fl y?
20. On Dec. 3, 1800, the
Electoral College had
a tie vote for what two
candidates?
I
tâ€™s been 50 years since President
Richard Nixon signed
the National Cancer Act, launching
the â€œwar on cancer.â€ How did
we do? Substantial progress has
been made in the war against
cancer, according to new analysis
from the American Cancer
Society.
The new analysis found that
as of 2019 mortality rates for all
cancers combined dropped by
27 percent since 1971 and by 32
percent since 1991, when mortality
rates were highest. Mortality
rates have dropped since 1971
for 12 of 15 investigated cancer
sites, including by as much as 70
percent for cervical and stomach
cancer. However, rates increased
in parts of the South and for pancreatic
cancer, and progress was
limited for brain and esophageal
cancers.
â€œThe increase in overall cancer
mortality in many parts of
the southern states suggests
unequal dissemination of adJOBS
| FROM Page 14
118,100 fewer residents were
unemployed.
The unemployment rate is
based on a monthly sample of
households. The job estimates
are derived from a monthly sample
survey of employers. As a result,
the two statistics may exhibit
diff erent monthly trends.
NOTES:
The labor force is the sum of
RISK | FROM Page 16
cerned about the negative impacts
of social media platforms
on Massachusettsâ€™s youngest
residents. In May she co-led a
bipartisan coalition of 44 attorneys
general urged Facebook
vances in cancer control like
the availability of screening and
therapeutic advances,â€ said Surveillance
and Health Equity Science
Senior VP Dr. Ahmedin Jemal,
â€œwhereas the continuous
increase in pancreatic cancer
mortality underscores the need
for increased investment in the
prevention, early detection and
treatment of this highly fatal disease.â€
This
year marks the 50th anniversary
of the National Cancer
Act of 1971, which designated
defeating cancer as a national
priority. The Act allocated substantial
resources to the National
Cancer Institute, which has seen
a 25-fold annual budget increase
since the law was enacted, from
$227 million to $6.01 billion.
Researchers at the American
Cancer Society, led by epidemiologist
Tyler Kratzer, analyzed
national cancer mortality
data from the National Center
for Health Statistics for all
the numbers of employed residents
and those unemployed,
that is residents not working but
actively seeking work in the last
four weeks. Estimates may not
add up to the total labor force
due to rounding.
For further information on
seasonal adjustment methodology,
please refer to the Bureau of
Labor Statistics website https://
www.bls.gov.
Local area unemployment stato
abandon its plans to launch a
version of Instagram for children
under the age of 13. In the letter
to CEO Mark Zuckerberg, the coalition
contends that Facebook
has historically failed to protect
the welfare of children on its
platforms.
cancers. The researchers credit
the decline in mortality rates
to improvements in prevention,
early detection and treatment.
For example, the substantial
declines in lung, oral cavity
and bladder cancer mortality
largely refl ect reductions in
smoking due to enhanced public
awareness of health consequences,
increased cigarette excise
taxes and smoke-free laws,
whereas the large declines in female
breast and colorectal cancer
mortality are mainly due to
screening and advances in treatment.
According to the authors,
the fi ndings demonstrate considerable
progress in reducing
the cancer burden in the wake
of expanded public investment
following the passage of the National
Cancer Act.
Improving health equity
through investment in social
determinants of health and implementation
research is critical
to ensuring continued progress.
tistics for October 2021 will be released
on Tuesday, November 23,
2021. The preliminary November
2021 and revised October 2021
unemployment rate, labor force
and job estimates for Massachusetts
will be released on Friday,
December 17, 2021. See the 2021
Media Advisory annual schedule
for a complete list of release dates.
Detailed labor market information
is available at www.
mass.gov/lmi.
Leading the investigation, involving
a broad group of states
across the country, is a bipartisan
coalition of attorneys general
from California, Florida, Kentucky,
Massachusetts, Nebraska,
New Jersey, Tennessee and
Vermont.
Happy and Blessed
Thanksgiving from everyone
at Carpenito Real Estate
335 Central Street,
Saugus, MA 01906
(781) 233-7300
View all our listings at: CarpenitoRealEstate.com
1. Charles de
Gaulle
2. England
3. Males
4. Y.M.C.A.
5. Bill Nye (the
Science Guy)
6. Illinois
7. The Brooklyn
Bridge
8. A pulsating
radio source
(thought to be a
neutron star with
a rapid spin)
9. A skinless,
boneless breast
10. Pong
11. In trees
12. 1838
13. England and
Scotland
14. Oscar Wilde
15. Alexander
Graham Bell
16. A turkey
named Supreme
II
17. Vermontâ€™s
18. USA
19. Only wild turkeys
can fl y.
20. Thomas Jefferson
and Aaron
Burr
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THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 24, 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.
House 151-8, Senate 26-3, apGET
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THE HOUSE AND SENATE.
Beacon Hill Roll Call records local
senatorsâ€™ and representativesâ€™
votes on roll calls from the week
of November 15-19.
CONGRESSIONAL REDISTRICTING
(H 4256)
proved and sent to Gov. Charlie
Baker a bill that redistricts the
stateâ€™s nine congressional districts.
The plan is based on the
2020 U.S. census and will be in effect
until the next redistricting cycle
following the census in 2030.
Supporters said the process
has been the most open, inclusive
and transparent redistricting
process in the history of the state.
â€œThe Joint Committee on Redistricting
conducted a broad,
transparent examination of the
congressional districts,â€ said
Senate Redistricting Committee
chair Sen. Will Brownsberger.
â€œHundreds of people participated.
At the end we felt we had a
plan that met all legal standards
and it was uncontested in most
respects.â€
â€œThis proposal simply does not
meet the mark for millions of Bay
Staters, slashing MetroWest into
fi ve diff erent bits and bifurcating
Fall River and New Bedford,â€
said Sen. Becca Rausch (D-Needham).
â€œThis map will have an impact
on our democracy for at
least the next decade to come. It
is imperative that we do this right
and that means advancing equity
and compactness, not diluting
representational power.â€
â€œThere is an inherent confl ict
of interest in having sitting offi
ce holders deciding where district
lines should go,â€ said Rep.
Lenny Mirra (R-Georgetown).
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â€œOther states have fi gured this
out and have created independent
commissions to do redistricting.
Itâ€™s time Massachusetts
does the same.â€
(A â€œYesâ€ vote is for the new
districts. A â€œNoâ€ vote is against
them.)
