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Vol. 34, No.7
-FREEwww.advocatenews.net
Free
Every Friday
Councillors request independent
soil study for proposed high
school site prior to bonding
City Council President: â€œWe need to know everything about that
[Wonderland] siteâ€
school. The council voted to approve
funding for the Conservation
Commission to do the testing,
but the job was too big and
additional areas requiring testing
were found. They had to hire
a third party and thatâ€™s where
things stopped.
â€œAll this motion is asking is that
ANTHONY COGLIANDRO
City Council President
By Barbara Taormina
T
oward the end of this weekâ€™s
long City Council meeting,
councillors heard a motion from
Ward 1 Councillor Joanne McKenna
and City Council President
Anthony Cogliandro that Mayor
Patrick Keefe be requested to hire
an independent environmental
assessment company to conduct
a full and complete environmental
assessment and thorough
geotechnical testing of the proposed
high school site to ensure
there are no hidden site development
costs associated with soil
conditions, hazardous materials,
wetlands and other environmentally
sensitive considerations. The
results of the assessment shall be
provided to the City Council for
public review and comment prior
to the public hearing for a bond
authorization request.
McKenna said there were concerns
about wetlands on the site
as well as the possibility of contaminated
soil. â€œWe donâ€™t know
what weâ€™ll fi nd at Wonderland â€“
a hundred years of what?â€ said
McKenna. â€œThese are underestimated
costs the City Council
should know about, now.â€
Cogliandro said he had been
asking about conservation since
2022. Since then, additional areas
on the former track have been
flagged as possible wetlands.
Cogliandro said the latest schematic
design showed the school
building on a small section of the
track, which means the building
design may need to be reJOANNE
MCKENNA
Ward 1 Councillor
adjusted.
Councillor-at-Large Marc Silvestri
asked what may have been
on the minds of many when he
heard the motion. Silvestri questioned
if Brian Dakinâ€™s company
was already doing this assessment.
Cogliandro said they have
not restarted that assessment
process, which was interrupted
when the council voted to return
to the existing site to build the
the process be restarted,â€ said
Cogliandro. â€œThis isnâ€™t to say Wonderland
is bad, itâ€™s to say thatâ€™s
where weâ€™re building the school
and we need to know everything
about that site.â€
Councillor-at-Large Anthony
Zambuto, who has opposed
building at Wonderland because
of the loss of tax revenue
it would mean for the city, supported
the motion. â€œWe need to
know everything about that site
before we vote to bond the funding
for the school,â€ said Zambuto.
Councillor-at-Large Michelle
Kelly agreed. â€œThe more unknowns
we have, the more diffi
cult it is for us to have confi -
dence in our vote for funding,â€
said Kelley.
EARLY VOTING
AND VOTER REGISTRATION
DEADLINE
The Presidential Primary is on Tuesday, March 5, 2024.
The Polls open at 7:00 am and close at 8:00 pm.
Early voting is available for the Presidential Primary to all registered
voters in the City of Revere. Registered voters wishing to cast an early
ballot may do so in person at Revere City Hall, 281 Broadway on:
Saturday, February 24, 2024
Sunday, February 25, 2024
Monday, February 26, 2024
Tuesday, February 27, 2024
10:00 am-2:00 pm
10:00 am-2:00 pm
8:00 am-7:00 pm
8:00 am-5:00 pm
Wednesday, February 28, 2024 8:00 am-5:00 pm
Thursday, February 29, 2024
Friday, March 1, 2024
8:00 am-5:00 pm
8:00am - 12:00pm
The deadline to register to vote or submit voter registration changes
for this election is Saturday, February 24, 2024.
The Election Department will be open from 9:00 am - 5:00 pm.
Online voter registration is also available at
https://www.sec.state.ma.us/ovr.
The Pleasant Street entrance to Revere City Hall is accessible
for people with disabilities.
If you have any questions, contact the Election Department
by phone at (781) 286-8200.
781-286-8500
Friday, February 16, 2024
Mayor hosts organ
donors, honors
recipients at special
City Hall event
Encouraging citizens to â€œcheck the heartâ€
and become organ donors
A SONâ€™S GIFT: Mayor Patrick Keefe donated his left kidney to his
mother, Lucille, 20 years ago after she went into stage 4 kidney
failure which extended her life.
By Tara Vocino
n light of Valentineâ€™s Day this
week, people were encouraged
to check the heart on their
driverâ€™s license to become an organ
donor at a City Hall drive
I
last Friday.
In 2023, 1,401 lives were saved
in New England by organ donation.
With more than 6,300 indiDONORS
| SEE Page 12
VOTACION TEMPRANA
Y LA FECHA LÃMITE PARA
REGISTRARSE PARA VOTAR
La Primaria Presidencial es martes, 5 de marzo de 2024.
Las urnas abrirÃ¡n a las 7:00 am y cerrarÃ¡n a las 8:00 pm.
La votaciÃ³n temprana estÃ¡ disponible para la Primaria Presidencial
para todos los votantes registrados en la Ciudad de Revere.
Los votantes registrados que deseen emitir una votaciÃ³n
temprana pueden hacerlo en persona en
Ayuntamiento de Revere, 281 Broadway en:
SÃ¡bado, 24 de febrero de 2024 10:00am - 2:00pm
Domingo, 25 de febrero de 2024
Lunes, 26 de febrero de 2024
Martes, 27 de febrero de 2024
MiÃ©rcoles, 28 febrero de 2024
Jueves, 29 de febrero de 2024
Viernes, 1 de marzo de 2024
10:00am - 2:00pm
8:00am - 7:00pm
8:00am - 5:00pm
8:00am - 5:00pm
8:00am - 5:00pm
8:00am - 12:00pm
La fecha lÃ­mite para registrarse para votar o para hacer cambios
a su registraciÃ³n de votante para esta elecciÃ³n es sÃ¡bado,
abierto de 9:00 am - 5:00 pm. RegistraciÃ³n de votante en lÃ­nea estÃ¡
disponible tambiÃ©n en https://www.sec.state.ma.us/ovr .
24 de febrero de 2024. El Departamento de Elecciones estarÃ¡
La entrada por la calle Pleasant del Ayuntamiento de Revere
es accesible para las personas discapacitadas.
Si tiene alguna pregunta, llame al Departamento de Elecciones
al telÃ©fono: (781) 286-8200.
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THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 16, 2024
RONâ€™S OIL
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~ Since 1989 ~
* Corporate Litigation
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* Landlord/Tenant Litigation
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* Bankruptcy
* Wrongful Death
* Zoning/Permitting Litigation
300 Broadway, Suite 1, Revere * 781-286-1560
lsimeonejr@simeonelaw.net
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advocate newspaper
Facebook.com/Advocate.news.ma
City Council votes to form climate
sustainability subcommittee
By Barbara Taormina
C
ity councillors were quick
to support a motion from
Councillor-at-Large Juan Pablo
Jaramillo that the city establish
a climate sustainability and
workforce subcommittee to
focus on issues related to the
short- and long-term eff ects of
climate change. Jaramillo proposed
a committee that will examine
climate change from a
systematic approach involving
climate resiliency, energy transition
and the role workers play
in the development and sustainability
of the city.
â€œWe need to take a leap into
the 21st century,â€ Jaramillo told
fellow councillors. â€œThe climate
crisis needs to be tackled on a local,
state and federal level.â€
I think this is a great motion,
we need to take this head on,â€
said Councillor-at-Large Marc
Silvestri.
Ward 1 Councillor Joanne
McKenna said there is little time
to waste for areas such as Pearl
Avenue, which she said is inunCelebrating
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Chris 2024
dated with water. â€œThe marsh
is coming up, itâ€™s overfl owing.
People are losing their cars, their
foundations, their houses. We
have to do something now; we
canâ€™t wait another two years,â€
she said.
Ward 5 Councillor Angela
Guarino-Sawaya echoed McKenna.
â€œIâ€™ve never seen the water
come up as fast as it has,â€ said
Guarino-Sawaya. â€œWe canâ€™t wait.â€
According to Guarino-Sawaya,
the section of the seawall in
Ward 5 that is in most dire need
of repair has yet to be touched.
McKenna said the neighborhood
brought the seawall to
the attention of their congressional
rep, but that was months
ago, and there was no follow-up.
â€œIâ€™m hoping this committee
will give us a voice,â€ said Guarino-Sawaya.
City
Council President Anthony
Cogliandro made it offi cial
and established the committee
and named Jaramillo chairman.
Councillor proposes ideas to
pay for new high school
As the city gets closer to the
looming reality of a huge bill
to pay for the new high school,
thereâ€™s more conversation about
ways to cover the cost.
This week, Ward 5 Councillor
Angela Guarino-Sawaya presented
two proposals to help
pay for the new school. Guarino-Sawaya
proposed that all
revenue generated from the
parking lot leases at Wonderland
be transferred to the Revere
High School Stabilization
Fund beginning July 1, 2023,
to the present and throughout
JUAN PABLO JARAMILLO
Councillor-at-Large
the life of the leases. â€œThis is a
direct community investment,â€
said Guarino-Sawaya, who also
stressed it is a transparent channel
of funding that would go directly
to the school rather than
the general fund. She said it
would help prevent the burden
of the cost of the school falling
exclusively on taxpayers.
Guarino-Sawaya also proposed
a fundraising program
that would allow residents and
businesses to buy engraved
walkway pavers or bricks that
could be installed in the school
courtyard in the back of the
school. Guarino-Sawaya suggested
the program, which she
said would be similar to what
was created at the American
Legion, could bring in a couple
of million dollars and again
spare taxpayers some of the cost
of the project. She described
a courtyard with colored and
gold and glass bricks and fl are
and suggested families and RHS
graduates would take part to be
part of local history.
City announces 2024
Water and Sewer Senior
Discount Qualifications
and Application
Residents should please note that the 2024
Qualifi cations and Application are new and
updated from previous years
Special to Th e Advocate
M
ayor Patrick M. Keefe Jr., in
collaboration with Chief of
Infrastructure and Engineering
Don Ciaramella, announced the
opening of the 2024 Senior Water
Discount Application on Friday,
March 1, 2024. The Mayor
urges residents to pay attention
to the updated application and
qualifi cations, as the terms and
conditions of this discount have
changed this year.
The application period will
run from Friday, March 1, 2024,
through Sunday, September 1,
2024. This application must be
completed and submitted no
later than the last day of the application
period. Applications
are to be submitted to the new
Water/Sewer Admin. Offi ce at
319 Charger St. Rear, inside the
DPW Building.
DISCOUNT | SEE Page 19
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Page 3
Pioneer Charter School Celebrates 17th Annual
Science and Engineering Fair
Special to Th e Advocate
E
arlier this month, the Pioneer
Charter School of Science
(PCSS) campuses in Everett
(PCSS I), Beverly and Saugus
(PCSS II) hosted the 17th
Annual Science and Engineering
Fair. This yearâ€™s theme was
â€œNew Ways to Solve Problems
Using Science, Technology, and
Artifi cial Intelligence,â€ with over
300 students representing 175
project groups.
The Science Fair is a culmination
of student work that began
at the start of the school year in
August. Each year, PCSS 6-12th
grade students participate in a
preliminary event in December.
From there, the top 40 percent
of students are selected to participate
in the fair. Over 50 volunteers
and judges from the New
Englandâ€“area STEM community
participated, including those
from Yale, MIT Lincoln Labs, BU
Biomechanics and Pulmonary
Lab, and various private industries.
This yearâ€™s projects included
using artifi cial intelligence
(AI) to fi nd the best brownie recipe,
predicting forest fi res using
AI, building robots to assist
with medical needs, and studying
the eff ects of social media
and technology on concentration
and learning.
Each year the Fair aims to allow
students to use the scientifi c
method or engineering design
process to investigate a question
or problem that interests them
outside the general class curriculum.
It also serves as a method
for students to complete an independent
research project as
part of the PCSS college readiness
program and assists students
in developing the necessary
skills in verbal and written
scientifi c communication.
The mission of PCSS is to prepare
educationally under-reGerry
Dâ€™Ambrosio
Attorney-at-Law
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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.
PCSS I 11th-graders Doha Marbouh (left), of Revere, and Sallam Ali (right), of Malden, present their
Science project, â€œThe Eff ectiveness of Natural vs. Chemical Disinfectants In Preventing Bacterial
Growth,â€ to a judge. (Courtesy photo)
14 Proctor Avenue, Revere
(781) 284-5657
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THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 16, 2024
JOHN MACKEY & ASSOCIATES
~ Attorneys at Law ~
* PERSONAL INJURY
* REAL ESTATE
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* PERSONAL BANKRUPTCY
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14 Norwood Street
Everett, MA 02149
Phone: (617) 387-4900 Fax: (617) 381-1755
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Chef Anthony Pio leads a cooking class at the Rossetti-Cowan Senior Center.
(617) 387-9810 R
evereTV loves any opportunity
to partner with the
Rossetti-Cowan Senior Center
to cover community events or
record new programming for
all to enjoy. Last week the staff
took a camera to visit the Senior
Center, where Chef Anthony
Pio from Murrayâ€™s Tavern in
Revere shared his culinary expertise
with seniors. Seniors got
their own set of ingredients and
were guided through the creation
of delicious homemade
ricotta gnocchi topped with
marinara sauce. Chef Pio went
through each step with the attendees
and answered any
questions they had along the
way. Learn about this local chef
and how to make ricotta gnocchi,
and relive the experience
by watching the full video now
playing on the RTV Community
Channel. You can also recreate
this dish by following along
and listening to the recipe!
If you love cooking shows,
tune in to the Community
Channel; reruns of holiday-themed
episodes of â€œCooking
with the Keefesâ€ are now
scheduled weekly. The most
recent recording was hosted
by Jennifer Keefe just a few
weeks ago in celebration of Galentineâ€™s
Day with some baked
treats. Galentineâ€™s Day is a day
to celebrate friendship the day
before traditional Valentineâ€™s
Day. An old Superbowl Special
aired last week to showcase
some favorite football snack
ideas. You will see the Keefesâ€™
St. Patrickâ€™s Day episode from
a few years ago playing in the
month of March. All RTV cooking
programming airs on the
Community Channel, which is
8 and 1072 on Comcast and 3
and 614 on RCN.
This week for â€œIn the Loop,â€
there is information about
Mayor Patrick Keefe announcing
the opening of the 2024
Youth Summer Job Applications
with Revere Recreation.
A summer job with the City of
Revere is an opportunity for our
young residents to gain valuable
experience and contribute
to their community. All applications
must be submitted
via the Google Form on Revere
Recreationâ€™s website by April 5
at 5 p.m. Watch the PSAs posted
in four languages on RevereTV
for more information regarding
the application process
and how to ask any questions
about the program. All recordings
of â€œIn the Loopâ€ get posted
to YouTube, Facebook and Instagram
as well.
If you have been wondering
what the Robert Haas Jr. Health
& Wellness Center is all about, a
video walkthrough will soon be
posted to RevereTV. Take a look
at the equipment, get to know
some staff and hear about
some classes they off er. A more
in-depth video tour is coming
soon. This will be scheduled to
the Community Channel and
social media.
As always, RTV GOV is scheduled
with the latest government
meetings. This weekâ€™s rotation
includes the Zoning Subcommittee,
Route 1A South
Roundabout Informational
Meeting, Conservation Commission,
Appointments Subcommittee
and Traffi c Commission.
RTV GOV is channel 9 for
Comcast subscribers and channels
13 and 613 for RCN subscribers.
If you are not a cable
subscriber in Revere, you can
watch these meetings on RevereTVâ€™s
YouTube page.
Need a hall for your special event?
The Schiavo Club, located at
71 Tileston Street, Everett is
available for your Birthdays,
Anniversaries, Sweet 16 parties
and more?
For more info,
call (857) 249-7882
Subscribe to the Advocate Online!
Your Local News in 6 Languages!
www.advocatenews.net
.advo
news.net
RevereTV Spotlight
×‰	Ú 7cassandra://EARbEfIf-RchrXvnQfIgg8Ay0FiN3s-VjcoLCleb0x4Í/ÀÍ`Ì°Í ×eÎoÅæÕ[Ž…Ô×‰EÚßTHE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 16, 2024
Page 5
Firefighter DiBartolomeo promoted to a lieutenant
Shown from left to right: Deputy Fire Chief Michael DiCarlo, State Rep. Jessica Giannino,
Fire Chief Christopher Bright, State Representative Jeff rey Turco, Fire Lt.
Leonard DiBartolomeo, Mayor Patrick Keefe, Jr., City Council Vice President Ira Novoselsky,
Ward 1 City Councillor Joanne McKenna, School Committee Vice Chair
Jacqueline Monterroso, School Committee Member
Anthony Caggiano, School Committee Secretary
John Kingston and City Council President
Anthony Cogliandro.
By Tara Vocino
F
irefi ghter Leonard DiBartolomeo was promoted
to a lieutenant during last Thursdayâ€™s
ceremony in the Revere City Council
Chambers.
Fire Chief Christopher Bright said itâ€™s a joyous
occasion when a fi refi ghter moves up in rank.
Family members, shown from left to right: proud father, Leonard DiBartolomeo,
mother, Martha DiBartolomeo, Fire Lt. Leonard DiBartolomeo, Jr., wife, Rowan DiBartolomeo,
mother-in-law, Tansel Cornell and father-in-law, Darwin Cornel. (Advocate
photos by Tara Vocino)
His proud wife, Rowan, pinned DiBartolomeo during last Thursdayâ€™s
ceremony at Revere City Hall.
City Clerk Ashley Melnik is shown administering the oath to Lt.
DiBartolomeo.