Rep. Jessica Giannino Yes
Sen. Joseph Boncore
has resigned
REQUIRE SCHOOLS TO
TEACH ABOUT GENOCIDE (S
2557)
House 157-2, approved a bill requiring
public schools to educate
middle and high school students
on the history of genocide. The
measure also establishes a Genocide
Education Trust Fund to help
fund the teaching. The funds
would come from the Legislature,
private and public gifts and
grants and revenue from fi nes imposed
for hate crimes.
Supporters cited a 2020 survey,
commissioned by the Conference
on Jewish Material Claims
Against Germany, which gauged
Holocaust knowledge and found
that 63 per cent of millennials and
Generation Z population, did not
know six million Jews were murdered
in the Holocaust. The survey
also found that nearly half
were unfamiliar with Nazi concentration
camps like Auschwitz.
â€œIt is shocking how many
young people today have never
heard of the Auschwitz concentration
camp, the Holocaust
or other heinous genocides perpetrated
in the past,â€ said Sen. Jason
Lewis (D-Winchester), Senate
Chair of the Committee on
Education. â€œThis important legislation
will ensure that more students
understand the history of
genocide so that it never happens
again.â€
â€œIt is very important that the
history of genocide is taught in
our schools,â€ said Rep. Kelly Pease
(R-Westfi eld) one of the two representatives
who voted against
the proposal. â€œHowever all the
genocides that were discussed
for the bill are already covered
by Massachusetts Department
of Elementary and Secondary
Education (DESE) curriculum. If
there are shortcomings in how
it is taught then that should be
addressed, but not by setting
up a separate fund that includes
money from public and private
sources such as gifts, grants and
donations. DESE has already established
the curriculum, why is
more public and private money
needed?â€
â€œMassachusetts has always
been at the forefront of human
rights issues, and today, with the
passage of this bill, we can do
it again,â€ said Rep. Jeff Roy (DFranklin).
â€œWe can arm our students
with the knowledge they
will need to recognize the warning
signs and feel empowered to
prevent genocides in the future.
Making genocide education a
mandatory topic for teaching in
our schools is a reaffi rmation of
the commitment of free people
from all nations to never again
permit the occurrence of another
genocide and to deter indiff erence
to crimes against humanity
and human suff ering wherever
they occur.â€
Rep. Peter Durant (R-Spencer),
the only other representative to
vote against the bill, did not respond
to repeated requests by
Beacon Hill Roll Call to comment
on his opposition to the bill.
(A â€œYesâ€ vote is for the bill. A â€œNoâ€
vote is against it.)
Rep. Jessica Giannino Yes
REGULATE EXPANSION OF
HOSPITALS (H 4253)
House 158-1, approved and
sent to the Senate a bill that supporters
say will promote a more
balanced health care market by
strengthening the regulatory
processes for health care expansions.
The measure requires a rigorous
review to ensure that when
large hospital systems expand,
they are not infringing on community
hospital markets and raising
health care costs for patients.
â€œThe legislation â€¦ continues
the Houseâ€™s commitment
to health care as demonstrated
in Massachusettsâ€™ health care
reform law of 2006 and of the
landmark cost containment law
of 2012,â€ said Rep. John Lawn (DWatertown),
the House Chair of
the Committee on Health Care
Financing. â€œCommunity hospitals
operate on thin margins and with
the constant possibility of closure.
The bill passed by the House
â€¦ limits unchecked growth of
hospital chains, better suiting
community hospitals to survive
and ensuring continued competition
in the health care market.â€
â€œThe House took a major step in
working to guarantee that every
Massachusetts resident has access
to quality, aff ordable health
care by passing legislation that
will protect community hospitals,â€
said Speaker of the House
Ron Mariano (D-Quincy). â€œCommunity
hospitals off er high-quality
care to the most vulnerable
patient populations at affordable
rates. Our eff orts to control
health care cost growth depends
on their continued existence.â€
â€œOther states are beginning to
roll back determination of need
laws, because they negatively
impact healthcare,â€ said Rep.
Nick Boldyga (R-Southwick), the
lone vote against the bill. â€œBut
here we are doing just the opposite.
Protectionist policies like this
one restrict competition, stifl e innovation
and lower the quality
of healthcare a patient receives
all while ensuring costs remain
high. We need more competition
when it comes to healthcare,
not less.â€
(A â€œYesâ€ vote is for the bill. A â€œNoâ€
vote is against it.)
Rep. Jessica Giannino Yes
INCREASE MENTAL HEALTH
ACCESS (S 2572)
Senate 39-0, approved and
sent to the House legislation,
known as the Mental Health Addressing
Barriers to Care (ABC)
Act that will make mental health
care more accessible in the Bay
State.
â€œToday, the Massachusetts Senate
took vital strides toward transforming
mental health care in
Massachusetts,â€ said Sen. Julian
Cyr (D-Truro), House chair of the
Committee on Mental Health,
Substance Use and Recovery. â€œBy
unanimously passing [this bill],
we affi rm that mental health is
just as essential as physical health
and take a leap forward to ensure
that all people in Massachusetts
can access the mental health care
they need and deserve.â€
â€œMassachusettsâ€™ health care
system should deliver aff ordable,
high quality and accessible care
to all of our residentsâ€”including
mental health care,â€ said Sen.
Cindy Friedman (D-Arlington),
Senate chair of the Committee
on Health Care Financing. â€œThis
bill recognizes that mental health
care is just as important, valuable
and worthy of treatment as physical
health care. And begins to
tackle our most pressing issues,
such as expanding services to all
corners of the commonwealth,
enforcing existing parity laws and
addressing the boarding crisis
in our Emergency Departments
that is impacting too many of our
children and families.â€
(A â€œYesâ€ vote is for the bill).
Sen. Joseph Boncore has resigned
988
MENTAL HEALTH HOTLINE
(S 2572)
Senate 38-0, approved an
amendment that would require
the state to designate at least
one 988 crisis hotline center to
provide crisis intervention services
and crisis care coordination 24
hours per day, seven days a week
for individuals accessing the federally
designated 988 suicide prevention
and behavioral health crisis
hotline.
â€œOver a year ago, the federal
government created the 988 hotline,â€
said amendment sponsor
Sen. Susan Moran (D-Falmouth).
â€œThe 988 hotline is a 3-digit
phone number for Americans to
call when in a mental health crisis.