Shown from left to right: Firefi
ghters Leann DiCarlo, William
MacMillan and Ryan DiCarlo,
Deputy Fire Chief Michael DiCarlo,
Senior Deputy Fire Chief
James Cullen, Fire Chief Christopher
Bright, Lt. Leonard DiBartolomeo,
Lt. Nicholas Russo
and Firefi ghters John Serino,
Brian Hartman, Hernando Ortega-Bueno
and Robert Crowe
congratulated DiBartolomeo.
For Advertising
with Results,
call The Adv
call The Advocatocate
Newspapers Newspapers
at 781-286-8500 or
Info@advocatenews.net
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THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 16, 2024
RHS Patriots Varsity Basketball Cheerleaders
honor seniors on Senior Night
Senior Carlos Moran Hernandez was escorted by his mother, Indira, his father, Gerber,
and sisters, Celeste and Valeria, during last Thursdayâ€™s RHS Basketball Cheerleading
Senior Night at Revere High School.
Co-Captain Samira Cammarano was accompanied by her dance coach Reia BriggsConnor,
her mother, Samantha, her father, William, her sister, Natlia, and friends.
Co-Captain Brianna Rodriguez was accompanied by family members: proud mother
Adele, stepfather Eric, father Julio, brother Kane and grandmother Hilda.
By Tara Vocino
R
HS Patriots Varsity Basketball Cheerleaders honored their seniors during last Thursdayâ€™s Senior
Night at the Revere High School Fieldhouse.
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Senior Dylan Misci (in center) was accompanied by Coaches Kayle Pezzuto and Sabrina
Sloan and friends Brianna Rodriguez, Carlos Moran, Natalie Rodriguez,
Samira Cammarano, Vita Somboun, Amelia Murray and Stacey Li.
Co-Captain Natalie Rodriguez was escorted by family members:
mother Julie, stepfather Manny, father Luis, stepmother Michele,
grandmother Dora and grandfather Jorge.
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Page 7
RHS Boysâ€™ Varsity Patriots Basketball team honors
seniors on Senior Night
Co-Captain Leone was accompanied by his proud mother,
Joy, his father, John, and his brothers Matthew and Joe.
(Advocate photos by Tara Vocino)
By Tara Vocino
R
evere High
School Boysâ€™
Varsity Patriots
Basketball team
honored their seniors
during last
Thursdayâ€™s Senior
Night at Revere
High School.
Co-Captain Luke Ellis was escorted by his proud mother,
Lauren, and his grandmother Jannine during last Thursdayâ€™s
Boysâ€™ Basketball Senior Night at Revere High School.
Senior Ryan El Babor was escorted by his proud father,
Ali, and his brothers, Adam and Sofi .
Senior Amir Yamani was accompanied by family members:
proud father Abderrahim Yamani, sisters Sara
and Malake Yamani and mother Hasna Makane.
Senior Domenic Belmonte was escorted by his proud
mother, Andrea, and his father, Anthony.
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 Í‹Í ?9×H¯http://neaq.org××Ðˆ×‰EÚ JPage 8
THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 16, 2024
~ GUEST COMMENTARY ~
City Council Unanimously Sets Stage for Climate Conversation
By Councillor-at-Large Juan
Pablo Jaramillo
A
t Mondayâ€™s council meeting,
the Revere City Council set
the stage to have more intentional
conversations around climate
and its eff ects on the residents
of Revere by establishing
a new sub-committee for the
fi rst time in at least a decade.
The motion presented by
Councillor Juan Pablo Jaramillo
established the â€œClimate,
Sustainability, and Workforceâ€
Sub-Committee. The purpose
of this sub-committee will be
to focus on any motion or ordinance
change proposals relative
to short- and long-term
eff ects of climate change, the
solutions needed to address climate
change from a systemic
approach, from climate resiliency
to the energy transition, and
the important role that workers
play in the development and
sustainability of our city as a
whole and in the just transition
toward a greener future.
Councillor-at-Large Juan Pablo
Jaramillo, who is a labor and
environmental advocate at the
state level, remarked that â€œhundred-year
storms are happening
every twenty years, and that
the climate crisis must be tackled
at the city, state, and municipalâ€
level, adding that we
must create the space to have
the conversations around climate
and as we â€œwe pride ourselves
on being a working-class
city, we must fi nd the solutions
needed from a worker centered
approach.â€
According to the U.S. EPA, the
â€œclimate of Massachusetts is
changing. The Commonwealth
has warmed by more than two
degrees (F) in the last century.
Throughout the northeastern
United States, spring is arriving
earlier and bringing more precipitation,
heavy rainstorms are
more frequent, and summers
are hotter and drier. Sea level
is rising, and severe storms increasingly
cause floods that
damage property and infrastructure.
In the coming decades,
the changing climate is
likely to increase fl ooding, harm
ecosystems, disrupt fi shing and
farming, and increase some
risks to human health. Our climate
is changing because the
earth is warming. People have
increased the amount of carbon
dioxide in the air by 40 percent
since the late 1700s.â€ Revere is
no stranger to catastrophic climate
events as we experienced
in the wake of Hurricane Sandy
where flooding was so bad
that fi sh entered peopleâ€™s basements.
Jaramillo added that to
curb the worst eff ects of climate
change, we need to make the
intentional decision to be part
of the 351 city and town strategy
needed to meet the stateâ€™s
425r Broadway, Saugus
Located adjacent to Kohls Plaza Route 1 South
in Saugus at the intersection of Walnut Street
We are on MBTA Bus Route 429
781-231-1111
We are a Skating Rink with
Bowling Alleys, Arcade and
two TVâ€™s where the ball
games are always on!
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Monday
Tuesday
Wednesday
Thursday
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Saturday
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7:30-11 p.m.
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Roller skate rentals included in all prices
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Councillor asks why crime
reports arenâ€™t published in
the local newspapers
By Barbara Taormina
I
n an eff ort to ensure the community
has all available public
safety information, Councillor-at-Large
Michelle Kelley this
week proposed that the city
hold a public hearing on an ordinance
that would require certain
information from the police
department to be made public.
â€œIn days gone past, we had the
police blotter in local papers,â€
said Kelley, who suggested that
information about local crime,
such as neighborhood breakins,
is valuable to the public.
â€œEven if itâ€™s just general information,
with no names or addresses,
just general information
where residents can go and see
information about crime in the
community,â€ explained Kelley.
Councillors agreed to send
Kelleyâ€™s motion to the Health &
Human Services Subcommittee
for review although there were
concerns. Councillor-at-Large
Juan Pablo Jaramillo stressed
that the council should look at
the proposal through a human
lens and avoid doing harm to
those struggling with poverty
and substance abuse. Councillor-at-Large
Marc Silvestri pointed
out that an arrest doesnâ€™t always
lead to a conviction, and
publishing arrest records isnâ€™t
fair to those who were charged
but innocent of crimes. Councillors
questioned whether local
newspapers should be asked
to carry police records.
The Revere Advocate no longer
publishes police logs and is not
inclined to revive the practice.
â€œThe Advocateâ€™s position is that
we stopped publishing the arrest
logs due to the number of
people calling requesting to
have them removed due to their
arrest being found by would-be
employers following a Google
search,â€ said James Mitchell,
owner/publisher and editor of
The Advocate Newspapers, Inc.,
which publishes The Revere Advocate.
â€œSince
everyone who is arrested
is â€˜innocent until proven
guilty,â€™ I decided years ago to remove
the arrest logs from The
Advocate website and discontinue
publishing arrests to give
those who chose to lead a good
life a chance to succeed by removing
the online â€œscarlet letterâ€.
So many I have spoken to
throughout the years who ask
for my help to have their name
removed provided a good reason
in making my decision and
Iâ€™m glad I did. Everyone deserves
a chance to succeed in life - why
should one mistake follow them
for the rest of their lives?â€ said
Mitchell.
With respect to crime reports,
which provide the weekly number
of crimes reported, such as
break-ins, robberies, etc. each
week in the city, that could be
something provided by the police
dept. but it has never been
off ered. The majority of major
crimes reported in Revere must
go through the Massachusetts
district attorneyâ€™s offi ce while
under investigation before a
news outlet is notifi ed.
For Advertising with Results, call The Advocate Newspapers
at 781-286-8500 or Info@advocatenews.net
emission goals and sustainability
standards that will protect
our residents.
Councillor McKenna pointed
to the situation at Pearl Avenue,
where flooding is â€œdestroying
property and foundationsâ€
while adding her support
for the motion. McKennaâ€™s ward
1 sits mostly along Revereâ€™s
southern coast and inundation
is habitual and aging coastal
infrastructure is threatening
the homes of thousands in the
Beachmont Neighborhood.
Councillor Guarino-Sawaya,
who represents the Point of
Pines, Riverside, and Oak Island,
also chimed in in support of the
motion to create the sub-committee,
advocating fi ercely for
those communities which are
all adversely aff ected by coastal
erosion and fl ooding. Guarino-Sawayaâ€™s
ward is also the
most closely impacted by the
trash incinerator in neighboring
Saugus which has been a source
of environmental and health
concerns for decades.
The power to create sub-committees
lies solely on the Council
President but in a demonstration
of collaborative leadership,
President Cogliandro allowed
this motion to come to
the fl oor of the council session
recognizing the importance
of the climate conversation in
public. â€œNew blood on the council
brings new ideas and new
leadership. Iâ€™m excited to see
Councillor Jaramillo tackling climate
and coastal issues through
a new city council sub-committee,â€
said President Cogliandro.
Jaramillo thanked President
Cogliandro for â€œhis support in
this endeavor and his recognition
of the whole government
approach needed to tackle such
complex issues.â€
Beachmont resident Ed Deveau
spoke in support of the
newly created sub-committee
and expressed that he hoped
that this committee would elevate
the conversation around
some of the sea wall infrastructure
in Beachmont.
President Cogliandro named
Councillor Jaramillo as Chair of
the new sub-committee, adding
Councillors Novoselsky,
Guarino-Sawaya, and McKenna,
who all represent coastal neighborhoods
of Revere along with
Councillor Silvestri.
×‰	Ú 7cassandra://9CNjXgnydsP1tq_DsMviD5gDw-d6_tIMR0BhyVDMhRkÍ)ÁÍ`Ì°Í ×eÎoÅæÕ[Ž…Ø×‰EÚ!¯THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 16, 2024
Page 9
City of Revere
$11,234,522 general
obligation bond
anticipation notes
weighted average net
interest cost 3.2876%
City of Revere CFO reports competitive bids
from note underwriters
Special to Th e Advocate
C
ity of Revere Chief Financial
Officer Richard Viscay announced
that the City received
competitive bids from note underwriters
on Tuesday, February
6, 2024, for a $11,234,522, sixmonth
bond anticipation note
issue. Piper Sandler was awarded
$6,234,522 at an average interest
rate of 3.228% and Jeff eries
Financial Group was awarded
$5,000,000 at an average interest
rate of 3.362%. The City received
a total of six bids on the notes.
Note proceeds will be used to
fund various municipal projects.
Prior to the sale, S&P Global
Ratings, a municipal credit rating
agency, reviewed the Cityâ€™s
credit status with the Cityâ€™s fi -
nancial management team. The
review covered updates on the
local and regional economy, the
Cityâ€™s management practices, fi -
nances, debt position and other
obligations, including other
post-employment benefi ts and
pension obligations. Following
the review, S&Pâ€™s rating committee
affi rmed the Cityâ€™s AA underlying
bond rating and assigned
a rating of SP-1+ to the notes,
the highest attainable shortterm
rating. The rating agency
cited the Cityâ€™s stable tax base,
continued maintenance of very
strong reserves, moderate debt
with low fi xed costs and strong
institutional framework as positive
credit factors. Additionally,
S&P assigned the AA+ enhanced
rating to the Cityâ€™s outstanding
debt secured by the State Qualifi
ed Bond Act local state aid intercept
program.
The bids for the notes were accepted
at the offi ces of the Cityâ€™s
Financial Advisor, Hilltop Securities
Inc., which is located at 54
Canal St. in Boston, Mass.
For further information, please
contact Chief Financial Offi cer/
City Auditor/Budget Director
Richard Viscay at City Hall (281
Broadway, Revere, MA 02151);
telephone: 781-286-8131.
Make a difference as
a hospice volunteer!
Online training to begin March 4
C
are Dimensions, the regionâ€™s
largest provider of hospice
care, will hold online training
classes for those interested in
becoming volunteers for the
nonprofi t organization. You can
make a diff erence in a patientâ€™s
life by:
â€¢ Engaging in a shared interest
or hobby
â€¢ Helping with letter-writing
or life review
â€¢ Visiting with your approved
dog
â€¢ Reading to the patient
â€¢ Listening and by providing
a supportive, comforting presence
â€œIâ€™m
a firm believer in quality
of life, so Iâ€™ll do what I can
to help my patients with that.
Itâ€™s so rewarding when they
acknowledge my visitâ€â€”Care
Dimensions Hospice Volunteer
Michael Person of Wakefi
eld, Mass.
Our volunteers visit patients
in their homes, in facilities, and
at our hospice houses. If patient
visits are not the right fi t, you can
volunteer in other ways, such
as providing administrative offi
ce support or making check-in
phone calls to current patients
or bereaved family members.
Training will be held via Zoom
on Mondays and Wednesdays,
Aquarium welcomes guests
during February school vacation
week with extended hours and
educational programs
Spend the week with sea lions, fi lms and more
F
or February school vacation
week, the New England
Aquarium is ready to host guests
with animal encounters, a new
cafÃ© menu, fi lms on the largest
screen in New England, opportunities
to get involved in advocacy
eff orts, and more. The Aquarium
will extend its hours from 9 a.m.
to 6 p.m. daily from February 19 to
23 when Massachusetts, Rhode
Island and Maine public school
students have vacation weeks.
Guests are strongly encouraged
to purchase tickets online in advance
at neaq.org, as timed ticket
slots might sell out. Highlights
for the week include:
Daily presentations and behind-the-scenes
opportunities
â€¢ Aquarium guests can enjoy
daily presentations with the penguins,
sea lions and harbor seals,
along with the residents of the Giant
Ocean Tank. The full schedule
is available at https://www.neaq.
org/wp-content/uploads/2023/12/
daily-presentations.pdf
â€¢ The Aquarium is also off ering
special encounters with its resident
Atlantic harbor seals for an
additional fee. The daily programs
provide guests with an exclusive
inside-the-exhibit experience
and the opportunity to interact
with and learn more about these
marine mammals. Guests can also
register for an art-making session,
where they will receive a one-ofa-kind
painting made by a seal
during their visit. More information
is at https://www.neaq.org/
visit/animal-encounters/
Sea turtle advocacy programming
â€¢
During school vacation week,
the New England Aquarium will
off er visitors an opportunity to
help protect endangered sea
turtles. Guests are encouraged
to stop by the Blue Planet Action
Center during their visit to learn
more about the Aquariumâ€™s sea
turtle rescue and rehabilitation
program and write to their members
of Congress to encourage
their support of these critical conservation
eff orts. The site will be
9â€“11 a.m., March 4â€“27 (register
by February 24). For more information
or to register, please go
to www.CareDimensions.org/
Volunteers, or email VolunteerInfo@CareDimensions.org.
About
Car e Dimensions: The
largest hospice and palliative
care provider to adults and children
in Massachusetts, this nonprofi
t, community-based leader
in advanced illness care proA
harbor seal encounter (Credit: Tony Rinaldo for the New England Aquarium)
active from February 19 to 23 and
is an exciting chance to contribute
to the collective work to protect
these endangered animals.
Meet the Aquariumâ€™s newest
residents
â€¢ Toward the end of 2023, the
Aquarium welcomed two California
sea lions, Gio and Farley.
The 15-year-old sea lions are
now permanent residents in the
Aquariumâ€™s New Balance Foundation
Marine Mammal Center, and
join three other California sea lions:
Zoe, Sierra and Tipper. Daily
presentations have returned
to the Marine Mammal Center at
12 p.m. and 2 p.m., when visitors
can see the sea lions interacting
with their trainers.
â€¢ The Aquarium also recently
welcomed a nurse shark, Cirri, to
its Giant Ocean Tank, continuing
a decades-long commitment of
caring for and protecting shark
species. The three-and-a-halffoot,
22-pound shark joins Myrtle,
the Aquariumâ€™s famous green
sea turtle, cownose rays, eels and
hundreds of colorful reef fi sh in
the Caribbean coral reef exhibit.
Simons Theatre fi lms
â€¢ The Aquariumâ€™s Simons Theatre
is now showing â€œArctic: Our
Frozen Planet,â€ a 45-minute documentary
fi lmed on a scale never
attempted before. The film
captures a year-long adventure
vides comprehensive hospice,
palliative care and grief support
in more than 100 Massachusetts
communities. Founded
in 1978 as Hospice of the
North Shore, Care Dimensions
cares for patients wherever they
live or at its two inpatient hospice
facilities: the Care Dimensions
Hospice House in Lincoln
and the Kaplan Family Hospice
House in Danvers. Additionalacross
the seasons in the Arctic â€“
and the subsequent impact our
changing climate has had on it.
Tickets and show times are available
at all Aquarium ticketing locations
by calling 617-973-5206
or by visiting neaq.org. Also showing
are â€œBlue Whales: Return of
the Giants 3D,â€ â€œGreat White Shark
3D,â€ â€œIncredible Predators 3Dâ€ and
â€œSecrets of the Sea 3D.â€
Elevated CafÃ© Off erings
â€¢ Whether visitors are looking
for a full meal or a quick bite, the
cuisine at the Aquarium is elevated
in a fresh, exciting way that features
sustainably sourced ingredients,
thanks to a new partnership
with Sodexo Live! The cafÃ©
now features diverse choices, including
healthy dishes as well as
favorites from the grill, all aimed
at an inviting and environmentally-friendly
dining atmosphere,
along with visitor education
around sustainable initiatives.