The line will be fully operational
by July 2022. This is where
states come in. Just because the
phone line runs, doesnâ€™t mean
there will be services ready to respond
when someone calls. It is
our role to ensure that when people
call the hotline, there is someone
in the state that is ready and
available to respond.â€
Moran noted that the hotline
must also have the capabilBEACON
| SEE Page 19
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Shares 4 Tips to
Surviving the Holidays
with Family
Boston, MA, November 22,
2021 â€” Dr. Frank Anderson, a
Harvard-trained psychiatrist and
author of Transcending Trauma:
Healing Complex PTSD With Internal
Family Systems (IFS) Therapy,
(PESI Publishing, Inc; ISBN:
9781683733973; Original Trade
Paperback) can provide your
audience with advice on how
to positively deal with negative
emotional triggers over the holiday
season. Through the innovative,
evidence-based and holistic
therapy approach to understanding
and healing family
trauma, Dr. Anderson reveals
four tips that will help your audience
survive the holidays:
- Accept Imperfection. Before
any gathering, accept that the
event might not go exactly as
planned. Imperfection is a normal,
healthy part of life.
- Flush Out Family Drama.
Donâ€™t take on their drama. Differentiate
what is yours from
what is theirs, and remind yourself
what is truly important.
- Prepare an Emotional Exit
Plan. If you are going to be at
an event with relatives you donâ€™t
like, take a walk when you start
to feel triggeredâ€”and if you are
BEACON | FROM Page 18
ity to serve a diverse set of populations
and be able to serve individuals
who are high-risk or
have specialized needs because
they have substance use disorder,
other mental health conditions
or developmental disabilities.
â€œIn addition, these crisis centers
must be able to service a diverse
range of people at diff erent
ages, races, ethnicity, sexual orientation,
sexual identity and language
spoken,â€ continued Moran.
Moreover, to serve everyone
in every place in the commonwealth,
they must be able to provide
crisis and outgoing services
in a reasonable time in all areas
of the commonwealth.
(A â€œYesâ€ vote is for the bill.)
Sen. Joseph Boncore has resigned
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,
THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 24, 2021
PANDEMIC | FROM Page 6
zation. Dwight Hallâ€™s mission is
â€œto nurture and inspire students
as leaders of social change and
to advance justice and service.â€
Dwight Hallâ€™s programs strive
to form a more just society that
meets the needs of the commuhosting
the party, designate a
room that is off limits where you
can take a break.
- Treat Yourself. Everyone deserves
a little luxury, especially
during the holidays. Treat yourself
to your favorite meal or get
a massage. Whatever the activity
is, do it often during the holidays.
Frank
G. Anderson, MD, became
interested in treating trauma
during his residency program
in psychiatry at Harvard
Medical School and later became
a psychiatrist at the Trauma
Center in Boston under the
direction of Dr. Bessel van der
Kolk, the author of the New
York Times bestselling book,
The Body Keeps the Score. During
this early phase of his career,
Dr. Anderson met Dr. Richard
Schwartz, founder of Internal
Family Systems (IFS), and has
been practicing IFS therapy ever
since. Today, Dr. Anderson works
as a lead trainer and consultant
for the IFS Institute and serves as
adviser to the International Association
of Trauma Professionals
(IATP). To learn more about
Dr. Anderson and his work, visit
www.FrankAndersonMD.com.
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 November
15-19, the House met for a
total of 14 hours and 47 minutes
while the Senate met for a total
of eight hours.
Mon. Nov. 15 House 11:06
a.m. to 1:29 p.m.
Senate 11:15 a.m. to 11:41 a.m.
Tues. Nov. 16 House 11:05
a.m. to 4:02 p.m.
No Senate session
Wed. Nov. 17 House 11:02
a.m. to 6:25 p.m.
Senate 11:07 a.m. to 6:38 p.m.
Thurs. Nov. 18 House 11:00
a.m. to 11:04 a.m.
Senate 11:09 a.m. to 11:12 a.m.
Fri. Nov. 19 No House session
No
Senate session
Bob Katzen
welcomes feedback at
bob@beaconhillrollcall.com
CENSUS | FROM Page 1
merators could assist people in
fi lling out census forms. â€œI want
to note the work of the Revere
Counts Committee, because
that seemed to come into some
question [last] week,â€ said Kantor.
â€œThe Revere Counts group
provides outreach to residents
to urge them to complete their
census, to complete them online
and to respond to the federal
census enumerators when
they come calling or knocking on
their door. The instructions to all
Revere Counts staff and grantees
were very clear; they were never
allowed to assist anyone in fi lling
out a U.S. Census form.â€
After researching the issue and
contacting the legal counsel for
the Massachusetts Secretary of
State, Kantor said, the redistricting
committee pinpointed fi ve
potential issues that, taken together,
could account for the 67
people included in the census
block containing only one commercial
business. Kantor added
that people have been listed as
living at that particular census
block during the 2000 and 2010
federal censuses as well.
In addition, Kantor and Novoselsky
both noted that there
were several other areas in the
city that were identifi ed as addresses
that did not contain residential
buildings.
During the past decade, Kantor
said, the census bureau has
launched a series of data privacy
strategies called disclosure
avoidance. â€œWhat disclosure
avoidance does is actually
swap and move data around
a little bit to make it really hard
to identify the individual census
blocks that someone could fi gure
out,â€ said Kantor, â€œso it is very
likely that some of the data was
moved, and they create â€˜noiseâ€™ to
move individuals into a block so
they canâ€™t be as easily identifi ed
from a diff erent block.â€
Census blocks are created by
Page 19
nity in a fair and dignifi ed way.
I have sought to continue this
mission through my work on
the Revere School Committee.
My experience in education,
technology, and fi nance, within
both the private and public
sectors, provides me the experience
to ensure that our Comthe
census bureau about a year
before the census and are typically
based on street and natural
boundaries within a city, although
the city does not have
input into how the boundaries
are determined.
In addition to the disclosure
avoidance, Kantor said, federal
census enumerators may use
past addresses to identify individuals
who have fi lled out a prior
census but have not fi lled out
an existing census. Kantor said
there could also have been people
who fi lled out a federal census,
but didnâ€™t want the federal
government to know where
they lived and did not give a
correct address. â€œWe also know
the U.S. Census has a practice of
counting people who are living
outdoors â€“ people who might
be considered homeless or not
have a residence â€“ and they often
log them at an address near
where they may be staying,â€ said
Kantor. The fi nal possibility, he
said, is that sometimes workers
who have a temporary residence
will fi ll out their work address on
the census.