About the New England Aquarium:
This nonprofi t research and
conservation organization has
protected and cared for our ocean
and marine animals for more than
50 years. It provides science-based
solutions and helps shape policies
that create measurable change to
address threats the ocean faces. It
inspires action through discovery
and helps create engaged, resilient
communities.
ly, Care Dimensionsâ€™ HomeMD
program provides in-home
primary care to housebound
patients over age 65 in North
Shore and Greater Boston communities.
The Care Dimensions
Learning Institute educates
health care professionals and
community members on advanced
illness and end-of-life
topics. For more info, visit www.
CareDimensions.org.
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THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 16, 2024
Revere Highâ€™s dynamic duo:
Leone and Ellis lead with heart and hustle
By Dom Nicastro
T
he Revere High School boysâ€™
basketball team is looking to
fi nish strong as the regular season
winds down this month.
The team wonâ€™t be going to the
postseason but has played competitively
all year. And if you ask
those around the program whoâ€™s
helped keep the team competitive
and striving to win, itâ€™s senior
co-captains Andrew Leone
and Luke Ellis.
The duo caught up with the Revere
Advocate to discuss the season
and whatâ€™s next.
Andrew Leone: making the
hustle plays
Leoneâ€™s role on the team this
year was to basically play the 3, 4
or 5 frontcourt positions depending
on the lineup or game situation.
â€œIâ€™d say that my biggest role
is to provide hustle plays such
as rebounds and defense while
also trying to help facilitate the
off ense if Iâ€™m able to,â€ Leone said.
What made Revere tick this year
when it was on and winning?
â€œWhen the team is playing well, Iâ€™d
say whatâ€™s going well is the tempo
for us,â€ Leone said. â€œWhen we
play fast but under control we always
seem to play better. I think
the area that needs growth are
ANDREW LEONE
Patriots Capt.
just simply being able to close out
games, which we have struggled
with all year.â€
It isnâ€™t easy playing in the Greater
Boston League. The league was
already challenging before the
entry of the Lynn teams a few
years ago. â€œThe competition this
year in the league was good but
I wouldnâ€™t say anything surprising,â€
Leone said. â€œThe teams I think
could do well are Everett and
Lynn English in the postseason.â€
As for Revereâ€™s future, Leone
said he thinks this team is going
to be really good next year
because it has a lot of talented
players returning who have already
proved they can play well at
the varsity level. â€œThe message Iâ€™d
have for next yearâ€™s team is start
workouts earlier and start playing
together as soon as possible,â€
Leone said. â€œThis way you donâ€™t
LUKE ELLIS
Patriots Capt.
come into the season with chemistry
issues or rust. As captains we
have just tried to make sure that
everyone is giving it their all and
having fun, but we still want to
win every game possible regardless
of our record.â€
Leone is unsure of where he will
be attending college as of right
now, but his major will be fi nance.
Luke Ellis: defender at heart
Ellisâ€™ role on the team this year
was to play defense around the
rim and make jump shots and layups
when needed.
As for the team, the Patriots
play at their best when they
all work together and play as a
complete unit, complementing
each otherâ€™s play styes and
maximizing everyoneâ€™s individual
strengths, Ellis said. â€œThe team
can show growth through winning
more games next year and
making an eff ort to improve in
a multitude of areas, including
reducing our turnovers and rebounding,â€
Ellis said.
The league was pretty evenly
matched this year, which Ellis
said is great for everyone.
â€œLynn English and Everett have
bright futures and they played
extremely well this season,â€ Ellis
said. â€œI think RHS will be fi ne next
year and will defi nitely improve,
especially with the many players
staying who have grown in
their varsity experience. In terms
of keeping morale up throughout
the season, it was quite easy.
We just used our naturally positive
and lighthearted personalities
and kept pushing forward.â€
Ellis said heâ€™s undecided for
college. His major will be business
management.
Music of Bruckner, Bach headline North Shore
Philharmonic Orchestraâ€™s Winter Concert
A
nton Brucknerâ€™s demanding
Symphony No. 3 and Johann
Sebastian Bachâ€™s acclaimed
Double Violin Concerto are the
featured works when Music Director
Robert Lehmann conducts
the North Shore Philharmonic
Orchestra (NSPO) in its
Winter Concert on Sunday, February
25, at Swampscott High
Schoolâ€™s auditorium. Concert
time is 3:00 p.m. Tickets will be
available at the door or can be
purchased in advance at www.
nspo.org for $30; $25 for seniors
and students. Children 12 and
under are admitted free.
The Double Violin Concerto
will highlight NSPO concertmaster
Zoia Bologovsky and principal
second violin Ashley Offret.
Both are well-known, longstanding
members of the NSPO.
Bologovsky has toured throughout
the United States and Europe
as fi rst violinist with the
Arden String Quartet and has
held positions with the Portland
Symphony, Springfield
Beethoven-Brahms Society of
Boston. In addition, both teach
music.
The Bach Double Violin concerto,
which was composed
around 1730, has long been
one of the composerâ€™s most famous
works. German composer
Anton Bruckner composed
his Symphony No. 3 in 1873 as
a dedication to fellow composer
Richard Wagner. The work is
an expressive composition that
illustrates the composerâ€™s aff ecMusic
Director Robert Lehmann
will conduct the music of
Shubert, Bach and Bruckner in
the North Shore Philharmonic
Orchestraâ€™s Winter Concert on
Sunday, February 25, at 3 p.m.
at the Swampscott High School
Auditorium. (Courtesy of NSPO)
Symphony, Rhode Island Philharmonic,
Opera Maine and the
Portsmouth Symphony. Off ret
has played with the Rhode Island
Philharmonic, Symphony
New Hampshire and the Bachtion
for the grand and majestic
scale of classical music. Also on
the concert program is Franz
Shubertâ€™s â€œRosamundeâ€ Overture.
Though the play for the
music was unsuccessful, Shubertâ€™s
music earned a much
more favorable response, and
it has lived on to be one of Shubertâ€™s
most popular pieces.
The NSPO is playing its 75th
season in its 76th year, having
missed all of the 2020-2021
season due to the pandemic.
Staff ed largely by volunteer
players, the NSPO is committed
to providing access to quality
music at an aff ordable price to
communities north of Boston.
The Orchestra strives to develop,
train and provide opportunities
for young musicians while providing
a large range of programs
covering the full range of symphonic
and pops repertoire for
a diverse public. For full concert
information, visit www.nspo.org
or contact info@nspo.org.
North Shore Philharmonic Orchestra concertmaster
Zoia Bologovsky (Courtesy of NSPO)
Principal second violin Ashley Off ret (Courtesy of NSPO)
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Page 11
~ RHS PATRIOTS SPORTS ROUNDUP ~
Revere girls hoop
clinches share
of GBL title
The Revere High School girls
basketball team keeps rolling.
The team beat Somerville, 2415,
and clinched at least a share
of the Greater Boston League
title.
Alisha Jean led the team with
11 points and three rebounds.
Shayna Smith added six points
and eight rebounds.
Revere boys hoops
splits last two
The Revere boys beat Greater
Lowell, 67-62, in its fi nal home
game of the season.
The Patriots knocked off the
Gryphons at their place two
weeks prior by a score of 5849
but that was a much closer
game than the score suggested,
according to Revere coach
David Leary.
Junior guard Ethan Day (33
points, fi ve rebounds, four assists)
had a career night, scoring
14 points in the third quarter including
a 3-pointer from the top
to push the Patriots lead to 5038
with one quarter remaining.
Junior guard Avi Lung added
14 pts, four steals and four
assists. His 3-pointer late in the
fourth kept Greater Lowell at
bay.
Day and Lung combined shot
6-for-7 from the free throw line
down the stretch as Greater
Lowell was fouling intentionally
to stop the clock.
â€œWe did not make it easy on
ourselves, but Greater Lowell is
well-coached, young and hungry.
They came at us all night,â€
Leary said. â€œWe had a lot of guys
step up and obviously Ethan
had himself a game off ensively.
Nice to have Avi back to 100%,
and we had struggled with free
throw shooting at points this
year but we hit some big ones
to close it out. Good team win.â€
Somerville completed a season
sweep of Revere, 55-45.
Seniors Ryan El Babor, Domenic
Belmonte, Amir Yamani
and co-captains Luke Ellis and
Andrew Leone were honored
with their families to an on-court
ceremony pre-game. The five
seniors were also announced
as the starters prior to RHS Class
of 2020 Miss Olivia Freni's beautiful
rendition of the National
Anthem.
Ellis had 12 points and four
rebounds. Leone added four
points and eight rebounds. El
Babor tossed in a double-double
with 10 points and 10 rebounds
Lung scored seven
while adding four steals and as
many assists. Day added 12 pts
and fi ve boards.
"We obviously wanted to win
the game for our seniors and our
team, but give Somerville credit.
They made the big shots late to
take it,â€ Leary said. â€œWhat an atmosphere
we had here for these
guys. The student body, friends
and families really came out
and made it a special night for
our seniors. Luke tried to bring
the house down early with all of
the threes, Ryan played his best
game of the year and Dom, Amir
and Andrew all competed hard.
Hopefully they and their families
will cherish this night regardless
of the fi nal score."
Varsity, shown from left to right: Bottom row: Assistant Coach Victoria Correira, Assistant Coach
Elizabeth Lake, Head Coach Ariana Rivera, Daniela Murillo, Julianna Bolton, Salma Zahraoui, Rocio
Gonzalez and Shayna Smith; standing: Marwa Riad, Alisha Jean, Bella Stamatopoulos, Belma
Velic, Haley Belloise, Nisrin Sekkat and Lea Doucette with Assistant Coaches Michael Micciche and
Nicholas Canelas. (Advocate photo by Tara Vocino)
Revere boys, girls
shine at MSCTA
track meet
The Revere boys had a few
highlights from Saturday's MSCTA
Qualifying Meet, which took
place at Reggie Lewis Center on
Saturday.
The 4x200-meter relay team
set a new school record in
1:34.02. The team consisted of
senior Medy Bellemsieh, junior
Oliver Escobar, sophomore Jeremy
X, and senior JV Cunha. The
prior school record was 1:34.41
set in 2012 by Joe Ritchie, Younes
Hartout, Robert Rose and John
Lopes.
"Medy had an average start,
but turned on the jets about 4050
meters in and ran a spectacular
opening leg,â€ Revere coach
David Fleming said. As he's done
all year, Oliver got the baton and
looked like he was exploded out
of a cannon. He ran a really fast
second leg. The handoff from
Oliver to Jeremy wasn't entirely
smooth, but Jeremy ran another
strong leg and got the baton
to JV, who had a blazing anchor
leg. JV's split, which was in the
22-second range, was the difference
that carried the team to
the record."
Cunha won the 600 meters in
1:23.54. "JV was in control from
the opening gun, lead the entire
way and made it look easy,â€
Fleming said. â€œHe's so strong
right now. He's great shape
heading into the D1 State Meet
this week."
Isaiah DeCrosta fi nished second
in the 55-meter hurdles.
"Zay's been frustrated with a
football-related injury this season,
but he's back,â€ Fleming said.
â€œAs usual, girls head coach Racquel
MacDonald-Ciambelli gets
the coaching credit for Zay's success
in the hurdles."
Patsâ€™ Sean Burnett eyes the basket.
Luke Ellis looks for an open teammate in recent
action.
Bellemsieh finished first in
his heat and seventh overall in
the 300-meter with a time of
37.13, which was a new personal
record. "If Medy was in the top
heat, he would have run faster,â€
Fleming said. â€œOverall, I think
he was happy with how he performed
in his first 300-meter
race, but he was a bit frustrated
knowing he could have gone
faster. Either way, it's a good
tune-up for Medy, who will be
running with JV in the 600 in the
D1 State Meet."
Sophomore Edwin Alarcon
set a new personal record with
a time of 2:50.78 in the 1,000
meters.
"Edwin won his heat after moving
into the lead in the fi rst 100
meters,â€ Fleming said. â€œHe went
out fast in about 30 seconds for
200 meters and about 61 for 400.
He paid the price toward the end
but had enough left for the win.
It's been fun to watch Edwin's
progression in the 1,000. He's
worked hard and has chopped
approximately 20 seconds off his
time this season."
On the girls side, Liv Yuong
broke another school record this
weekend at the MSTCA State
Qualifi ers Meet. She jumped 1510
in the indoor long jump which
topped the old school record
by.75. This is her second school
record and ensures that she will
compete in three events this
Thursday at the D1 State Meet.
â€œSheâ€™s just a super-talented
athlete, and sheâ€™s so coachable,â€
MacDonald-Ciambelli said. â€œShe
takes advice well and applies it
to each of her events. Itâ€™s incredible
that sheâ€™s only a junior, and
I know she will keep rewriting
these record books.â€
This is Revereâ€™s list of competitors
on Thursday:
Yuong: 55-meter hurdles, long
jump, high jump
Gemma Stamatopoulos:
600-meter
Olivia Rupp: mile
Gisele Salvador, Danni Hope
Randall, Jaliyah Manigo, Ashley
Cabrera Rodriguez: 4x200-meter
relay.
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Page 12
THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 16, 2024
DONORS | FROM Page 1
viduals in New England currently
waiting for a life-saving organ
transplant, Mayor Patrick Keefe,
Jr. declared February 14 â€œHave
a Heart & Give a Heart Dayâ€ in
recognition of those touched
by organ and tissue donors citywide.
On February 9, New England
Donor Services, in collaboration
with the Mayorâ€™s Offi ce,
were joined by four local donors
and their organ recipients, in celebration
of this event.
Three people in one room all
gave a kidney to a loved one.
Keefe, who in the past donated
his left kidney to his mother,
Lucille, noted: â€œYou have the
opportunity to change the outcome
of someoneâ€™s life with a
selfless act. Choose to make
that outcome a positive one.â€
The Mayor added, â€œGive the
gift of life by choosing to be a
donor.â€
For information, contact Matt
Boger: 617-780-6249 / matt_boger@neds.org.
To register to be a
donor outside the RMV offi ce, or
for information, visit mass.gov/
OrganDonor.
Living donors and survivors rallied together in an eff ort to get more donors.
Shown from left to right: Matt Boger, State Representative Jessica
Giannino and Mayor Patrick Keefe with a state citation last
Friday morning at Revere City Hall.
Shown from left to right: State Representative Jessica Giannino, Bob Sawyer, Matt Boger and State
Senator Lydia Edwards. (Advocate photos by Tara Vocino)
Rocco Falzone thanked his wife, Colleen, for donating her kidney.
Revere resident Bob Sawyer received
a new extension on life by
receiving a heart from the â€œgreatest
heroâ€ whom he never met.
New England Donor Services Government Relations Director
Matt Boger encouraged people to register as an organ
donor at the Registry of Motor Vehicles, which is in Revere,
or online. Thereâ€™s no age limit to register.
State Representative Jessica Giannino said her great uncle lived
18 more months with an organ transplant.
A LIVING TESTAMENT: Lucille Keefe thanked her son for saving
her life more than 20 years ago.
Colleen Falzone said 22 people die
daily because they need a kidney.
John Nucci received a kidney from his friend, Kerri Perullo
â€“ pictured with her son, Owen.
Valeria Tafur received a kidney from her brother, Antonio. Kenny Laferriere has lived another 23 years
by receiving a heart transplant.
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Page 13
Old North Church & Historic Site opens doors
during February School Vacation
Connect lessons from our nationâ€™s founding to today
through a new exhibit, audio guide and self-guided tours
of the crypt at the national landmark
Old North Church, Bostonâ€™s oldest surviving church (Courtesy photo)
nown for â€œone if by land, and
two if by seaâ€ and the midnight
ride of Paul Revere, the
legacy of Bostonâ€™s oldest surviving
church as a symbol of American
independence and active
citizenship is discussed in history
and civics classrooms nationwide.
During February School
Vacation, Old North Church &
Historic Site will open its doors
K
to visitors, who will get an indepth
look into our nationâ€™s
founding while also discovering
the origins of Old North Church
and its role in shaping Americaâ€™s
past and present. Visitors can follow
the famous Freedom Trail to
the national landmark, which is
CHURCH | SEE Page 19
- LEGAL NOTICE -
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î€·î€«î€¨ î€·î€µî€¬î€¤î€¯ î€¦î€²î€¸î€µî€·
î€³î€µî€²î€¥î€¤î€·î€¨ î€¤î€±î€§ î€©î€¤î€°î€¬î€¯î€¼ î€¦î€²î€¸î€µî€·
î€¶î˜îµµî’îîŽ î€§îŒî™îŒî–îŒî’î‘
î€§î’î†îŽîˆî— î€±î’î€‘ î€¶î€¸î€•î€—î€³î€“î€”î€šî€–î€¨î€¤
Estate of: î€°î€¤î€µî€¬î€¨ î€¼î€‘ î€¹î€¨î€¦î€¦î€«î€¬î€¤
Date of Death: î€¶îˆî“î—îˆîî…îˆî• î€™î€ î€•î€“î€•î€”
Do I Need to File a Tax Return This Year?
Dear Savvy Senior,
What are the IRS income tax fi ling requirements for retirees this tax season?
I didnâ€™t fi le a tax return the past two years because my income was below the
fi ling threshold, but I got a part-time job late last year, so Iâ€™m wondering if Iâ€™m
required to fi le this year.
Retired Worker
Dear Retired,
Whether or not you are required
to fi le a federal income
tax return this year will depend
on how much you earned last
year (in 2023), as well as the
source of the income, your age
and fi ling status.
Hereâ€™s a rundown of this tax
seasonâ€™s IRS tax fi ling requirement
thresholds.
For most people, this is pretty
straightforward. If your 2023
gross income â€“ which includes
all taxable income, not counting
your Social Security benefits,
unless you are married
and fi ling separately â€“ was below
the threshold for your fi ling
status and age, you probably
wonâ€™t have to fi le. But if itâ€™s
over, you will.