â€œI donâ€™t think any one of these
explains the 67, but I think a combination
of these fi ve adds up to
the 67, and as Iâ€™ve mentioned,
this is not a new problem for the
city,â€ said Kantor. â€œWe did talk
to the general counsel for the
Secretary of State, and I think it
is worth noting that this is the
third census she has worked on,
and this is the fi rst time sheâ€™s ever
heard of a municipality complaining
of an overcount. She
hears a lot of complaints about
undercounts, and a lot of cities
take action against undercounts.â€
Novoselsky said he still isnâ€™t
happy with the explanations
and noted that he had identifi
ed more locations in his ward
that were not residential but listed
189 people. â€œI know you say
thatâ€™s the way they have been
coming down for the last two
censuses, but it wasnâ€™t an issue
then because it wasnâ€™t aff ecting
monwealth recovers fully and
that our children are properly
prepared for the jobs of the
21st
century.
Please join me in this eff ort.
â€”Anthony Dâ€™Ambrosio, BA
Yale, MA University
of Cambridge is
a Candidate for State Senate
the precinct lines; it wasnâ€™t aff ecting
the ward lines, but now it is,â€
said Novoselsky. â€œI still say there
is some kind of fraud and nastiness
going on with something
like this, and I donâ€™t believe the
U.S. Commerce Department and
U.S. Census department should
be allowed to put people where
they donâ€™t belong in empty lots.â€
Novoselsky said his ward lines
on the new map should look different
based on the 189 people
from his ward. As part of the new
redistricting map, the Garfi eld
School, which was in Ward 2, was
moved into Ward 1. â€œI donâ€™t care
what they say, I will not vote for
this map at all,â€ said Novoselsky.
City Council President Anthony
Zambuto said he still has issues
with the census data and
redistricting process, but laid
the blame at the federal government
and not the city. â€œThis has
been â€“ Iâ€™ll be kind â€“ enlightening,
and I think I trust the federal
government less now than I did
before the beginning of the process,â€
said Zambuto. â€œBut I donâ€™t
see any criminality or anything
on the part of the census takers.
I think we were taken aback
by the numbers, and some of us
might have said some things that
werenâ€™t accurate or were an overreach.
Like I said, I trust the federal
government even less, but
this is part of the process, and we
thank everyone who has done
the work, and obviously, no one
was counting people â€“ they were
just trying to solicit people to fi ll
out the census forms.â€
Councillor-at-Large George
Rotondo said the explanations
from Kantor made him feel comfortable
that at least the City of
Revere would not be found legally
liable if there were found
to be issues with the census data.
He also said he has spoken to city
councillors in surrounding communities,
and some have said
they have had no issues similar
to the issues in Revere, while
some said there have been some
irregularities.
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THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 24, 2021
OBITUARIES
Carmela â€œCamâ€
(Perillo) Cicolini
Born in Revere and a lifelong
resident of Saugus, Mrs. Cicolini
was the daughter of the late
John and Petrina (Russo) Perillo.
A 1958 graduate of Saugus
High, Cam was very involved
in the Town of Saugus; she was
a founding member and past
president of Saugus Kiwanis,
past president of the Saugus
PTO, a founding member of
the MEG, a member of the Saugus
High Alumni Assoc., a former
town meeting member, a
member of the former Bristow
St. Commission and was a member
of the Town Charter Commission.
Cam had a love and
passion for cooking and baking.
Cam is survived by her two
A
ge 80, died at the Bear Hill
Nursing Home in Wakefi eld
on Thursday, November 18 surrounded
by her loving family.
She was the wife of the late Vincent
Cicolini.
children, Joia Cicolini and Jeffrey
Cicolini and his wife Julie all
of Saugus; two grandchildren,
Gianna and Anthony; sisters-inlaw,
Gina Perillo of FL and Phyllis
Cicolini of Saugus; brotherin-law,
Peter Cicolini of Saugus;
Cousin, who was like a sister,
Rosemarie Corsino of Lynnfi eld;
as well as many other cousins,
nieces, nephews and God children;
Lifelong friend, Toni Gillis
of Saugus. She was predeceased
by her brother, Vincent Perillo,
brother-in-law, Donald Cicolini
and sister-in-law, Mary Catalano
and her husband Ralph.
In lieu of fl owers, donations
in Camâ€™s memory may be made
to Healthy Students-Healthy
Saugus,checks can be sent
directly to: Salem Five, C/O
Healthy Students-Healthy Saugus,
855-5 Broadway,Saugus
MA, 01906. Online donations
can also be made at https://givebutter.com/HealthySaugus.
Relatives
and friends are invited
to attend visiting hours in the
Bisbee-Porcella Funeral Home,
549 Lincoln Ave., SAUGUS on
Friday (11/26), 3-7 p.m. a funerO
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î‰î•î’î î†îˆîîî„î•î–î€ î„î—î—îŒî†î–î€
îŠî„î•î„îŠîˆî–î€ îœî„î•î‡î–î€ îˆî—î†î€‘
î€ºîˆ î„îî–î’ î‡î’ î‡îˆîî’îîŒî—îŒî’î‘î€‘
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î€šî€›î€”î€î€–î€•î€”î€î€•î€—î€œî€œ
78
, passed away on November
17, 2021, with
her family by her side in Revere.
She was born on June, 11, 1943,
in Battambang province, CamCopyrighted
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
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SELLER1
BUYER2
Shafi , Hareem
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Estrada-Flores, Vilma E Lopez-Estrada, Doris E Zheng, Wanjun
SELLER2 ADDRESS DATE
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PRICE
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Quan, Meihua 700 Broadway 29.10.2021 $ 480 000,00
f Revere passed away suddenly
on November 18,
2021 at the age of 63. Born in
Winthrop on June 27, 1958 to
the late Fiorino and Mildred
(Gambale) Falzone. Dear brother
of Janine Falzone-Curtis and
her husband Thomas of Revere,
and Dennine Macadam of
PA. Cherished uncle of James
Curtis of Revere. Also survived
by many loving cousins and
friends. Frank is predeceased by
his loving girlfriend Karen Colman.
His kind heart will be remembered
dearly by his family
and friends. In lieu of fl owers
donations may be made to the
Jimmy Fund at www.danafarber.jimmyfund.org.
Kosom
Sak
R
etired Revere Firefi ghter, at
84 years, in Revere, unexpectedly,
on November 18.
Beloved son of the late Henry
L. Vitale, Sr. & Louise M. (Zolla)
Vitale. Devoted companion
to Beverly A. Rogers of Revere
for nearly 50 years. Cherished
brother to Annette M. Thompson
& husband Bernard of Cape
Coral, FL, Elaine L. Bougiouris &
husband Kyriacos E. â€œKoulisâ€ of
Revere & the late Henry F. Vitale
& his late wife Concetta â€œConnieâ€
& the late Reynold A. Vitale. Also
lovingly survived by Roxanne
Tahmosh & husband Raymond
of Reading & Brian Tahmosh
& wife Lesley Conroy of Washington,
D.C. Russell also leaves
many caring nieces, nephews,
OBITUARIES | SEE Page 22
al will be held from the funeral
home on Saturday (11/27) at 9
a.m. followed by a funeral mass
in St. Margaretâ€™s Church, 431 Lincoln
Ave., Saugus at 10 a.m. Interment
in Riverside Cemetery
in Saugus.
Frank J. Falzone
bodia. She graduated college in
Education major. She worked as
a middle school teacher in her
hometown, where she met her
husband who was also working
there at the time. They got
married in 1962. She is survived
by two sons and two daughters.
Throughout her life, she
had worked hard to support
her family. Educating people in
need has always been her passion.
Teaching is something she
very much enjoyed. After her retirement,
she came to the United
States and lived with her
youngest daughter in Revere.
She became ill after three years
she had lived here. She was in
and out of the hospital for these
past two years which has taken
a toll on her. However, she was a
strong woman. She endured all
the pain, and was able to make
it through after so many surgeries.
She was diagnosed with
stage 4 pancreatic cancer in early
November. Before we knew it,
it was too late to save her from it.
Russell E. Vitale
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‰THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 24, 2021
Page 21
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PÍ€×‘C’×˜š   Í(Í€u×‰œ”×‰	Ú 7cassandra://dcLOVTWEyHkIrfaSA9nbcRtzqAYXkzt5wvkioWbRmoAÎ %°Í`ÍœÍ)×‰	Ú 7cassandra://tnD39oYho0_qJovD9f1e68U4UzgtQZMuOvBOFjmTFI8ÍŸ"Í`ÍJÍà×‰	Ú 7cassandra://jNqQQwAqMtWLb5sBnZtTe8c3OyAujm5TSo9itLrOAMAÍ.ŠÍ`Ì°Í ×‰	Ú 7cassandra://62XvFTu-vOQ76elyvzIIVNhjbkBXF32IPYlWpg3c8A0Î A¦Í´Í ÍÅÍñ×a“£yð=!‚Ši+×˜š Í( Í(Í€u×‰œ”×‰	Ú 7cassandra://SEalGekR72t8_gefEZ2jq__d7tjaSACB2FrbkPlOst4Î ¬çÍ`ÍœÍ)×‰	Ú 7cassandra://6bAHbOFa40-yuTyHs0jmskIBU-7gvRqPhegX6te-TmkÍ¯Í`ÍJÍà×‰	Ú 7cassandra://TRYF1g2zt-RZsl1G-lRqhTy-dr-5Zig3dHbGLammhlgÍ,•Í`Ì°Í ×‰	Ú 7cassandra://31kv1ulbMi8uETrldQwpDkMm__ywMsFWJrWv0xHPd0QÎ õIÍy>Í ÍÅÍñ×a“£yð=!‚Ši,‘× ×a“¤yð=!‚Ši3 ÍƒÍ!Í+9×H½http://www.jrs-properties.com××Ðˆ×‰EÚ!½Page 22
~WE ARE OPEN~
Veteran Owned
Licensed &
Insured
THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 24, 2021
OBITUARIES | FROM Page 20
grandnieces & grandnephews.
Late member of the Revere
781-854-2479
Saugus, MA 01906
rustypllc@gmail.com
FRANKâ€™S Housepainting
(781) 289-0698
â€¢ Exterior
â€¢ Ceiling Dr. â€¢ Power Wash
â€¢ Paper Removal â€¢ Carpentry
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î€°î’îî‡ î€‰ î€ºî„î—îˆî•î“î•î’î’î‚¿î‘îŠ
î€¨î€»î€³î€¨î€µî€·î€¶
î‚‡ î€¶î˜îî“ î€³î˜îî“î– î‚‡ î€ºî„îîî– î€‰ î€©îî’î’î• î€¦î•î„î†îŽî– î‚‡
î€¤î€¯î€¯ î€ºî€²î€µî€® î€ªî€¸î€¤î€µî€¤î€±î€·î€¨î€¨î€§
î€ î€¯îŒî†îˆî‘î–îˆî‡ î€¦î’î‘î—î•î„î†î—î’î• î€
î€­î€³î€ª î€¦î€²î€±î€¶î€·î€µî€¸î€¦î€·î€¬î€²î€±
î€¦îˆîî î“î‹î’î‘îˆ î€šî€›î€”î€î€™î€–î€•î€î€šî€˜î€“î€–
43 Holland St., Saugus $499,000
î€˜î€“î€›î€î€•î€œî€•î€î€œî€”î€–î€—
Soccorso Club. Russell prematurely
retired from the Revere
Fire Department as a result of
a major accident after 21 years
of service.
In lieu of flowers, remembrances
may be made to the
Shriners Hospitals for Children,
51 Blossom St., Boston, MA
02114.
â€œProper prep makes all the differenceâ€ â€“ F. Ferrera
â€¢ Interior
Sandra (Kennedy)
Sasso
D
ied peacefully at her home
on November 17, 2021.
Sandy was born January 20,
1944 in Revere, where she was
a lifelong resident. She is the
daughter of the late Veteran
George Kennedy and Edna (Harkins)
Kennedy. Sandy is the sister
of the late Tommy Kennedy,
Dennis Kennedy and her best
friend and sister Judith (Kennedy)
DaMore. Devoted cousin of
Maureen Kidney of Lynn. Lifelong
best friend of the late Donna
McDonald and godmother
to her daughter Tracy. She is
survived by her loving husband
Leonard also of Revere. Leonard
and Sandra were married
for close to 60 years. Leonard
continues to work in the printing
industry today and lives in
the house that he, Sandy and
his family built in 1967. Sandy
has two sons Daniel and Dennis
Sasso. She loved them dearly
and wanted most to give
them a better life, which she
achieved. Sandy was also mother
to many Golden Retrievers
over the years. Her career was
spent showing and breeding
Goldens, as well as being a chef
in the Winthrop School System.
Sandy loved all animals especially
dogs. She loved family, socializing,
The Patriots, cooking, her
ski home in North Conway and
telling it like it is regardless of
the situation. Devoted sister-inlaw
to the Sasso family, whom
she hosted over the years and
cooked the Thanksgiving Turkey.
Sandy was a loving aunt
to Renee Ciaramella of Revere,
Anna Manuelle of Saugus and
many more nieces and nephews
in the Sasso family. Sandy went
far from her humble beginning
liviing a full and colorful life.