â€¢ Single: $13,850 ($15,700
if youâ€™re 65 or older by Jan. 1,
2023).
â€¢ Married filing jointly:
$27,700 ($29,200 if you or your
spouse is 65 or older; or $30,700
if youâ€™re both over 65).
â€¢ Married fi ling separately:
$5 at any age.
â€¢ Head of household: $20,800
($22,650 if 65 or older).
â€¢ Qualifying surviving
spouse: $27,700 ($29,200 if 65
or older).
To get a detailed breakdown
on federal fi ling requirements,
along with information on taxable
and nontaxable income,
call the IRS at 800-829-3676
and ask them to mail you a free
copy of the â€œ1040 and 1040-SR
Instructions for Tax Year 2023,â€ or
you can see it online at IRS.gov/
pub/irs-pdf/i1040gi.pdf.
Check Here Too
Be aware that there are other
fi nancial situations that can
require you to file a tax return,
even if your gross income
falls below the IRS filing requirements.
For example, if you
earned more than $400 from
self-employment in 2023, owe
any taxes on an IRA, Health Savings
Account or an alternative
minimum tax, or get premium
tax credits because you, your
spouse or a dependent is enrolled
in a Health Insurance Marketplace
plan, youâ€™ll need to fi le.
Youâ€™ll also need to fi le if youâ€™re
receiving Social Security benefi
ts, and one-half of your benefi
ts plus your other gross income
and any tax-exempt interest
exceeds $25,000, or $32,000 if
youâ€™re married and fi ling jointly.
To fi gure all this out, the IRS offers
an online tax tool that asks
a series of questions that will
help you determine if youâ€™re required
to fi le, or if you should
fi le because youâ€™re due a refund.
It takes less than 15 minutes to
complete.
You can access this tool at
IRS.gov/Help/ITA â€“ click on â€œDo
I Need to File a Tax Return?â€
Or you can get assistance over
the phone by calling the IRS
helpline at 800-829-1040.
Check Your State
Even if youâ€™re not required to
fi le a federal tax return this year,
donâ€™t assume that youâ€™re also excused
from fi ling state income
taxes. The rules for your state
might be very diff erent. Check
with your state tax agency before
concluding that youâ€™re entirely
in the clear. For links to
state tax agencies see Taxadmin.
org/fta-members.
Tax Preparation Help
If you fi nd that you do need
to fi le a tax return this year, you
can free fi le through the IRS at
IRS.gov/FreeFile if your 2023 adjusted
gross income was below
$79,000.
Or, if you need some help,
contact the Tax Counseling for
the Elderly (or TCE) program.
Sponsored by the IRS, TCE provides
free tax preparation and
counseling to middle and lowincome
taxpayers, age 60 and
older. Call 800-906-9887 or visit
IRS.treasury.gov/freetaxprep to
locate services near you.
You can also get tax preparation
assistance through the
AARP Foundation Tax-Aide service.
Call 888-227-7669 or visit
AARP.org/fi ndtaxhelp for more
information. You donâ€™t have to
be an AARP member to use this
service.
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.
î€¬î€±î€©î€²î€µî€°î€¤î€¯ î€³î€µî€²î€¥î€¤î€·î€¨
î€³î€¸î€¥î€¯î€¬î€¦î€¤î€·î€¬î€²î€± î€±î€²î€·î€¬î€¦î€¨
To all persons interested in the above captioned estate, by
Petition of Petitioner î€¨î˜îŠîˆî‘îˆ î€©î€‘ î€¹îˆî†î†î‹îŒî„î€ î€­î•î€‘ of î€µîˆî™îˆî•îˆî€ î€°î€¤
a Will has been admitted to informal probate. î€¨î˜îŠîˆî‘îˆ î€©î€‘ î€¹îˆî†î†î‹îŒî„î€
î€­î•î€‘ of î€µîˆî™îˆî•îˆî€ î€°î€¤î€ has been informally appointed as the Personal
Representative of the estate to serve îšîŒî—î‹î’î˜î— î–î˜î•îˆî—îœ on the bond.
î€·î‹îˆ îˆî–î—î„î—îˆ îŒî– î…îˆîŒî‘îŠ î„î‡îîŒî‘îŒî–î—îˆî•îˆî‡ î˜î‘î‡îˆî• îŒî‘î‰î’î•îî„î î“î•î’î†îˆî‡î˜î•îˆ
î…îœ î—î‹îˆ î€³îˆî•î–î’î‘î„î î€µîˆî“î•îˆî–îˆî‘î—î„î—îŒî™îˆ î˜î‘î‡îˆî• î—î‹îˆ î€°î„î–î–î„î†î‹î˜î–îˆî—î—î–
î€¸î‘îŒî‰î’î•î î€³î•î’î…î„î—îˆ î€¦î’î‡îˆ îšîŒî—î‹î’î˜î— î–î˜î“îˆî•î™îŒî–îŒî’î‘ î…îœ î—î‹îˆ î€¦î’î˜î•î—î€‘
î€¬î‘î™îˆî‘î—î’î•îœ î„î‘î‡ î„î†î†î’î˜î‘î—î– î„î•îˆ î‘î’î— î•îˆî”î˜îŒî•îˆî‡ î—î’ î…îˆ î‚¿îîˆî‡ îšîŒî—î‹ î—î‹îˆ
î€¦î’î˜î•î—î€ î…î˜î— îŒî‘î—îˆî•îˆî–î—îˆî‡ î“î„î•î—îŒîˆî– î„î•îˆ îˆî‘î—îŒî—îîˆî‡ î—î’ î‘î’î—îŒî†îˆ î•îˆîŠî„î•î‡îŒî‘îŠ
î—î‹îˆ î„î‡îîŒî‘îŒî–î—î•î„î—îŒî’î‘ î‰î•î’î î—î‹îˆ î€³îˆî•î–î’î‘î„î î€µîˆî“î•îˆî–îˆî‘î—î„î—îŒî™îˆ î„î‘î‡
î†î„î‘ î“îˆî—îŒî—îŒî’î‘ î—î‹îˆ î€¦î’î˜î•î— îŒî‘ î„î‘îœ îî„î—î—îˆî• î•îˆîî„î—îŒî‘îŠ î—î’ î—î‹îˆ îˆî–î—î„î—îˆî€
îŒî‘î†îî˜î‡îŒî‘îŠ î‡îŒî–î—î•îŒî…î˜î—îŒî’î‘ î’î‰ î„î–î–îˆî—î– î„î‘î‡ îˆî›î“îˆî‘î–îˆî– î’î‰ î„î‡îîŒî‘îŒî–î—î•î„î—îŒî’î‘î€‘
î€¬î‘î—îˆî•îˆî–î—îˆî‡ î“î„î•î—îŒîˆî– î„î•îˆ îˆî‘î—îŒî—îîˆî‡ î—î’ î“îˆî—îŒî—îŒî’î‘ î—î‹îˆ î€¦î’î˜î•î— î—î’ îŒî‘î–î—îŒî—î˜î—îˆ
î‰î’î•îî„î î“î•î’î†îˆîˆî‡îŒî‘îŠî– î„î‘î‡ î—î’ î’î…î—î„îŒî‘ î’î•î‡îˆî•î– î—îˆî•îîŒî‘î„î—îŒî‘îŠ î’î•
î•îˆî–î—î•îŒî†î—îŒî‘îŠ î—î‹îˆ î“î’îšîˆî•î– î’î‰ î€³îˆî•î–î’î‘î„î î€µîˆî“î•îˆî–îˆî‘î—î„î—îŒî™îˆî– î„î“î“î’îŒî‘î—îˆî‡
î˜î‘î‡îˆî• îŒî‘î‰î’î•îî„î î“î•î’î†îˆî‡î˜î•îˆî€‘ î€¤ î†î’î“îœ î’î‰ î—î‹îˆ î€³îˆî—îŒî—îŒî’î‘ î„î‘î‡ î€ºîŒîîî€
îŒî‰ î„î‘îœî€ î†î„î‘ î…îˆ î’î…î—î„îŒî‘îˆî‡ î‰î•î’î î—î‹îˆ î€³îˆî—îŒî—îŒî’î‘îˆî•î€‘
î€©îˆî…î•î˜î„î•îœ î€”î€™î€ î€•î€“î€•î€—
- LEGAL NOTICE -
î€¦î€²î€°î€°î€²î€±î€ºî€¨î€¤î€¯î€·î€« î€²î€© î€°î€¤î€¶î€¶î€¤î€¦î€«î€¸î€¶î€¨î€·î€·î€¶
î€·î€«î€¨ î€·î€µî€¬î€¤î€¯ î€¦î€²î€¸î€µî€·
î€³î€µî€²î€¥î€¤î€·î€¨ î€¤î€±î€§ î€©î€¤î€°î€¬î€¯î€¼ î€¦î€²î€¸î€µî€·
î€¶î˜îµµî’îîŽ î€§îŒî™îŒî–îŒî’î‘
î€§î’î†îŽîˆî— î€±î’î€‘ î€¶î€¸î€•î€—î€³î€“î€•î€•î€™î€¨î€¤
Estate of: î€°î€¤î€µî€¬î€¨ î€¦î€‘ î€§îŒî€ªî€¬î€¤î€±î€±î€¬
Date of Death: î€­î˜î‘îˆ î€•î€›î€ î€•î€“î€•î€•
î€¬î€±î€©î€²î€µî€°î€¤î€¯ î€³î€µî€²î€¥î€¤î€·î€¨
î€³î€¸î€¥î€¯î€¬î€¦î€¤î€·î€¬î€²î€± î€±î€²î€·î€¬î€¦î€¨
To all persons interested in the above captioned estate, by
Petition of Petitioner î€°îŒî†î‹î„îˆî î€¨î€‘ î€§îŒî€ªîŒî„î‘î‘îŒ of î€µîˆî™îˆî•îˆî€ î€°î€¤î€ a
Will has been admitted to informal probate. î€°îŒî†î‹î„îˆî î€¨î€‘ î€§îŒî€ªîŒî„î‘î‘îŒ
of î€µîˆî™îˆî•îˆî€ î€°î€¤î€ has been informally appointed as the Personal
Representative of the estate to serve îšîŒî—î‹î’î˜î— î–î˜î•îˆî—îœ on the bond.
î€·î‹îˆ îˆî–î—î„î—îˆ îŒî– î…îˆîŒî‘îŠ î„î‡îîŒî‘îŒî–î—îˆî•îˆî‡ î˜î‘î‡îˆî• îŒî‘î‰î’î•îî„î î“î•î’î†îˆî‡î˜î•îˆ
î…îœ î—î‹îˆ î€³îˆî•î–î’î‘î„î î€µîˆî“î•îˆî–îˆî‘î—î„î—îŒî™îˆ î˜î‘î‡îˆî• î—î‹îˆ î€°î„î–î–î„î†î‹î˜î–îˆî—î—î–
î€¸î‘îŒî‰î’î•î î€³î•î’î…î„î—îˆ î€¦î’î‡îˆ îšîŒî—î‹î’î˜î— î–î˜î“îˆî•î™îŒî–îŒî’î‘ î…îœ î—î‹îˆ î€¦î’î˜î•î—î€‘
î€¬î‘î™îˆî‘î—î’î•îœ î„î‘î‡ î„î†î†î’î˜î‘î—î– î„î•îˆ î‘î’î— î•îˆî”î˜îŒî•îˆî‡ î—î’ î…îˆ î‚¿îîˆî‡ îšîŒî—î‹ î—î‹îˆ
î€¦î’î˜î•î—î€ î…î˜î— îŒî‘î—îˆî•îˆî–î—îˆî‡ î“î„î•î—îŒîˆî– î„î•îˆ îˆî‘î—îŒî—îîˆî‡ î—î’ î‘î’î—îŒî†îˆ î•îˆîŠî„î•î‡îŒî‘îŠ
î—î‹îˆ î„î‡îîŒî‘îŒî–î—î•î„î—îŒî’î‘ î‰î•î’î î—î‹îˆ î€³îˆî•î–î’î‘î„î î€µîˆî“î•îˆî–îˆî‘î—î„î—îŒî™îˆ î„î‘î‡
î†î„î‘ î“îˆî—îŒî—îŒî’î‘ î—î‹îˆ î€¦î’î˜î•î— îŒî‘ î„î‘îœ îî„î—î—îˆî• î•îˆîî„î—îŒî‘îŠ î—î’ î—î‹îˆ îˆî–î—î„î—îˆî€
îŒî‘î†îî˜î‡îŒî‘îŠ î‡îŒî–î—î•îŒî…î˜î—îŒî’î‘ î’î‰ î„î–î–îˆî—î– î„î‘î‡ îˆî›î“îˆî‘î–îˆî– î’î‰ î„î‡îîŒî‘îŒî–î—î•î„î—îŒî’î‘î€‘
î€¬î‘î—îˆî•îˆî–î—îˆî‡ î“î„î•î—îŒîˆî– î„î•îˆ îˆî‘î—îŒî—îîˆî‡ î—î’ î“îˆî—îŒî—îŒî’î‘ î—î‹îˆ î€¦î’î˜î•î— î—î’ îŒî‘î–î—îŒî—î˜î—îˆ
î‰î’î•îî„î î“î•î’î†îˆîˆî‡îŒî‘îŠî– î„î‘î‡ î—î’ î’î…î—î„îŒî‘ î’î•î‡îˆî•î– î—îˆî•îîŒî‘î„î—îŒî‘îŠ î’î•
î•îˆî–î—î•îŒî†î—îŒî‘îŠ î—î‹îˆ î“î’îšîˆî•î– î’î‰ î€³îˆî•î–î’î‘î„î î€µîˆî“î•îˆî–îˆî‘î—î„î—îŒî™îˆî– î„î“î“î’îŒî‘î—îˆî‡
î˜î‘î‡îˆî• îŒî‘î‰î’î•îî„î î“î•î’î†îˆî‡î˜î•îˆî€‘ î€¤ î†î’î“îœ î’î‰ î—î‹îˆ î€³îˆî—îŒî—îŒî’î‘ î„î‘î‡ î€ºîŒîîî€
îŒî‰ î„î‘îœî€ î†î„î‘ î…îˆ î’î…î—î„îŒî‘îˆî‡ î‰î•î’î î—î‹îˆ î€³îˆî—îŒî—îŒî’î‘îˆî•î€‘
î€©îˆî…î•î˜î„î•îœ î€”î€™î€ î€•î€“î€•î€—
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THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 16, 2024
â€œThis supplemental budget enBy
Bob Katzen
If you have any questions about this weekâ€™s report, e-mail us
at bob@beaconhillrollcall.com or call us at (617) 720-1562
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com/su/aPTLucK
THE HOUSE AND SENATE: There
were no roll calls in the House or
Senate last week.
This week Beacon Hill Roll Call
reports on some of the bills that
were approved by the 2023-2024
Legislature through February 9,
2024 and signed into law by Gov.
Maura Healey.
Of the more than 6,400 bills that
have been fi led for consideration,
only 108 have been approved by
the Legislature and signed into
law by the governor. Of those 108,
16 were bills that aff ect the entire
state while the other 92 were either
sick leave banks or other local-related
measures applying to
just one city or town. Sick leave
banks allow public employees to
voluntarily donate sick, personal
or vacation days to a sick leave
bank for use by a fellow worker
so he or she can get paid while
on medical leave.
Here are six of the important
statewide-related bills signed into
law including comments from
legislators at the time the bill was
approved.
$56.2 BILLION FISCAL 2024
STATE BUDGET (H 4040)
House 156-2, Senate 39-0, approved
a $56.2 billion fi scal 2024
state budget for the fi scal year
that began July 1, 2023. The price
tag represents a $3.8 billion increase
over last yearâ€™s fi scal 2023
budget.
Provisions include $171.5 million
to require public schools
to provide universal free school
meals to all students; $50 million
to support free community
colleges; $50 million to create
Green School Works, a program to
fund projects to install and maintain
clean energy infrastructure
at public schools; $6.59 billion in
Chapter 70 education funding for
cities and towns, an increase of
$604 million over last year; $504.5
million for the special education
circuit breaker; $181 million for
MBTA capital projects; $19.81 billion
for MassHealth, the stateâ€™s
Medicaid program that provides
health care for low-income and
disabled persons; and a new law
that prisons must provide free unlimited
incoming and outgoing
phone calls for prisoners.
Another provision would allow
undocumented/illegal immigrants
to qualify for the lower
in-state college tuition rate if they
attended high school here for at
least three years and graduated
or completed a GED.
â€œMassachusetts continues to
move in a positive direction by
making signifi cant investments
in this budget,â€ said Rep. Todd
Smola (R-Warren), the ranking
House member of the Committee
on Ways and Means. â€œWe prioritize
local funding by increasing
general government aid to municipalities
and double the minimum
aid contribution per pupil
for education.â€
â€œWhile there were many good
provisions in the budget, the fi nal
version contained policies, unrelated
to the budget itself, that we
could not support,â€ said Reps. Nick
Boldyga (R-Southwick) and Marc
Lombardo (R-Billerica) in a joint
statement.
The statement continued, â€œSeniors,
renters, small businesses
and hard-working families can
barely aff ord to make ends meet.
As a result, Massachusetts continues
to see one of the highest
out-migrations in the country. At
the same time, this budget provides
a massive expansion in fi -
nancial benefi ts for illegal immigrants.
Itâ€™s easier for Hollywood
movie studios and multi-national
corporations to get massive tax
cuts than for the working-class to
catch a break. The people of Massachusetts
deserve better.â€
(A â€œYesâ€ vote is for the budget. A
â€œNoâ€ vote is against it.)
Rep. Jessica Giannino Yes
Rep. Jeff Turco
Sen. Lydia Edwards
Yes
Yes
$388.6 MILLION FISCAL 2023
SUPPLEMENTAL BUDGET (H 3548)
House 153-0, Senate 39-0, approved
a $388.6 million fiscal
2023 supplemental budget.
Provisions include $65 million
for free school meals; $130 million
to keep expanded nutrition
assistance in place for a few more
months; $2 million for the reimbursement
of SNAP benefi ts for
victims of benefi t theft; $250,000
for a free abortion-related legal
hotline; $45 million for emergency
shelter assistance; $40 million
to support aff ordable housing for
immigrants and refugees; and $2
million for the Boston branch of
the NAACP for costs of some programs
to be included in its 114th
National NAACP Conference in
2023 in Boston.
Other provisions keep some
pandemic-era programs, set to
expire, in place including allowing
restaurants to sell beer, wine and
cocktails for take-out; expanding
outdoor dining; and extending
the authority, set to expire in a few
weeks, for public bodies, agencies
and commissions to hold their
meetings remotely.
sures that our commonwealth
continues to support the most
vulnerable among us while
also building on the lessons we
learned during the COVID-19
pandemic,â€ said Senate President
Karen Spilka (D-Ashland). â€œIâ€™m
proud to say that the Legislature
has proven once again that it has
the courage to chart a course that
leaves no place or person in the
commonwealth behind.â€
(A â€œYesâ€ vote is for the $388.6
million supplemental budget.)
Rep. Jessica Giannino Yes
Rep. Jeff Turco
Sen. Lydia Edwards
Yes
Yes
$375 MILLION FOR ROADS AND
BRIDGES (S 2375)
House 157-0, Senate 38-0, approved
a bill that includes authorizing
$200 million in one-time
funding for the maintenance and
repair of local roads and bridges
in cities and towns across the
state. The $375 million package, a
bond bill under which the funding
would be borrowed by the
state through the sale of bonds,
also includes $175 million for several
transportation-related grant
programs.
The programs funded by the
$175 million include the municipal
small bridge program; the
complete streets program; a bus
transit infrastructure program;
and grants for municipalities to
purchase electric vehicles and
the infrastructure needed to support
them.
â€œProviding funding for critical
infrastructure projects through
investments in the commonwealthâ€™s
public transportation,
roads and bridges is one of the
most important responsibilities
that we have as members of the
Legislature,â€ said House Speaker
Ron Mariano (D-Quincy). â€œIâ€™m
proud of the support for regional
infrastructure that this legislation
provides, and of the funding
that it allocates for the purchasing
of electric vehicles by transit
authorities.â€
(A â€œYesâ€ vote is for the $375 million
package.)
Rep. Jessica Giannino Yes
Rep. Jeff Turco
Sen. Lydia Edwards
Yes
Yes
TAX RELIEF PACKAGE (H 4104)
House 155-1, Senate 38-1, approved
a tax relief package that
supporters say will provide $561.3
million in tax relief in fi scal year
2024 and $1.02 billion per year in
subsequent years.
Provisions include increasing
the rental deduction cap from
$3,000 to $4,000; reducing the estate
tax for all taxpayers and eliminating
the tax for all estates under
$2 million by allowing a uniform
credit of $99,600; increasing
the refundable tax credit for
a dependent child, disabled adult
or senior from $180 to $310 per
dependent in taxable year 2023,
and then to $440 in subsequent
years while eliminating the child/
dependent cap; doubling the refundable
senior circuit breaker
tax credit from $1,200 to $2,400;
increasing the refundable Earned
Income Tax Credit from 30 percent
to 40 percent of the federal
credit; and reducing the shortterm
capital gains tax rate from 12
percent to 8.5 percent.
Other provisions double the
lead paint tax credit to $3,000 for
full abatement and $1,000 for partial
abatement; ensure that employer
student loan payments
are not treated as taxable compensation;
make public transit
fares, as well as ferry and regional
transit passes and bike commuter
expenses, eligible for the commuter
expense tax deduction;
increase from $1,500 to $2,000
the maximum that municipalities
may pay seniors to do volunteer
work to reduce their property
taxes; raise the annual authorization
for the low income housing
tax credit from $40 million to
$60 million; and allow cities and
towns to adopt a local property
tax exemption for aff ordable real
estate that is rented by a person
whose income is less than a certain
level set by the municipality.
The measure also includes two
provisions which the Mass Fiscal
Alliance says will result in tax
hikes. One would require Massachusetts
married couples who fi le
income tax returns jointly at the
federal level to do the same at the
state level. The other changes the
system under Chapter 62F that
requires that annual tax revenue
above a certain amount collected
by the state go back to the taxpayers.
Under current law, the money
is returned to taxpayers based
on what he or she earned and
paid in taxes. The new tax package
changed that and provided
that each taxpayer will receive a
fl at rate refund, unrelated to what
they earned or paid in taxes.
â€œThis is the most significant
tax relief package in a generation,â€
said Senate President Karen
Spilka (D-Ashland). â€œThis legislation
is going to put real dollars
into the pockets of the people
who need it most, including
parents, seniors, young people
and middle class families who are
struggling to keep up with rising
costs. This bill includes a historic
expansion of housing programs
that will ignite aff ordable housing
development and ease the housing
crunch, as well as signifi cant
relief for families with young children.
It will also make Massachusetts
a more competitive place
to live and work and encourages
businesses to continue investing
in our region.â€
â€œBack in April, I stood at the rostrum
for about 13 minutes and expressed
a mix of support for the
many elements of this bill that will
help working families and people
experiencing poverty â€” while at
the same time criticizing the elements
of this bill that will benefit
large corporations and the
super-rich,â€ said Rep. Mike Connolly
(D-Cambridge), the only
House member to vote against
the package.
â€œFrom my vantage point, this
bill was significantly improved
through the conference committee
process, and there are several
elements of the bill I enthusiastically
support,â€ continued Connolly.
â€œAnd yet, as I stand here today,
I still cannot bring myself to support
the total price tag of $1.1 billion
once fully implemented. Not
after we just spent a decade working
to pass the Fair Share Amendment
to gain desperately needed
new revenue â€¦ A lot more needs
to be done, including bigger public
investments in programs, services
and infrastructure â€” investments
that could be signifi cantly
constrained by the overall cost of
todayâ€™s tax cut bill.â€
(A â€œYesâ€ vote is for the tax relief
package. A â€œNoâ€ vote is against it.)
Rep. Jessica Giannino Yes
Rep. Jeff Turco
Sen. Lydia Edwards
Yes
Yes
FREE PHONE CALLS FOR PRISONERS
(H 4051)
House 132-26, (Senate on a
voice vote without a roll call vote),
approved a proposal that beginning
on December 1, 2023, would
provide free phone calls and video
calls for all prisoners in Massachusetts.
The
vote was mostly along party
lines with all Republicans and
one Democrat voting against the
bill and all other Democrats voting
for it.
Currently there is no legal requirement
for free phone calls
in prisons. Each facility contracts
separately for telephone service.
â€œThe telephone is a lifeline for
people locked in prisons and
their families, but phone company
profi teering and kickbacks to
prisons, have made calls unaff ordable,â€
said Aaron Steinberg, Communications
Director of Prisonersâ€™
Legal Services of Massachusetts.
â€œThis landmark law will allow
for precious human contact
between incarcerated people
and their children and other
loved ones. This will help families
thrive and help incarcerated people
succeed when they return to
our communities.â€
Steinberg continued, that under
current law, â€œeach facility contracts
separately for telephone
service and with current contracting
provisions, facilities are given
kickbacks called â€˜site commissions,â€™
with little incentive to negotiate
for the lowest rate.â€
â€œEvery law abiding citizen that
has a job and works 40 plus hours
a week has to pay for phone calls,â€
said Boldyga. â€œWhy are criminals
entitled to free phone calls? Itâ€™s
completely ridiculous and absurd
that Democrats are giving
free anything to criminals. Criminals
and their families should be
paying for their phone calls, not
taxpayers. â€œ
(A â€œYesâ€ vote is for the bill. A â€œNoâ€
vote is against it.)
Rep. Jessica Giannino Yes
Rep. Jeff Turco
Yes
NEW CABINET POSITION: SECRETARY
OF HOUSING AND LIVABLE
COMMUNITIES (H 43)
Senate 39-0 (No House roll call),
approved Gov. Maura Healeyâ€™s
reorganization plan that would
split the current Executive Offi ce
of Housing and Economic Development
into two separate cabinet
level departments: the new Secretary
of Housing and Livable Communities
and the renamed Secretary
of Economic Development.
â€œThe creation of a new Secretariat
will bring a cabinet-level
focus to the commonwealthâ€™s
housing crisis,â€ said Sen. Nick Collins
(D-Boston), Chair of the Senate
Committee on State Administration
and Regulatory Oversight.
He noted that Gov. Healey
will now be able put her vision for
housing and livable communities
into action.â€
(A â€œYesâ€ vote is for the bill.)
Sen. Lydia Edwards
Yes
BEACON | SEE Page 16
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Page 15
Mike Borgonzi knows Super Bowls
Former Everett High football star helps crafts the next NFL dynasty as KC Chiefs assistant general manager
ther if I could play organized
football after seeing my older
cousin Gino playing for the Everett
Eagles,â€ Mike added. â€œI had
to wait until I was eight to play,
before then he ended up taking
me down to Sacramone Park to
sign me up.
â€œI had a lot of great coaches
and teachers that taught me the
game back then like Bill Crowley,
Paul Crowley, Chucky Leo and
the great Mike Milo, who ended
up coaching me in high school,
as well.â€
Back-to-Back for Everettâ€™s Borgonzi. Kansas City Chiefs Assistant
General Manager Mike Borgonzi, his wife, Jill, and son, Joseph,
are shown proudly posing with the Super Bowl trophy after the
Chiefs defeated the San Francisco 49ers in overtime, 25-22, at Allegiant
Stadium in Las Vegas on Feb. 11. Mike and Jill also have a
daughter, Nina. (Courtesy photo /X)
By Joe McConnell
F
or the second time in as many
months, Everett Pride was on
display for the nation to see.
In January, former Crimson
Tide football stars Mike Sainristil
and Josaiah Stewart helped
lead the University of Michigan
Wolverines to the NCAA Division
1 championship. Sainristil
continues to work out hoping to
impress NFL (National Football
League) scouts for the late April
draft, while Stewart is set to return
for his senior season as a
standout Michigan edge rusher.
Last Sunday, Mike Borgonzi
continued the Everett success
story on the national level, when
the Kansas City Chiefs defeated
the San Francisco 49ers in Super
Bowl LVIII, 25-22. The overtime
thriller in Las Vegas was Borgonziâ€™s
second Super Bowl championship
as the teamâ€™s assistant
general manager, and was its
Director of Football Operations,
when they won Super Bowl LIV
four years ago. Heâ€™s been with the
organization since 2008.
But it all began right here once
again in Tide country. Mike grew
up on Meadowview Road with
his parents, Al and Doris, and
younger brother Dave, whoâ€™s
currently the Chicago Bears linebackers
coach. Mike got his football
career underway as an Everett
Pop Warner Eagle, and it all
culminated on the local level,
when he was a star senior running
back on the Tideâ€™s fi rst Super
Bowl championship team in
1997, which completed a perfect
11-0 season. The program has
since won 12 more Super Bowls,
the last one coming in 2017.
After that championship campaign,
he made the Boston Herald
and Boston Globe All-Scholastic
teams, and was also on USA
Todayâ€™s honorable mention AllAmerican
squad.
Mike remembers those days
fondly. â€œI started playing Pop Warner
football for the Everett Eagles
when I was eight-years-old,â€ he
told the Everett Advocate earlier
this week after Sundayâ€™s championship
celebration in Vegas.
â€œWe had some good teams
during my Pop Warner years, but
Iâ€™m not sure if we had won any titles.
It always amazed me that a
city the size of Everett had two
Pop Warner organizations back
then, which spoke volumes of
just how many kids in the city
loved the game of football. As
coach Dibs (former EHS coach
John DiBiaso) once said, â€œwhen
youâ€™re born in Everett, they donâ€™t
give you a pacifi er, they give you
a mouthpiece.â€
Many of those Everett players
reached out to Mike after Sundayâ€™s
win. â€œI actually received
over 300 text messages after the
game, and quite a few of them
came from my former EHS teammates,â€
he said. â€œWe had a special
bond growing up in Everett,
and itâ€™s always great to hear from
them. Iâ€™m grateful for their friendship
and support over the years.â€
Mike will also never forget his
roots that got him to this point as
a successful professional football
executive. â€œAs far back as I can remember,
football always dominated
my household,â€ he said.
â€œMy father was a (New England)
Patriots season ticket holder during
the 1970s and 1980s, and we
would spend a lot of summer
days at Bryant College (in Smithfi
eld, Rhode Island) watching the
Patriots training camp practices.
â€œI remember begging my faBut
his admiration for Coach
DiBiaso will always remain high
on his list of athletic memories.
â€œI really canâ€™t put into words the
impact that Coach DiBiaso had
on me as a young student-athlete,
not only in football, but in
life, as well,â€ said DiBiasoâ€™s 1997 senior
captain, who played all four
years on the varsity for him. â€œHe
instilled in me the importance of
hard work, perseverance, teamwork
and humility.
â€œAt a young age, he showed
me the blueprint for building and
sustaining a championship team.
His relentless work ethic, organization,
attention to detail and the
discipline it takes to build a winner
had an indelible impact on
me. Heâ€™ll go down as the greatest
high school coach in the history
of the state. The city of Everett
was lucky to have him all
those years.â€
A close second to DiBiaso for
Mike is the Everett High School
(EHS) community itself. â€œPlaying
football at Everett High School
was special for me,â€ he said. â€œAs
a kid growing up, you would always
hear about the rich football
tradition in Everett from the
famous 1914 team that won the
national championship after outscoring
the opposition 600-0 to
the great 1960s teams of Bobby
Leo, so when I fi nally got a
chance to play there in the 1990s,
we were able to restore some of
that championship tradition. And
then to do it with some of your
best friends growing up made it
even more special.â€
From EHS, Mike went on to
Brown University to continue his
football career. â€œI was fortunate
enough to attend Brown. I played
football there all four years, while
earning my bachelorâ€™s degree in
business management. Those
years were also special for me.
Brown challenged me in a lot of
diff erent ways, both academically
and athletically. I made a lot
of great friendships there, and
in my sophomore year we won
the 1999 Ivy League championship,â€
said the three-time All-Ivy
League selection at fullback.
At the conclusion of his collegiate
career, Borgonzi naturally
turned his attention to pro
football. â€œMy dream was to always
play in the NFL,â€ he said. â€œI
had some workouts with NFL
teams before the draft, and ended
up having a free agent tryout
with the Buff alo Bills that spring
(2001). After not signing a pro
contract, I ended up coaching
for a year at Amherst College, before
signing on with the Green
Bay Blizzard in the Arena Football
Leaue. My time there was
short after getting injured. I then
headed home to Boston to work
in fi nance.â€
Borgonzi had a diffi cult time
adjusting to life away from the
game, but knew someday heâ€™d
be back in football in some capacity.
â€œMy
fi rst real break in the (football)
business was when I was
hired as the assistant recruiting
coordinator at Boston College
in 2007,â€ he said. â€œOne of my responsibilities
there was being the
NFL liaison with the team, which
meant I was meeting with a lot
of NFL personnel to talk about
our players. At the time, we had
a few first round picks on the
NFL | SEE Page 19
Public Hearing Notice
City of Revere, MA
Proposed Loan Order
Oak Island / MBTA Railroad Crossing
Construction Project - CW 18903
Notice is hereby given that the Revere City Council will conduct
a public hearing on Monday evening, February 26, 2024
at 6:00 p.m. in the City Councillor Joseph A. DelGrosso City
Council Chamber, Revere City Hall, 281 Broadway, Revere,
MA 02151 relative to the following proposed loan order:
That $3,000,000 is appropriated to pay costs of the Oak Island
/ MBTA Railroad Crossing Construction Project (CW 18903),
including the removal and replacement of the existing water
main and sewer line located directly below this MBTA crossing,
including the payment of all costs incidental and related
thereto and any other related costs or expenses thereof as deî‚¿î‘îˆî‡
îŒî‘ î€ªî€‘î€¯î€‘ î†î€‘î€•î€œî€¦î€ î€¶îˆî†î—îŒî’î‘ î€”î€ž î—î‹î„î— î—î’ îîˆîˆî— î—î‹îŒî– î„î“î“î•î’î“î•îŒî„î—îŒî’î‘
the Treasurer, with the approval of the Mayor, is authorized to
î…î’î•î•î’îš î–î„îŒî‡ î„îî’î˜î‘î— î˜î‘î‡îˆî• î„î‘î‡ î“î˜î•î–î˜î„î‘î— î—î’ î€ªî€‘î€¯î€‘ î†î€‘î€—î€—î€ î€¶îˆî†î—îŒî’î‘
î€šî€‹î€”î€Œ î’î• î€¶îˆî†î—îŒî’î‘ î€›î€‹î€”î€—î€Œ î„î‘î‡î€’î’î• î€ªî€‘î€¯î€‘ î†î€‘î€•î€œî€¦î€ î’î• î“î˜î•î–î˜î„î‘î— î—î’ î„î‘îœ î’î—î‹er
enabling authority, and to issue bonds or notes of the City
î—î‹îˆî•îˆî‰î’î•î€ž î—î‹î„î— î—î‹îˆ î€·î•îˆî„î–î˜î•îˆî• îšîŒî—î‹ î—î‹îˆ î„î“î“î•î’î™î„î î’î‰ î—î‹îˆ î€°î„îœî’î• îŒî–
authorized to borrow all or a portion of such amount from the
Massachusetts Clean Water Trust (the Trustâ€) established under
î€ªî€‘î€¯î€‘ î†î€‘ î€•î€œî€¦ î„î‘î‡ îŒî‘ î†î’î‘î‘îˆî†î—îŒî’î‘ î—î‹îˆî•îˆîšîŒî—î‹ î—î’ îˆî‘î—îˆî• îŒî‘î—î’ î„ î‚¿î‘î„î‘î†ing
agreement and/or security agreement with the Trust and
otherwise to contract with the Trust and the Department of Environmental
Protection (â€œDEPâ€ ) with respect to such loan and
for any federal or state aid that may be available for the project
î’î• î‰î’î• î—î‹îˆ î‚¿î‘î„î‘î†îŒî‘îŠ î—î‹îˆî•îˆî’î‰î€ž î„î‘î‡ î—î‹î„î— î—î‹îˆ î€°î„îœî’î• îŒî– î„î˜î—î‹î’î•îŒîîˆî‡
to enter into any agreements with the DEP, to expend all funds
available for the project, and to take any other actions necessary
to carry out the project.