Those of you who knew Sandy
would say she spoke her mind
and lived her way. A Memorial
Visitation will be held at the
Paul Buonfi glio & Sons-Bruno
Funeral Home 128 Revere St, Revere
on Saturday, November 27,
2021 from 2:00pm to 4:00pm.
Relatives and friends are kindly
invited. In lieu of fl owers the
family would ask that you donate
to the Yankee Golden Retriever
Recuse Inc. Information
can be found at ygrr.org.
6 Hodgkins Rd., Unit A $379,000
Rockport, MA - CONTINGENT
Would you like to live on a one level living? This ranch
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î„ î€• î…îˆî‡î•î’î’î î…î˜î— îšî„î– î†î’î‘î™îˆî•î—îˆî‡ î—î’ î„ îî„î•îŠîˆ î€” î…îˆî‡î•î’î’îî€‘ î€¬î—
includes a lower level with extra rooms and additional
î€” î‰î˜îî î…î„î—î‹î€‘ î€±îŒî†îˆ î–îŒî‡îˆ î–î—î•îˆîˆî—î€‘ î€·î‹îˆ îƒî„î— îœî„î•î‡ îŒî– î‘îˆî–î—îîˆî‡ îšîŒî—î‹ î„
î‰îˆî‘î†îˆî‡ îŒî‘ îœî„î•î‡î€ î„î‘î‡ îî’î•îˆî€‘ î€¼î’î˜ îšîŒîî îî’î™îˆ î—î‹îŒî– î‹î’îîˆî€‘
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Rosa
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Carl
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Barry Tam
Sue Palomba
Founder, CEO
Lea
Doherty
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îŒî—î– î’îšî‘ îˆî‘î—î•î„î‘î†îˆ îšîŒî—î‹ î„ î…îˆî„î˜î—îŒî‰î˜î îî˜î‡î•î’î’îî€‘ î€·î‹îŒî– î†î’î‘î‡î’ î†î„î‘ î…îˆ
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has 3 bedrooms along with a full bath and a pull down attic with
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î“î„î•îŽîŒî‘îŠî€ î†î’îîî˜î—îˆî• î•î„îŒî î–îˆî„î–îŒî‡îˆ î—î’îšî‘î€ î„î‘î‡ îî˜î†î‹ îî’î•îˆî€‘ î€ºî‹î„î— îî’î•îˆ
î†î„î‘ î…îˆ î„î–îŽîˆî‡î€‘ î€·î‹îŒî– î’î“î“î’î•î—î˜î‘îŒî—îœ îŒî– î„îšî„îŒî—îŒî‘îŠ î‰î’î• îœî’î˜î€„
î€•î€“ î€µî„îŒîî•î’î„î‡ î€¤î™îˆî€‘
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$474,800
Light and airy rooms,
in the uniquely
designed, attractively
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adapts to a variety of
Ron
Visconti
î€”î€œî€™ î€¯î’î†î˜î–î— î€¶î—î€‘î€ î€¯îœî‘î‘ - Welcome to the Stadium Condominiums,
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î†î’îîœ îîŒî™îŒî‘îŠî€ î„î‘ î’î‰îƒ€î†îˆ î„î•îˆî„î€ î…îˆî‡î•î’î’îî€ î€” î‰î˜îî î…î„î—î‹î•î’î’îî€
workout area with a bonus area of a private indoor balcony
î’î™îˆî•îî’î’îŽîŒî‘îŠ î—î‹îˆ îî’î…î…îœî€‘ î€·î‹îŒî– îŒî– î„ î—î•îˆîîˆî‘î‡î’î˜î– î™î„îî˜îˆ î„î‘î‡ îšîŒîî
î‘î’î— îî„î–î—î€‘ î€¦î˜î•î•îˆî‘î—îîœ î•îˆî‘î—îˆî‡î€‘ î€·îˆî‘î„î‘î— î“î„îœî– î€‡î€”î€î€—î€˜î€“î€’îî’î€‘ î„î‘î‡ îšî’î˜îî‡
îîŒîŽîˆ î—î’ î–î—î„îœî€‘ î€¯îˆî„î–îˆ îˆî›î“îŒî•îˆî– îˆî‘î‡ î’î‰ î€¤î“î•îŒîî€ î€¶îˆî†î—îŒî’î‘ î€› î€ î€‡î€•î€“î€˜î€î€“î€“î€“
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î€³îŒîîî„î•îˆîîî„
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î‘îˆîˆî‡î– î„î‘î‡ î˜î–îˆî–î€‘ î€¶î’ îî˜î†î‹ î‹îˆî•îˆ î—î’ î˜î—îŒîîŒîîˆî€‘ î€§îˆîîŒîŠî‹î—î‰î˜î î„î‘î‡ î€¬î‘î™îŒî—îŒî‘îŠ
year round getaway, Condo Alternative! Easy access to Front
î€¥îˆî„î†î‹î€‘ î€¤ î†î’îîî˜î—îˆî•î– î‡î•îˆî„îî€‘ î€³îˆî•î‰îˆî†î— îî’î†î„î—îŒî’î‘î€‘ î€¤îî î—î‹îˆ îšî’î•îŽ î‹î„î–
î…îˆîˆî‘ î‡î’î‘îˆ î‰î’î• îœî’î˜ î—î’ îî’î™îˆ î•îŒîŠî‹î— îŒî‘ î—î’ î—î‹îŒî– î€• î€¥î€µ î€”î€‘î€˜ î…î„î—î‹ î†î’îî’î‘îŒî„îî€‘
Located near the train, shopping, restaurants, beaches, and
î€¶î‹î„îîŒî‘ î€¯îŒî˜ î€°î˜î–îŒî† î€¦îˆî‘î—îˆî•î€‘ î€·î‹îˆ î’î“îˆî‘ î†î’î‘î†îˆî“î— îîŒî™îŒî‘îŠ î„î‘î‡ î‡îŒî‘îŒî‘îŠ
î•î’î’î îŒî– î…î•îŒîŠî‹î— î•î’î’îîœî€‘ î€©î•îˆî‘î†î‹ î‡î’î’î•î– î—î’ îšî’î‘î‡îˆî•î‰î˜î î…î„îî†î’î‘îœ î’î‰î‰ î—î‹îˆ
îî„î–î—îˆî• î…îˆî‡î•î’î’îî€‘ î€¯î’îš îî„îŒî‘î—îˆî‘î„î‘î†îˆ îˆî›î—îˆî•îŒî’î• îšîŒî—î‹ î“î„î•îŽîŒî‘îŠ î‰î’î• î€•
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area in basement with plumbing connections for a possible
î…î„î—î‹î•î’î’îî€‘ î€·î‹îŒî– î€µî’î†îŽî“î’î•î— îŠîˆî îŒî– îšî’î•î—î‹ î–îˆîˆîŒî‘îŠî€‘ î€«î„î– îŠî•îˆî„î— î•îˆî‘î—î„îî€’
î™î•î…î’ î“î’î—îˆî‘î—îŒî„î î„î‘î‡ î‹î„î– î„ î‹îŒî–î—î’î•îœ î’î‰ î†î’îîîˆî•î†îŒî„î î˜î–îˆî€‘
UNDER
AGREEMENT
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Page 23
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Sandy Juliano
Broker/President
î€·î‹îˆ î–î—î„î‰› î„î— î€­î€µî€¶ î€³î•î’î“îˆî•î—îŒîˆî–
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î„î‘î‡ î€«îˆî„îî—î‹îœ î€·î‹î„î‘îŽî–îŠîŒî™îŒî‘îŠî€„
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$509,900
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58 BRADFORD ST.