î€·î‹î„î— î—î‹îˆ î€·î•îˆî„î–î˜î•îˆî• îŒî– î„î˜î—î‹î’î•îŒîîˆî‡ î—î’ î‚¿îîˆ î„î‘ î„î“î“îîŒî†î„î—îŒî’î‘ îšîŒî—î‹ î—î‹îˆ
î„î“î“î•î’î“î•îŒî„î—îˆ î’îµ¶î†îŒî„îî– î’î‰ î€·î‹îˆ î€¦î’îîî’î‘îšîˆî„îî—î‹ î’î‰ î€°î„î–î–î„î†î‹î˜î–îˆî—î—î–
î€‹î—î‹îˆ î‚³î€¦î’îîî’î‘îšîˆî„îî—î‹î‚´î€Œ î—î’ î”î˜î„îîŒî‰îœ î˜î‘î‡îˆî• î€ªî€‘î€¯î€‘ î†î€‘ î€—î€—î€¤ î’î‰ î„î‘îœ î„î‘î‡
all bonds of the City authorized to be borrowed pursuant to this
loan order, and to provide such information and execute such
î‡î’î†î˜îîˆî‘î—î– î„î– î–î˜î†î‹ î’îµ¶î†îŒî„îî– î’î‰ î—î‹îˆ î€¦î’îîî’î‘îšîˆî„îî—î‹ îî„îœ î•îˆî”î˜îŒî•îˆ
in connection therewith.
î€¤ î†î’î“îœ î’î‰ î—î‹îˆ î„î‰î’î•îˆîîˆî‘î—îŒî’î‘îˆî‡ î“î•î’î“î’î–îˆî‡ îî’î„î‘ î’î•î‡îˆî• îŒî– î’î‘ î‚¿îîˆ
î„î‘î‡ î„î™î„îŒîî„î…îîˆ î‰î’î• î“î˜î…îîŒî† îŒî‘î–î“îˆî†î—îŒî’î‘ îŒî‘ î—î‹îˆ î€²îµ¶î†îˆ î’î‰ î—î‹îˆ î€¦îŒî—îœ
Clerk, Revere City Hall, Revere, Massachusetts 02151, Monday
through Thursday from 8:00 A.M. to 5:00 P.M. and Friday
8:00 A.M. to 12:00 P.M.
Attest:
Ashley E. Melnik
City Clerk
February 16, 2024
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THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 16, 2024
BEACON | FROM Page 14
ALSO UP ON BEACON HILL
CHARITABLE DONATIONS (H
2280) - The House has given initial
approval to a bill that would require
that any group or individual
soliciting contributions for a charitable
organization by mail or telephone,
to inform potential donors
what percentage of contributions
go directly to the charity.
Supporters said that oftentimes
people who make donations assume
that 100 percent of their donation
goes directly to the charity
when in fact a private fundraising
company is getting a percentage
of the money raised.
â€œPeople should feel secure that
their charitable donations are being
used in an appropriate manner
and going to the organization
they chose to supportâ€ said sponsor
Rep. Paul McMurtry (D-Dedham).
â€œThis added disclosure by
solicitors protects both the commonwealthâ€™s
donors and charitable
organizations.â€
PROHIBIT â€œLEGACYâ€ COLLEGE
ADMISSIONS â€“ (No bill number
yet assigned) â€“ The Committee
on Higher Education has given
a favorable report to and recommended
passage of a bill that
would prohibit public and private
colleges in the Bay State colleges
from using â€œlegacy admissionsâ€ â€“ a
tradition that gives to a boost in a
prospective studentâ€™s odds of admission
to a college just because
the applicant is related to a current
student or alumnus.
â€œThe practice of legacy admissions
has perpetuated inequalities
in higher education for too long,â€
said Mary Tamer, Executive Director
of Democrats for Education Reform
Massachusetts, â€œIt serves as a
barrier to equity and opportunity,
granting an unearned advantage
to children of alumni â€“ often from
wealthy or well-connected families
â€“ at the expense of deserving
students from diverse backgrounds.â€
NOMINATION
PAPERS NOW
AVAILABLE FOR 2024 CANDIDATES
â€“ Nomination papers are
now available for candidates who
are planning to run for offi ce in the
September 2024 primary election
and November 2024 general election.
Under state law, candidates
are required to gather a certain
number of signatures in order to
qualify for the ballot. Papers are
available in the Offi ce of the Secretary
of the Stateâ€™s Elections Division,
located at 1 Ashburton Place
in Boston and Galvinâ€™s other offi
ces in Springfi eld and Fall River.
Offi ces to be fi lled at this yearâ€™s
election include President and
Vice-president, U.S. Senator, U.S.
representative, Governorâ€™s Councilor,
State Senator, State Representative,
Register of Deeds, Clerk
of Courts, County Commissioner.
Candidates for district and
county offi ces have until April 30,
2024 to gather signatures and
submit their papers to local registrars
of voters for certifi cation.
Those certifi ed signatures must
then be fi led with the Secretary
of State by May 28, 2024.
Party-affi liated candidates running
in the State Primary for federal
offi ce have until May 7, 2024
to gather their signatures and submit
them to local registrars, and
until June 4, 2024 to fi le with the
Secretary of State.
Non-party candidates for federal
offi ce have until July 30, 2024
to return their nomination papers
into local registrars, and until August
27, 2024 to fi le them with Galvinâ€™s
offi ce.
Additional information is at
www.sec.state.ma.us/elections
CREATE EMERGENCY DISASTER
RELIEF PROGRAM (S 2506) â€“
The Committee on Emergency
Preparedness and Management
held a hearing on a measure that
would create an emergency disaster
relief program managed by the
Massachusetts Emergency Management
Agency (MEMA) and
funded with $250 million from
excess capital gains revenue that
would otherwise be transferred to
the Rainy Day Fund.
Supporters explained that federal
disaster declarations can only
be triggered when certain and
specifi c criteria occur. They noted
the total amount of the storm
damage must meet a certain dollar
amount threshold, or the disaster
must exceed the response capability
of the state and local governments.
â€œMassachusetts
is one of a few
states that does not have a framework
in place to respond to disasters,
climate-related or otherwise,
in our municipalities,â€ said sponsor
Sen. Jo Comerford (D-Northampton).
â€œWe saw fi rst-hand this past
summer the devastating toll
weather events have on our communitiesâ€™
infrastructure, across the
commonwealth.â€
MENTAL HEALTH AWARENESS
(H 4142) â€“ A bill heard by the Higher
Education Committee would
require public state colleges to
provide students and employees
with mental health awareness and
prevention programming. This
would cover vital topics including
signs of mental health issues and
substance abuse, where to access
mental health resources and crisis
intervention strategies.
â€œIâ€™m sponsoring this bill because
as a psychiatric nurse, I recognize
that many mental health disorders
present themselves in early
adulthood and believe in the evidence-based
research which recommends
that higher education
institutions can help improve positive
mental health in vulnerable
emerging adult populations by
implementing training and education
initiatives,â€ said sponsor
Rep. Kay Khan (D-Newton). â€œStudies
have shown that more students
are presenting with increasingly
severe mental health problems
in recent decades, a problem
exacerbated by the recent COVID-19
pandemic.â€
Khan continued, â€œPrioritizing
mental health education by requiring
mandatory mental health
awareness programming and primary
prevention education in
public higher education institutions
will train students to recognize
these issues in their peers and
prepare staff for conversations
around mental health, resulting
in healthier and more successful
outcomes for students in Massachusetts.â€
VETERANS
BREAKTHROUGH
TREATMENT PROGRAM (H 4218)
â€“ The Public Health Committeeâ€™s
hearing included legislation that
would create the Veteran Breakthrough
Treatments Program to
support the development and
deployment of treatments that
have been designated as â€œbreakthrough
therapiesâ€ for veterans
and fi rst responders. Breakthrough
Therapy designation is
given by the FDA to treatments
that clinical evidence has shown
to be extremely promising.
â€œThis legislation is about equipping
veterans with innovative and
eff ective therapies to treat PTSD
and hidden wounds of war,â€ said
sponsor Rep. Dylan Fernandes (DFalmouth).
â€œAllowing veterans access
to breakthrough therapies
designated by the FDA as promising
treatments gives them an additional
tool to treat their healthcare
needs and empower those struggling
on their path to recovery.â€
CONSUMER BILLS â€“ The Consumer
Protection and Professional
Licensure held a hearing on several
bills including:
ALLOW BUSINESSES TO OPT
INTO â€œDO NOT CALLâ€ LIST (S 202) -
Would restrict telemarketing companies
doing business in the state
by allowing businesses to sign up
for a â€œDo Not Callâ€ list and fi ning
companies up to $5,000 if they call
a business on the list. Current law
only allows individual consumers
to sign up for the list.
Under the bill, all current laws
that now apply to individuals
would also apply to businesses including
allowing an individual on
the list to sue a company for up to
$5,000 if the company violates the
law and calls the individual more
than once a year; preventing companies
from blocking their number
from appearing on any businessâ€™
Caller ID; prohibiting companies
from using recorded message
devices to make these calls;
and restricting these calls to between
8 a.m. and 8 p.m.
â€œWeâ€™re continuing to see a
steady rise in spam calls, and this
is one of the preferred methods of
scammers to obtain personal information,â€
said Rep. Bruce Ayers
(D-Quincy). â€œSmall businesses
have struggled the last few years,
and Massachusetts needs to do
whatever we can to protect our
economic drivers. Allowing businesses
to sign up for the do-notcall
list is an easy and efficient
way of screening out any nefarious
attempts to defraud a small
business and take away valuable
economic resources for our small
business owners.â€
DIGITAL COUPONS FOR SENIORS
(H 4154) â€“ Would require
grocery stores to apply all available
digital coupons to the orders
of senior citizens over 65, even if
the person does not have the digital
coupons on their phone.
â€œThis proposal was fi led by request
of a constituent,â€ said sponsor
Rep. Jeff Turco (D-Winthrop).
â€œMany senior citizens do not use
a smart phone and therefore do
not have access to digital coupons
and as a result they pay higher
prices at the register. This legislation
would apply all applicable
digital coupons automatically to
our seniors.â€
REVIVE â€œHAPPY HOURSâ€ (S 157)
â€“ Would allow cities and towns
to permit restaurants that are licensed
to serve alcohol to off er
discounted prices on alcoholic
beverages during dates and time
periods specifi ed by the city or
town. The measure prohibits any
alcohol from being discounted after
10 p.m.
Under current law, passed in
1984, restaurants have been prohibited
from holding â€œhappy
hoursâ€ during which some alcoholic
drinks are free or the price
is reduced. The 1984 law was
sparked by the September 1983
death of Kathleen Barry, a 20-yearold
from Weymouth, when Barry
and her friend won free pitchers
of beer at a Braintree Ground
Round. After leaving the bar, Barry
and a friend climbed on top of a
drunk friendâ€™s car for a ride around
a Braintree parking lot and Barry
fell under the car and was dragged
50 feet to her death.
â€œMuch has changed in Massachusetts
since a happy hour ban
was enacted in 1984,â€ said sponsor
Sen. Julian Cyr (D-Truro). â€œThe
drinking age has long been settled
at 21, stiff penalties have been
established to deter drunk driving
and ride hailing apps have
become a popular way to safely
get around on a night out. While
alcohol-related off enses decline
across the country and little compelling
evidence exists linking
happy hour with higher rates of
alcohol-related DUIs, Massachusetts
remains the last state in the
country to have an absolute ban
on happy hour.
Cyr continued, â€œIn the aftermath
of COVID-19 and advent of remote
work, happy hour is a tool that can
help revitalize main streets and
downtowns struggling for foot
traffi c. This legislation empowers
municipalities to determine if they
want to allow local restaurants to
off er happy hour specials and decide
if it is the right choice for their
community.â€
RE-SIGNING LEASES (H 264) -
Would prohibit landlords from
requiring their tenants to re-sign
a lease more than three months
in advance of the termination of
their current lease.
â€œI filed this legislation in response
to complaints I heard from
tenants who are being unfairly
required to re-sign their lease
only a few months into their current
lease,â€ said sponsor Rep. Tackey
Chan (D-Quincy). â€œTenants
are being forced to make decisions
about their housing situation
more than six months in advance
and are fi nancially penalized
when they cannot commit.â€
QUOTABLE QUOTES
â€œBecause of a successful vaccination
campaign that eff ectively
eliminated measles in the United
States in 2000, many people
may not be aware that measles,
which is transmitted via exposure
to contact with airborne droplets,
is highly contagious and can lead
to serious and life-threatening
complications. Children and those
with compromised immune systems
are especially at risk.â€
---Statement from the Massachusetts
Medical Society on reported
cases of measles in Europe
and at least six states and potential
exposures at two large United
States airports and reminding
all patients in the state to do their
part to protect themselves and
their communities from contracting
and spreading measles.
â€œSuccessful, evidence-based
reentry programs are essential
to preventing recidivism and improving
outcomes for young
adults who are involved in the
criminal justice system. These
programs help ensure they have
the tools and resources needed
to make sustainable, positive
life changes. This funding is an
investment in meaningful, second-chance
opportunities.â€
---Gov. Maura Healey announcing
nearly $6.5 million in grants
to support nonprofi ts, working in
partnership with the Massachusetts
Department of Correction
and Sheriff sâ€™ Offi ces, to provide
reentry services for 18- to 25-yearolds
returning from incarceration.
â€œMany Massachusetts drivers
want to make the switch to electric
vehicles but worry about access
to charging. This investment
will break down barriers to widespread
electric vehicle adoption
and help Massachusetts meet its
ambitious greenhouse gas emissions
targets.
---Lt. Gov. Kim Driscoll announcing
a $50 million in initiatives to
build out electric vehicle charging
infrastructure across the state.
â€œPublic partnerships and collaborations
with faith-based and
nonprofit organizations have
been vital to community safety.
These organizations are part of
the social fabric of our neighborhoods
and our region. This funding
allows us to support and protect
these nonprofi ts as they continue
providing essential services
in our communities.â€
---Secretary of Public Safety and
Security Terrence Reidy announcing
$3.8 million in grant awards to
support security enhancements
for 80 Massachusetts nonprofi ts
at high risk of hate crimes or attacks
by extremists.
HOW LONG WAS LAST WEEKâ€™S
SESSION?
Beacon Hill Roll Call tracks the
length of time that the House
and Senate were in session each
week. Many legislators say that
legislative sessions are only one
aspect of the Legislatureâ€™s job
and that a lot of important work
is done outside of the House and
Senate chambers. They note that
their jobs also involve committee
work, research, constituent
work and other matters that are
important to their districts. Critics
say that the Legislature does not
meet regularly or long enough to
debate and vote in public view on
the thousands of pieces of legislation
that have been fi led. They
note that the infrequency and
brief length of sessions are misguided
and lead to irresponsible
late-night sessions and a mad rush
to act on dozens of bills in the days
immediately preceding the end of
an annual session.
During the week of February
5-9, the House met for a total of
44 minutes and the Senate met
for a total of 47 minutes
Mon. Feb. 5 House 11:00 a.m.
to 11:32 a.m.
Senate 11:14 a.m. to 11:37 a.m.
Tues. Feb. 6 No House session
No Senate session
Wed. Feb. 7 No House session
No Senate session
Thurs. Feb. 8 House 11:02 a.m.
to 11:14 a.m.
Senate 11:11 a.m. to 11:35 a.m.
Fri. Feb. 9 No House session
No Senate session
Bob Katzen welcomes feedback
at bob@beaconhillrollcall.com
Bob founded Beacon Hill Roll
Call in 1975 and was inducted into
the New England Newspaper and
Press Association (NENPA)
Hall of Fame in 2019.
×‰	Ú 7cassandra://PzISv-0NnNpD9vuSMc_JxJ6pgbPjHP9XjLuSNqXI5xUÍ#*Í`Ì°Í ×eÎoÅæÕ[Ž…à×‰EÚTHE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 16, 2024
Page 17
Eileen â€œBabeâ€
Walsh Cammarata
OBITUARIES
Theresa L. Del Grosso
at 11:00 a.m. (Visiting Hours are
respectfully omitted.) Interment
will immediately follow in Holy
Cross Cemetery, Malden.
In lieu of flowers, remembrances
may be made to St.
Jude Childrenâ€™s Research Hospital,
501 St. Jude Place Memphis,
TN 38105.
Angelina â€œChickieâ€
(Terrazzano)
Bramante
O
O
f Revere. Passed away February
11th at Lighthouse
in Revere after a courageous
fi ght and will like no other (As
a True Townie). Eileen â€œBabeâ€
was born January 3rd 1936 to
Eileen Dow Walsh and James
Walsh of Charlestown MA. Eileen
was named Babe by her
oldest brother James â€œGigâ€ and
was the best big sister to her
baby brother Paul â€œPJâ€. Eileen
â€œBabeâ€ married the love of her
life Salvatore â€œBuddyâ€ Cammarata
April 12th 1958. Babe embarked
on the most challenging
career anyone could choose,
the mother to her four children.