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Norma Capuano Parziale
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O
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THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 24, 2021
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î€¯îŠ‹îŠ•îŠ–îŠ‹îŠîŠ‰ î€‰ î€¶îŠ‡îŠŽîŠŽîŠ‹îŠîŠ‰
î€²îŠˆîŠˆîŠ‹îŠ…îŠ‡ îŠ‹îŠ î€¶îŠƒîŠ—îŠ‰îŠ—îŠ•
â€œExperience and knowledge
Provide the Best Serviceâ€
î€©î¨’î¨…î¨… î€°î¨î¨’î¨‹î¨…î¨” î€¨î¨–î¨î¨Œî¨•î¨î¨”î¨‰î¨î¨Žî¨“
î€¦îŠƒîŠ”îŠ’îŠ‡îŠîŠ‹îŠ–îŠ‘î€µîŠ‡îŠƒîŠŽî€¨îŠ•îŠ–îŠƒîŠ–îŠ‡î€‘îŠ…îŠ‘îŠ
î€¦
î€µ î€¨
View our website from
your mobile phone!
335 Central St., Saugus, MA
781-233-7300
î€¯î€¼î€±î€± î€ î€”î–î— î€¤î€§ î€ î€š î•îî€‘ î€µî„î‘î†î‹î€ î€•î€î€– î…î‡î•îî–î€‘î€ î€• î‰î˜îî î…î„î—î‹î–î€ îˆî„î—î€îŒî‘ îŽîŒî—î€‘î€ î€”î–î— îƒ€î•î€‘ î‰îî•îî€‘î€ îŠî•îˆî„î—
î’î“îˆî‘ îƒ€î•î€‘ î“îî„î‘î€ î‹î•î‡îšî‡î€‘ îƒ€î’î’î•îŒî‘îŠî€ î‚¿î‘îŒî–î‹îˆî‡ îî’îšîˆî• îîˆî™îˆîî€ î‰î•î’î‘î— î€‰ î•îˆî„î• î‡îˆî†îŽî–î€ îîˆî™îˆî îœî„î•î‡
îšî€’ îŒî•î•îŒîŠî„î—îŒî’î‘ î–îœî–î—îˆî î€‰ î–î—î’î•î„îŠîˆ î–î‹îˆî‡î€ î‘îŒî†îˆîîœ îî’î†î„î—îˆî‡ î’î‘ î‡îˆî„î‡î€îˆî‘î‡ î–î—î•îˆîˆî—î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‡î€–î€›î€œî€î€œî€“î€“î€‘
î€¶î€¤î€¸î€ªî€¸î€¶ î€ î€”î–î— î€¤î€§ î€ î€¼î’î˜î‘îŠ î€™ î•îî€‘î€ î€– î…î‡î•îî€‘ î€¦î€¨ î€¦î’îî’î‘îŒî„î î’ï‚‡îˆî•î– î€• î‰î˜îî î…î„î—î‹î–î€
îŠî„î– î‚¿î•îˆî“îî„î†îˆî€ îšî’î’î‡ îƒ€î’î’î•îŒî‘îŠî€ îŠî•îˆî„î— î’î“îˆî‘ î†î’î‘î†îˆî“î—î€ î„îî„î•îî€ î‡îˆî†îŽî€ î—îšî’ î†î„î•î€
î„î—î—î„î†î‹îˆî‡ îŠî„î•î„îŠîˆî€ î–îŒî‡îˆ î–î—î•îˆîˆî— îî’î†î„î—îŒî’î‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‡î€™î€›î€œî€î€œî€“î€“î€‘
î€µî€¨î€¹î€¨î€µî€¨ î€ î€³î€µî€¬î€°î€¨ î€¥î€µî€²î€¤î€§î€ºî€¤î€¼ îî’î†î„î—îŒî’î‘ î€‰ î™îŒî–îŒî…îŒîîŒî—îœ î’ï‚‡îˆî•î– î—î‹îŒî– îŠî•îˆî„î— î•îˆî—î„îŒî î†î’î‘î‡î’
î–î—î’î•îˆ î‰î•î’î‘î— îšî€’ îî„î‘îœ î“î’î–î–îŒî…îŒîîŒî—îŒîˆî–î€‘ î€¯î’î†î„î—îˆî‡ î’î‘ î…î˜î– îîŒî‘îˆî€ îšîŒî—î‹îŒî‘ îšî„îîŽîŒî‘îŠ î‡îŒî–î—î„î‘î†îˆ î’î‰
î‘îˆîŒîŠî‹î…î’î•î‹î’î’î‡î–î€‘ î€ªî•îˆî„î— î’î“î“î’î•î—î˜î‘îŒî—îœ î—î’ îŒî‘î™îˆî–î— î„î‘î‡ î…î˜îŒîî‡ îœî’î˜î• î…î˜î–îŒî‘îˆî–î–î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‡î€™î€“î€“î€î€“î€“î€“î€‘
î€¶î€¤î€¸î€ªî€¸î€¶ î€ î€› î•î’î’î î€µî„îŒî–îˆî‡ î€µî„î‘î†î‹ î’ï‚‡îˆî•î– î€–î€î€— î…î‡î•îî–î€‘î€ î€• î…î„î—î‹î–î€ îŠî•î„î‘îŒî—îˆ î†î’î˜î‘î—îˆî•
î—î’î“î–î€ î’î“îˆî‘ î†î’î‘î†îˆî“î—î€ î…îˆî„î˜î—îŒî‰î˜î îšî„î—îˆî• î™îŒîˆîšî– î’î‰ î€«î„îšîŽî– î€³î’î‘î‡î€‘ î€ªî•îˆî„î— î‰î„îîŒîîœ î‹î’îîˆ
îšîŒî—î‹ î‘î’î—î‹îŒî‘îŠ î—î’ î‡î’î€„î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘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€šî€œî€î€“î€“î€“î€‘