Eileen â€œBabeâ€ is survived by her
daughters and sons-in-law; Kim
and Dennis Hanton, Deb and
Tom DiGregorio, Eileen Cammarata
of Revere and her son
John Cammarata of Lynnfi eld,
her cherished grandchildren;
Dennis Hanton and Tania Cornelio,
Haley and Patrick Lindquist,
Thomas DiGregorio and Johanna
Marmoucha, James Hanton
and Samantha Harrington, John
DiGregorio, Ella and Eva Cammarata
and her loving great
grandchildren; Charlotte and Oliver
Hanton, and Julian DiGregorio.
Babe is also survived by her
brother and sister-in-law Paul PJ
and Linda Walsh as well as her
brother-in-law Vincent â€œSonnyâ€
Cammarata along with many
nieces and nephews.
Babeâ€™s fi ery personality was
only matched by her runway
red hair. Her circle of friends that
could be found every Tuesday
night at DeMainoâ€™s stayed by her
side until the end. Lighthouse
Nursing Care facility and Compassus
were with Babe throughout
her recent journey. The family
is so appreciative for all the
care and kindness she received.
A Visitation was held at St. Mary
of the Assumption Parish, Revere
on Thursday, February 15,
followed by a Mass. Interment
Woodlawn Cemetery. In lieu of
fl owers please consider a donation
to Compassus790 Turnpike
Street #202 North Andover MA
01845 www.compassus.com.
f Revere. Died on Monday,
February 12th at the Kaplan
Family Hospice in Danvers, following
a long illness, she was
93 years old. Theresa was born
on May 24, 1930, in Boston to
her late parents, Pasquale â€œPatâ€
Del Grosso & Pasqualine â€œLenaâ€
(Brogna) Del Grosso. She along
with her sisters were raised in
East Boston until the family settled
in Revere in 1946. Theresa
was educated in East Boston
Public Schools. As a young
woman, Theresa began working
at Hyâ€“Sil in Revere, then
she was hired at Jordan Marsh
Department Store in Bostonâ€™s
Downtown Crossing in the giftwrapping
department. She was
known for creating beautiful
bows and later even made them
for her church. Theresa later began
working for Gillette Corporation
in South Boston in the
Sales Department where her
career spanned over 40 years,
and she was well known and
loved by her colleagues across
the country. Theresa was a devout
catholic and was also a
CCD Teacher at Immaculate
Conception Church in Revere
and she also served as a lector.
She would also attend Novena
Masses at St. Anthonyâ€™s and
prayed for everyone, even those
she didnâ€™t know. Theresa was an
avid reader, often reading 3 to 4
books per week. She was dedicated
to her parents and when
they were elderly, she cared for
them as well as her sister Barbara,
as her health declined. Family
was always the most important
to her, and she loved and cherished
them all.
She is the beloved sister of
Anne S. Osgood of Revere & her
late husband Robert A. Osgood,
Sr. and the late Barbara C. Del
Grosso, Rita A. Bordonaro & her
husband Vincenzo Bordonaro
and Rose Sullivan & her husband
Edward Sullivan. She is also lovingly
survived by many nieces,
nephews, grandnieces, grandnephews,
great grandnieces, &
great grandnephews.
Family & friends are respectfully
invited to attend a Funeral
Mass on Saturday, February
17th in St. Anthony of Padua
Church, 250 Revere St., Revere
1. On Feb. 16, 1905, in Boston,
the fi rst U.S. Esperanto club
was organized; what is Esperanto?
2.
What is a croque monsieur
(literally â€œcrunch sirâ€)?
3. What U.S. president (with
the same middle name as
the name of a Massachusetts
city) after being president
served in Congress and
had a stroke in the House
Chamber?
4. On Feb. 17, 1933, whom did
comic strip character Blondie
Boopadoop marry?
O
f Revere. Passed unexpectedly
on February 8, 2024,
at the age of 84. She was born
in Revere, MA, and graduated
from Revere High School.
Chickie started her career as a
hairdresser at Filenes, and continued
at Jordan Marsh and
Panzettis in Boston. She also
served as a crossing guard for
the Revere Public School system.
She was proud to say that
she crossed many children over
37 years and enjoyed every moment.
Chickie loved to entertain
her family and friends. She also
loved to travel and spend quality
time with her family.
Chickie was the loving wife
of the late Dominic Bramante,
and the daughter of the late
Antonio and Mary Terrazzano.
She was the loving sister of the
late Albert Terrazzano Sr. and
his wife Carmella, the late Marie
and her husband Joe Papasodora,
and the late Irene Terrazzano.
She also was the loving
aunt of Albert Terrazzano
Jr. and his wife Cynthia, Denise
and her late husband Sgt Peter
Papasodora. She was the great
aunt to Anthony Terrazzano, Taylor
Papasodora and her fi ancÃ©
Anthony Fabbo, John Papasodora
and his fi ancÃ©e Aliza Anderson,
and Joseph Papasodora.
She also leaves behind many
loving cousins.
Funeral Services will be in the
Paul Buonfiglio & Sons - Bruno
Funeral Home, 128 Revere
Street, REVERE, on Friday, February
16, 2024 at 11:30 AM. Relatives
and friends are kindly invited.
Visitation will be from 9:3011:30
AM. Entombment will be
in Woodlawn Mausoleum.
5. Who is the youngest Time
Person of the Year (2019)?
6. Why did Saudi Arabia, which
has prohibited alcohol since
1952, recently open an alcohol
store for non-Muslim
diplomats?
7. What U.S. president was the
fi rst to be sworn in with his
nickname?
8. On Feb. 18, 1930, Elm Farm
Ollie became the fi rst cow
to fl y in a plane; what happened
to the milk she produced
during the fl ight?
9. What is known as the â€œBig
Muddyâ€?
10. In the early 1900s, which
U.S. president pushed for
Answers
reform of football instead
of abolishing it altogether?
11. On Feb. 19, 1947, rescuers
reached what group
trapped in the Sierra Nevada
mountains?
12. What local sports team has
a mascot named, Slyde the
Fox?
13. What businesses was Madam
C.J. Walker in (she was
an early African American
female millionaire reported
on by Guinness World Records
recently)?
14. On Feb. 20, 1972, who became
the fi rst astronaut to
orbit earth?
15. What U.S. president was a
Rhodes Scholar?
16. What is a monobob?
17. On Feb. 21, 1893, Spanish
musician AndrÃ©s Segovia
was born; he popularized
what musical instrument?
18. In what city is the Ginza
Line, which is Asiaâ€™s oldest
subway?
19. Who won the fi rst World Series
baseball in 1903?
20. February 22 is National Chili
Day; Texasâ€™ official dish is
chili; what humorist from
Oklahoma said Texas chili is
â€œthe bowl of blessednessâ€?
1. A made-up language
based on
common words in
the main European
languages
2. A cooked ham
and cheese sandwich
that often
has egg batter and
bÃ©chamel sauce
3. John Quincy Adams
4.
Dagwood Bumstead
5.
Greta Thunberg
6. To â€œcounter the
illicit trade of alcohol
goodsâ€
7. Jimmy Carter
8. Paper containers
of it were
dropped by parachute
to spectators.
9.
Missouri River
10. Theodore Roosevelt
11.
The Donner
Party pioneers
12. The New England
Revolution
soccer team
13. Beauty culture
and real estate
14. John Glenn
15. Bill Clinton
16. A one-person
bobsled
17. Guitar
18. Tokyo
19. The Boston
Americans
20. Will Rogers
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î€³îî˜îî…îŒî‘îŠ î€‰ î€«îˆî„î—îŒî‘îŠ
î€µîˆî–îŒî‡îˆî‘î—îŒî„î î€‰ î€¦î’îîîˆî•î†îŒî„î î€¶îˆî•î™îŒî†îˆ
î€ªî„î– î€©îŒî—î—îŒî‘îŠ î‚‡ î€§î•î„îŒî‘ î€¶îˆî•î™îŒî†îˆ
î€™î€”î€šî€‘î€™î€œî€œî€‘î€œî€–î€›î€–
î€¶îˆî‘îŒî’î• î€¦îŒî—îŒîîˆî‘ î€§îŒî–î†î’î˜î‘î—
ADVOCATE
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×‰	Ú 7cassandra://VdyV42cvzWJuUMjWqT4yJfTgcD6vvQTIZ87pEzPIeNYÍ3¸Í`Ì°Í ×eÎoÅæÕ[Ž…â×‰EÚ!çTHE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 16, 2024
Page 19
Copyrighted material previously published in Banker & Tradesman/The Commercial Record, a weekly trade newspaper. It is reprinted with permission
from the publisher, The Warren Group. For a searchable database of real estate transactions and property information visit: www.thewarrengroup.com
BUYER1
REAL ESTATE TRANSACTIONS
SELLER1
BUYER2
Manandhar, Umesh Manandhar, Uma
NFL | FROM Page 15
team, including Matt Ryan, so there
was a lot of scouts coming through
BC. I was able to network with a lot
of the scouts that I met there, and in
the process developed a relationship
with Scott Pioli, when he was
with the Patriots. Scott was eventually
hired by Kansas City as its general
manager in 2009, and he brought
me out there to work with him.â€
After building up his reputation
as a successful executive with the
Chiefs organization, Borgonzi is now
being wooed by other teams like Pioli
was 15 years ago. â€œI had a great
experience this past month interviewing
for the Washington Commandersâ€™
GM job. I met with owner
DISCOUNT | FROM Page 3
Applicants must provide a utility
bill for something other than
water, such as electric, gas or cable
bill, in their name. Applicants
must also provide a valid Massachusetts
state driverâ€™s license or
Agd Rt
Ramos, Christian C Aguila-Ramos, Tracy M Resevoir Ave 191 LLC
Josh Harris and his search committee
for nearly six hours in his Miami
offi ce,â€ he said.
Could the Patriots be in Mikeâ€™s future?
After
the Patriots have recently
moved on from the successful
Belichick dynastic era, Borgonzi is
not ruling out that possibility.
â€œYou know ever since I got into
the league 15 years ago, Iâ€™ve had
thoughts of coming back home to
work for the Patriots someday,â€ he
said. â€œI was at the Super Bowl media
night last week, and was actually
approached by some Boston media
outlets with that same question.
That would be a dream of mine, for
sure, just to come back home to try
and help restore that championship
photo ID with date of birth and
address.
This program will no longer
be associated with the 41C Assessors
program. The discount
will only be applied to the last
quarter of the calendar year invoice,
which is released in OctoSELLER2
level
team that I grew up watching.â€
The move back home, whenever
that day might be, will be made easier,
because his wife, Jill, is a North
Reading native, and many members
of their families still live in the area.
â€œBut itâ€™s still always tough to relocate
when you have a young family,
especially when the kids (son Joseph
and daughter Nina) are in school,
and have developed friendships
over the years. It has to take that special
opportunity for me to leave this
city and this organization,â€ Mike said.
But vacationing every summer on
Cape Cod to visit family and friends
before training camp is a nice place
to start in that decision-making process
for the Everett High football legend
with a championship pedigree.
ber 2024. Applicants must be or
turn age 65 during the calendar
year 2024 to be eligible for the
discount. Applicants must also
own and occupy the property
that the application is for. Both
water and tax bills must be in
the name of the applicant or the
ADDRESS DATE PRICE
Huang, Huili 1129 N Shore Rd #3D 01.30.24 388000
191 Reservoir Ave
01.31.24 890000
CHURCH | FROM Page 13
located in the heart of Bostonâ€™s North End neighborhood.
In 2023, Old North Church was designated a Site of
Conscience by the International Coalition of Sites of
Conscience. With a new exhibit, group and self-guided
tours, and retail experience featuring American-made
products from BIPOC- and women-owned businesses,
the Old North campus off ers something for everyone.
The historic site, which is typically closed to the public
during the winter season, will be open Feb. 17-24 from
11 a.m.-5 p.m. (12:30-5 p.m. on Sunday). General admission
tickets, which are off ered at $5 per person, include
a self-guided tour of the churchâ€™s sanctuary and a new
exhibit and the chance to ask questions to knowledgeable
Educators. A special $10 bundle includes general
admission, a self-guided tour of the historic crypt, where
1,100 bodies are buried, and an immersive audio guide.
For more information or to purchase tickets in advance,
visit: www.oldnorth.com.
spouse of the applicant. This discount
will only apply to the owners
of one-, two- and three-family
dwellings.
The discount percentage will
be based on previous year total
gallon consumption. A 35%
discount will be given to qualifying
applicants who have used
less than 20,000 gallons of water.
A 20% discount will be given to
qualifying applicants who have
used 25,001-60,000 gallons of water.
No discount will be given to
those who have consumed more
than 60,000 gallons of water.