î€¶î€¤î€¸î€ªî€¸î€¶î€’î€°î€¨î€¯î€µî€²î€¶î€¨ îîŒî‘îˆ î€ î€µîˆî‘î’î™î„î—îˆî‡ î€– î…î‡î•îî€‘ î€¦î’îî’î‘îŒî„î î’ï‚‡îˆî•î– î€•îƒ² î€±î€¨î€º î…î„î—î‹î–î€
î’î“îˆî‘ îƒ€î•î€‘ î“îî„î‘î€ î€±î€¨î€º î”î˜î„î•î—î îŽîŒî—î€‘î€ îî„î–î—îˆî• î…î‡î•îî€‘ îšî€’ î“î•îŒî™î„î—îˆ î…î„î—î‹ î€‰ î‚¿î•îˆî“îî„î†îˆî€ î€±î€¨î€º
îƒ€î’î’î•îŒî‘îŠî€ î€±î€¨î€º î‹îˆî„î— î€‰ î†îˆî‘î—î€‘ î„îŒî•î€ î‡îˆî†îŽî€ î“î„î—îŒî’î€ î—î•î„î‘î”î˜îŒî îî„îŽîˆ î™îŒîˆîšî–î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‡î€šî€–î€œî€î€“î€“î€“î€‘
î€¶î€¤î€¸î€ªî€¸î€¶ î€ î€—î€“î€î€“î€“î€“ î€Žî€’î€ î–î”î€‘ î‰î—î€‘ îî’î— îšî€’ î€µî„î‘î†î‹ î–î—îœîîˆ î‹î’îîˆ î’î‰î‰îˆî•îŒî‘îŠ î€™ î•îî–î€‘î€ î€• î…î‡î•îî–î€‘ î€‰ î€”îƒ² î…î„î—î‹î–
îŒî‘ î‘îˆîˆî‡ î’î‰ î˜î“î‡î„î—îŒî‘îŠ î€‰ î€·î€¯î€¦î€ î’î™îˆî•î–îŒîîˆî‡ î‡îˆî—î„î†î‹îˆî‡ îŠî„î•î€‘î€’î…î„î•î‘ î–î—î•î˜î†î—î˜î•îˆî€‘ î€¯î„î•îŠîˆ îî’î— îšî€’ î‰î•î’î‘î—î„îŠîˆ
î’î‘ î—îšî’ î–î—î•îˆîˆî—î–î€‘ î€ªî•îˆî„î— î’î“î“î’î•î—î˜î‘îŒî—îœ î—î’ îˆî›î“îî’î•îˆ î“î’î–î–îŒî…îŒîîŒî—îŒîˆî–î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‡î€˜î€•î€˜î€î€“î€“î€“î€‘
î€°î€¤î€¯î€§î€¨î€± î€ î€ºîˆîî îî„îŒî‘î—î„îŒî‘îˆî‡ î€— î•îî€‘î€ î€• î…î‡î•îî€‘ î€¦î„î“îˆ î€¦î’î‡ î–î—îœîîˆ î‹î’îîˆî€ î‚¿î•îˆî“îî„î†îˆ îî™î•îî€‘î€
î‹î•î‡îšî‡î€‘ îƒ€î’î’î•îŒî‘îŠî€ î€– î–îˆî„î–î’î‘ î“î’î•î†î‹î€ î™îŒî‘î—î„îŠîˆ î‡îˆî—î„îŒîî–î€ î•îˆî“îî„î†îˆîîˆî‘î— îšîŒî‘î‡î’îšî–î€ îšî„îîŽî€î˜î“
î„î—î—îŒî†î€ î‚¿î‘îŒî–î‹îˆî‡ îî’îšîˆî• îîˆî™îˆîî€ î„î—î—î„î†î‹îˆî‡ îŠî„î•î„îŠîˆî€ î‰îˆî‘î†îˆî‡î€ î†î’î•î‘îˆî• îî’î—î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‡î€˜î€–î€“î€î€“î€“î€“î€‘
î€¨î€¹î€¨î€µî€¨î€·î€· î€ î€ºîˆîî îˆî–î—î„î…îîŒî–î‹îˆî‡ î€¤î˜î—î’ î€¥î’î‡îœî€’î€¤î˜î—î’ î€µîˆî“î„îŒî• î–î‹î’î“î€ î€™ î…î„îœî–î€ î€– î’ï‚ˆî†îˆî–î€
î€• î‹î„îî‰ î…î„î—î‹î€ î„îî“îîˆ î“î„î•îŽîŒî‘îŠî€ îî„î‘îœ î“î’î–î–îŒî…îŒîîŒî—îŒîˆî–î€ î†îî’î–îˆ î—î’ î„îî îî„îî’î• î•î’î˜î—îˆî–î€
î„î‘î‡ î€¨î‘î†î’î•îˆ î€¦î„î–îŒî‘î’î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‡î€•î€î€“î€“î€“î€î€“î€“î€“î€‘
î€¶î€¤î€¸î€ªî€¸î€¶ î€ î€”î€” î€¸î‘îŒî— î€¥î˜îŒîî‡îŒî‘îŠî€‘ î€¦îîŒî‰î—î’î‘î‡î„îîˆ î€¶î”î€‘ î€³î•î’î“îˆî•î—îœ î†î’î‘î–îŒî–î—î– î’î‰ î€– î–î—î’î•îˆ î‰î•î’î‘î—î–
î„î‘î‡ î€” î‰î•îˆîˆî€î–î—î„î‘î‡îŒî‘îŠ î…î˜îŒîî‡îŒî‘îŠî€ î€š î•îˆî–îŒî‡îˆî‘î—îŒî„î î˜î‘îŒî—î–î€‘ î€¤îî î–îˆî“î„î•î„î—îˆ î˜î—îŒîîŒî—îŒîˆî–î€‘ î€¤îî î˜î‘îŒî—î–
î‡îˆîîˆî„î‡îˆî‡î€ î„îî“îîˆ î’ï‚‡ î–î—î•îˆîˆî— î“î„î•îŽîŒî‘îŠî€ î€¬î€±î€¦î€µî€¨î€§î€¬î€¥î€¯î€¨ î’î“î“î’î•î—î˜î‘îŒî—îœî€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‘î€‡î€•î€î€™î€“î€“î€î€“î€“î€“î€‘
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