î€¶îˆîˆ î€ºî‹î„î— î€²î˜î• î€¦îîŒîˆî‘î—î– î€¤î•îˆ î€¶î„îœîŒî‘îŠî€„
î€ªîˆî— î„
î€°î„î‘îŠî’ î€µîˆî„îî—îœ î‹î„î– îˆî›î—îˆî‘î‡îˆî‡ î’î˜î• î…î˜î–îŒî‘îˆî–î– îî’î‡îˆî î—î’
î•îˆî‘î—î„îî–î€ î“î•î’î“îˆî•î—îœ îî„î‘î„îŠîˆîîˆî‘î— î„î‘î‡ î–î‹î’î•î—î€î—îˆî•î î•îˆî‘î—î„îî–
î„î‘î‡ î˜î–îˆ î—î‹îˆ î“îî„î—î‰î’î•î î–î˜î†î‹ î„î– î€¤îŒî•î…î‘î…î€ îŒî‘î†îî˜î‡îŒî‘îŠ î’î˜î•
î€µî’î†îŽî“î’î•î— î’î‰î‰îŒî†îˆî€‘
î€¦î’î‘î—î„î†î— î€¬î‘î‰î’î•îî„î—îŒî’î‘î€ î€©î’î• îŒî‘î”î˜îŒî•îŒîˆî– î„î‘î‡ î—î’ î–î†î‹îˆî‡î˜îîˆ î„
î™îŒîˆîšîŒî‘îŠî€ î“îîˆî„î–îˆ î†î„îî î€¶î˜îˆ î€³î„îî’îî…î„ î„î— î€šî€›î€”î€î€˜î€˜î€›î€î€”î€“î€œî€” î’î•
îˆîî„îŒî îŒî‘î‰î’îšîŒî—î‹îî„î‘îŠî’î€£îŠîî„îŒîî€‘î†î’îî€‘
î€¨î›î†îŒî—îŒî‘îŠ î€±îˆîšî–î€„
î€·î‹îˆ î–î„îîˆ î„î— î€–î€–
î€°î„î“îîˆîšî’î’î‡ î€¤î™îˆ îŒî‘
î€ªîî’î˜î†îˆî–î—îˆî• î€°î€¤ îŒî– î„
î–î˜î†î†îˆî–î–î€„ î€¤ î…îŒîŠ î—î‹î„î‘îŽ
îœî’î˜ î—î’ î’î˜î• î„îî„îîŒî‘îŠ
î…î˜îœîˆî•î– î‰î’î• î—î‹îˆîŒî• î—î•î˜î–î—
î„î‘î‡ î“îˆî•î–îˆî™îˆî•î„î‘î†îˆî€‘
î€ªî•î„î—îŒî—î˜î‡îˆ î—î’ î’î˜î•
î‡îˆî‡îŒî†î„î—îˆî‡
î“î•î’î‰îˆî–î–îŒî’î‘î„îî– î„î‘î‡
î“î„î•î—î‘îˆî•î–î€ îŒî‘î†îî˜î‡îŒî‘îŠ
î€°î„î˜î•îˆîˆî‘ î€¥îˆî•î‘î„î•î‡
î‰î•î’î î€µîˆî„î‡îŒî‘îŠ î€¦î’î’î“
î€¥î„î‘îŽî€ î€°îˆîîŒî–î–î„ î€¦î˜î•î—îŒî–
î‰î•î’î î€¶îŒîî“îîˆ î€·îŒî—îîˆî€
î„î‘î‡ îîŒî–î—îŒî‘îŠ î„îŠîˆî‘î—
î€ªîŒî‘îŠîˆî• î€¤î—î—î„îœî„ î‰î•î’î
î€¤î‡î™îŒî–î’î•î– î€¯îŒî™îŒî‘îŠî€‘ î€¯îˆî—î€Šî–
îŽîˆîˆî“ î—î•î„î‘î–î‰î’î•îîŒî‘îŠ
îîŒî™îˆî– î„î‘î‡ î–î‹î„î“îŒî‘îŠ
î†î’îîî˜î‘îŒî—îŒîˆî– î—î‹î•î’î˜îŠî‹
î•îˆî„î îˆî–î—î„î—îˆ î—î’îŠîˆî—î‹îˆî•î€„
î€¦î‹îˆîˆî•î– î—î’ îî’î•îˆ
î–î˜î†î†îˆî–î– î„î‹îˆî„î‡î€„
î†î’îî“î•îˆî‹îˆî‘î–îŒî™îˆ
îî„î•îŽîˆî— î„î‘î„îîœî–îŒî– î„î—
î‘î’ î†î’î–î—î€„
î€¤î•îˆ îœî’î˜ î†î’î‘î–îŒî‡îˆî•îŒî‘îŠ î–îˆîîîŒî‘îŠ
îœî’î˜î• î“î•î’î“îˆî•î—îœî€¢
î€²î˜î• î—îˆî„î î’î‰î‰îˆî•î– î„ î€©î€µî€¨î€¨ îî„î•îŽîˆî—îŒî‘îŠ
î„î‘î„îîœî–îŒî– î–îˆî•î™îŒî†îˆî€ î“î•î’î™îŒî‡îŒî‘îŠ îœî’î˜ îšîŒî—î‹
î™î„îî˜î„î…îîˆ îŒî‘î–îŒîŠî‹î—î– î—î’ îŠî˜îŒî‡îˆ îœî’î˜î• î•îˆî„î
îˆî–î—î„î—îˆ î‡îˆî†îŒî–îŒî’î‘î–î€‘ î€ºîŒî—î‹ îŒî‘î—îˆî•îˆî–î— î•î„î—îˆî–
î†î˜î•î•îˆî‘î—îîœ îŒî‘ î—î‹îˆ î€™î€î€šî€ˆî€ îŒî—î€Šî– î„î‘
î„î‡î™î„î‘î—î„îŠîˆî’î˜î– î—îŒîîˆ î‰î’î• î…î’î—î‹ î…î˜îœîˆî•î– î„î‘î‡
î–îˆîîîˆî•î–î€‘
î€¦î’î‘î—î„î†î— î˜î– î—î’î‡î„îœ î„î— î€™î€”î€šî€î€›î€šî€šî€î€—î€˜î€˜î€– î’î• î™îŒî„
îˆîî„îŒî î„î— î–î’îî‡îšîŒî—î‹î–î˜îˆî€£îŠîî„îŒîî€‘î†î’î î—î’
î–î†î‹îˆî‡î˜îîˆ îœî’î˜î• î†î’î‘î–î˜îî—î„î—îŒî’î‘î€‘
î€¯îˆî— î’î˜î• îˆî›î“îˆî•î—îŒî–îˆ î‹îˆîî“ îœî’î˜ î‘î„î™îŒîŠî„î—îˆ î—î‹îˆ
î•îˆî„î îˆî–î—î„î—îˆ îî„î•îŽîˆî— îšîŒî—î‹ î†î’î‘î‰îŒî‡îˆî‘î†îˆî€‘
î€¹îŒî–îŒî— î—î‹îˆ îîŒî‘îŽ î—î’ î•îˆî„î‡ î•îˆî„î î—îˆî–î—îŒîî’î‘îŒî„îî– î„î‘î‡ î‰îŒî‘î‡
î’î˜î— îšî‹îœ î’î˜î• î†îîŒîˆî‘î—î– î•î„î™îˆ î„î…î’î˜î— î—î‹îˆîŒî• îˆî›î“îˆî•îŒîˆî‘î†îˆî–
îšîŒî—î‹ î˜î–î€‘
î‹î—î—î“î–î€î€’î€’îî„î“î–î€‘î„î“î“î€‘îŠî’î’î€‘îŠîî€’î…î€–î€¥î€³î‘î€¼î€§î€«îŒî€¼î€¯î€•î˜îŒî€”î“î€™
Revere
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THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 16, 2024
î€ƒî€›î€¬î€ªî€Ÿî€¨î€£î€®î€© î€’î€Ÿî€›î€¦ î€…î€­î€®î€›î€®î€Ÿ î€£î€­ î€¨î€©î€±
î¶î€î‚‚î€µî‚‚î¶ îŠîˆžî‰Šîˆ¡îˆ¤îˆ¢î‰Šîˆîˆîˆ
î€½îƒ»îƒ€î„›îƒŠîƒ†îƒ¥î‚¿îƒµîƒŠ îƒ€î„îƒµî„îƒ»îƒ¥î‚¨îƒµ î„¿îƒ¥î„¦îƒ¢ î‚¨ îƒî„î„›îƒîƒŠî„î„«î„Ÿ
îƒœîƒ¥î„›îƒŠî„˜îƒµî‚¨îƒ€îƒŠ îƒ¥îƒ» î‚¨îƒ» îƒ¥îƒºî„˜î„›îƒŠî„Ÿî„Ÿîƒ¥î„¾îƒŠ îˆŸî‰¨î„Ÿî„¦î„î„›î……
îƒî„›îƒŠî‚¨î„¦ î„›î„î„îƒºî‰‰ î’î„ îƒ†îƒŠî„¦î‚¨îƒ¥îƒµ î„¿î‚¨î„Ÿ îƒºîƒ¥î„Ÿî„ŸîƒŠîƒ†î‰Ž
î¶î€î‚‚î€µî‚‚î¶ îŠîˆ¦îˆŸîˆ¢î‰Šîˆîˆîˆ
î€™î„«î„Ÿî„¦î„îƒº îƒ€î„îƒµî„îƒ»îƒ¥î‚¨îƒµ îƒ¥îƒ» î„¦îƒ¢îƒŠ î‚–î„î„îƒ†îƒµî‚¨îƒ»îƒ†î„Ÿ
î„¿îƒ¥î„¦îƒ¢ îƒœîƒ¥î„›îƒŠî„˜îƒµî‚¨îƒ€îƒŠî‰Š îƒœîƒ¥îƒ»îƒ¥î„Ÿîƒ¢îƒŠîƒ† îƒµî„î„¿îƒŠî„› îƒµîƒŠî„¾îƒŠîƒµî‰Š
îƒ€îƒŠîƒ»î„¦î„›î‚¨îƒµ î‚¨îƒ¥î„›î‰Š î‚¨îƒ»îƒ† îˆŸî‰¨îƒ€î‚¨î„› îƒî‚¨î„›î‚¨îƒîƒŠî‰‰
î€Žî€Ÿî€± î€™î€Ÿî€›î€¬î…‡ î€Žî€Ÿî€± î€ˆî€©î€§î€Ÿî…Š
î€…î€¬î€£î€î€› î€‚î€£î€›î€¨î€î€©
î€™î€©î€¯î€¬ î€†î€©î€¬î€Ÿî€°î€Ÿî€¬ î€î€¡î€Ÿî€¨î€®î…„
î„¸î„ˆî„‰î„‚î„¹ î„Šî„‚î„î…šî„î„ƒî„ƒî„Š
î€£î„›îƒ¥îƒ€î‚¨ îƒ¥î„Ÿ î„›îƒŠî‚¨îƒ†î…… î‚¨îƒ»îƒ† îƒŠî„šî„«îƒ¥î„˜î„˜îƒŠîƒ† î„¦î„ î‚¿îƒŠ
î‚œî„î„«î„› î€´î„î„›îƒŠî„¾îƒŠî„› î€îƒîƒŠîƒ»î„¦î‹‡ î‚¨îƒ»îƒ† îƒ¢îƒŠîƒµî„˜ î……î„î„«
îƒœîƒ¥îƒ»îƒ† î„¦îƒ¢îƒŠ îƒ¢î„îƒºîƒŠ î„îƒœ î……î„î„«î„› îƒ†î„›îƒŠî‚¨îƒºî„Ÿî‰‰
î¶î€î‚‚î€µî‚‚î¶ îŠîˆ£îˆ¤îˆ¦î‰Šîˆ¦îˆîˆ
îŒî„î„¾îƒ¥îƒ»îƒîƒµî…… îƒºî‚¨îƒ¥îƒ»î„¦î‚¨îƒ¥îƒ»îƒŠîƒ† î„Ÿî„˜îƒµîƒ¥î„¦î‰¨îƒŠîƒ»î„¦î„›î…… î„›î‚¨îƒ»îƒ€îƒ¢
î„¿îƒ¥î„¦îƒ¢ îˆ  î‚¿îƒŠîƒ†î„›î„î„îƒºî„Ÿî‰Š îˆž î‰† î‚¿î‚¨î„¦îƒ¢î„Ÿî‰Š îƒœîƒ¥îƒ»îƒ¥î„Ÿîƒ¢îƒŠîƒ†
îƒµî„î„¿îƒŠî„› îƒµîƒŠî„¾îƒŠîƒµî‰Š îˆžî‰¨îƒ€î‚¨î„› îƒî‚¨î„›î‚¨îƒîƒŠî‰Š î„îƒ» î‚¨ îƒµîƒŠî„¾îƒŠîƒµ îƒµî„î„¦î‰‰
î€™î˜î‘î‘î˜î’î‘î˜î‚•î€£î¶î‰‰î€™î˜î‘
îˆ îˆ îˆ¢ î€™î€£î’î½î²î€îŒ î¶î½î²î€£î€£î½î‰Š î¶î€î‚‚î€µî‚‚î¶î‰Š î‘î€ î‹Š î‰œîˆ¤îˆ¥îˆžî‰ îˆŸîˆ îˆ î‰¨îˆ¤îˆ îˆîˆ
î¶î€î‚‚î€µî‚‚î¶ îŠîˆ îˆŸîˆ¦î‰Šîˆ¦îˆîˆ
î’îƒŠî„¿ îˆŸ î‚¿îƒŠîƒ†î„›î„î„îƒº îƒ€î„îƒ»îƒ†î„ î„¿îƒ¥î„¦îƒ¢ î‚¨ îƒî„›î‚¨îƒ»îƒ¥î„¦îƒŠ
îƒ³îƒ¥î„¦îƒ€îƒ¢îƒŠîƒ»î‰Š îƒ€îƒŠîƒ»î„¦î„›î‚¨îƒµ î‚¨îƒ¥î„›î‰Š îƒî‚¨î„Ÿ îƒ¢îƒŠî‚¨î„¦î‰Š îƒ»îƒŠî„¿
î„¿îƒ¥îƒ»îƒ†î„î„¿î„Ÿî‰Š î‚¨îƒ»îƒ† î„îƒœîƒœî‰¨î„Ÿî„¦î„›îƒŠîƒŠî„¦ î„˜î‚¨î„›îƒ³îƒ¥îƒ»îƒî‰‰
î‹†îˆŸîˆîˆŸîˆ¡ î€˜î€ºî€º î€îƒœîƒœîƒ¥îƒµîƒ¥î‚¨î„¦îƒŠî„Ÿî‰Š îŒîŒî€™î‰‰ î€îƒ» îƒ¥îƒ»îƒ†îƒŠî„˜îƒŠîƒ»îƒ†îƒŠîƒ»î„¦îƒµî…… î„î„¿îƒ»îƒŠîƒ† î‚¨îƒ»îƒ† î„î„˜îƒŠî„›î‚¨î„¦îƒŠîƒ† îƒœî„›î‚¨îƒ»îƒ€îƒ¢îƒ¥î„ŸîƒŠîƒŠ î„îƒœ î€˜î€ºî€º î€îƒœîƒœîƒ¥îƒµîƒ¥î‚¨î„¦îƒŠî„Ÿî‰Š îŒîŒî€™î‰‰ î€˜îƒŠî„›îƒ³î„Ÿîƒ¢îƒ¥î„›îƒŠ î€ºî‚¨î„¦îƒ¢î‚¨î„¿î‚¨î…… î€ºî„îƒºîƒŠî¶îƒŠî„›î„¾îƒ¥îƒ€îƒŠî„Ÿ î‚¨îƒ»îƒ†
î„¦îƒ¢îƒŠ î€˜îƒŠî„›îƒ³î„Ÿîƒ¢îƒ¥î„›îƒŠ î€ºî‚¨î„¦îƒ¢î‚¨î„¿î‚¨î…… î€ºî„îƒºîƒŠî¶îƒŠî„›î„¾îƒ¥îƒ€îƒŠî„Ÿ î„Ÿî……îƒºî‚¿î„îƒµ î‚¨î„›îƒŠ î„›îƒŠîƒîƒ¥î„Ÿî„¦îƒŠî„›îƒŠîƒ† î„ŸîƒŠî„›î„¾îƒ¥îƒ€îƒŠ îƒºî‚¨î„›îƒ³î„Ÿ î„îƒœ î€™î„îƒµî„«îƒºî‚¿îƒ¥î‚¨ î€½îƒ»î„Ÿî„«î„›î‚¨îƒ»îƒ€îƒŠ î€™î„îƒºî„˜î‚¨îƒ»î……î‰Š î‚¨ î€˜îƒŠî„›îƒ³î„Ÿîƒ¢îƒ¥î„›îƒŠ î€ºî‚¨î„¦îƒ¢î‚¨î„¿î‚¨î…… î‚¨îƒœîƒœîƒ¥îƒµîƒ¥î‚¨î„¦îƒŠî‰‰
î€£î„šî„«î‚¨îƒµ î€ºî„î„«î„Ÿîƒ¥îƒ»îƒ î˜î„˜î„˜î„î„›î„¦î„«îƒ»îƒ¥î„¦î……î‰‰
î¶î€î‚‚î€µî‚‚î¶ îŠîˆ¤îˆŸîˆ¢î‰Šîˆîˆîˆ
î²î‚¨î„›îƒŠ î„¦î„¿î„î‰¨îƒœî‚¨îƒºîƒ¥îƒµî…… î„¿îƒ¥î„¦îƒ¢ îˆŸî‰–îˆ  î‚¿îƒŠîƒ†î„›î„î„îƒºî„Ÿî‰Š
îƒ¢î‚¨î„›îƒ†î„¿î„î„îƒ† îƒœîƒµî„î„î„›î„Ÿî‰Š î‚¨îƒ»îƒ† î‚¨ îƒ€îƒ¢î‚¨î„›îƒºîƒ¥îƒ»îƒ
î„˜î‚¨î„¦îƒ¥î„ îƒ¥îƒ» î‚¨ î„šî„«îƒ¥îƒŠî„¦ î„Ÿîƒ¥îƒ†îƒŠ î„Ÿî„¦î„›îƒŠîƒŠî„¦ îƒµî„îƒ€î‚¨î„¦îƒ¥î„îƒ»î‰‰
î€˜î€£î‚•î€£î²îŒî‚œ îŠîˆ£îˆ¥îˆ¦î‰Šîˆ¦îˆîˆ
î²îƒŠîƒ»î„î„¾î‚¨î„¦îƒŠîƒ† îƒ€î„îƒµî„îƒ»îƒ¥î‚¨îƒµ î„¿îƒ¥î„¦îƒ¢ îƒ»îƒŠî„¿ îƒ³îƒ¥î„¦îƒ€îƒ¢îƒŠîƒ»î‰Š
îƒ¢î‚¨î„›îƒ†î„¿î„î„îƒ† îƒœîƒµî„î„î„›î„Ÿî‰Š î‚¨îƒ»îƒ† îƒ¢îƒŠî‚¨î„¦îƒ¥îƒ»îƒ î„Ÿî……î„Ÿî„¦îƒŠîƒºî‰‰
î€´îƒŠî‚¨î„¦î„«î„›îƒŠî„Ÿ î‚¨ îˆŸî‰¨îƒ€î‚¨î„› îƒî‚¨î„›î‚¨îƒîƒŠ î‚¨îƒ»îƒ† îƒµî‚¨î„›îƒîƒŠ îƒµî„î„¦î‰‰
COMING SOON
COMING SOON - RENOVATED 13 YEARS
AGO, THIS 3 BED CAPE OFFERS AN OPEN
CONCEPT KITCHEN/ DINING AREA THAT
INCLUDES, STAINLESS APPLIANCES, GRANITE,
BREAKFAST BAR, TILE FLOOR WITH A
MATCHING BACKSPLASH. RED OAK
HARDWOOD FLOOR, CROWN MOLDING, THE
SUN ROOM WITH SKYLIGHT LEADS TO DECK
OVERLOOKING A FENCED LEVEL YARD. THE
LOWER LEVEL FAMILY ROOM HAS BERBER
CARPET AND OFFERS AN 400 SQUARE FEET
OF HEATED LIVING SPACE, 1715 SQFT IN
TOTAL. SAUGUS
CALL KEITH 781-389-0791 FOR DETAILS
COMING SOON
COMING SOON- 2 FAMILY LOCATED IN
THE CENTER OF TOWN. ONE UNIT
CONSISTS OF 2 BEDROOMS, 1 BATH,
THE OTHER IS 1 BEDROOM, 1 BATH.
BOTH GAS HEATING SYSTEMS ARE
NEWER. HARDWOOD FLOORING, EAT-IN
KITCHENS. PROPERTY HAS A LARGE
YARD AND OFF STREET PARKING.
SAUGUS CALL KEITH 781-389-0791
FOR DETAILS
FOR SALE
FOR SALE -PREMIERE LOCATION FOR RETAIL/OFFICE
SPACE IN ONE OF LYNNFIELD'S BUSIEST PLAZAS. THIS
BUILDING IS CURRENTLY OWNED AND USED BY THE KOC.
THIS COLONIAL OFFERS 30+ PARKING SPACES. INSIDE
YOU'LL FIND ALMOST 3600 SF OVER 2 FINISHED LEVELS,
AND AN ADDITIONAL UNFINISHED FULL BASEMENT. RB
ZONING. MANY POSSIBILITIES FOR AN OWNER/USER OR
INVESTOR LOOKING TO CAPITALIZE ON MULTIPLE SPACES
OR TEAR-DOWN & REBUILD. MAIN LEVEL HAS SMALLER
FUNCTION AREA, LARGE HALL AREA, KITCHEN, 1/2 BATH &
BAR AREA. UPPER LEVEL HAS 2 OFFICES, CONFERENCE
ROOM & FULL BATH .LYNNFIELD $649,000
CALL KEITH 781-389-0791
FOR LEASE
FOR LEASE -600 SQUARE FOOT OPEN SPACE WITH KITCHEN
AND 1/2 BATH INCLUDED.TENANT PAYS THEIR OWN GAS AND
ELECTRIC UTILITIES. CLOSE TO SAUGUS CENTER, THIS HIGH
TRAFFIC AREA IS AN EXCELLENT LOCATION FOR A NEW OR EXISTING
BUSINESS. PERFECT FOR OFFICE, AESTHETICIANS, NAIL
SALON, YOGA STUDIO, ETC. INCLUDES ONE PARKING SPOT IN
REAR FOR BUSINESS OWNER. AVAILABLE MARCH 1ST SAUGUS
$1,500
CALL KEITH 781-389-0791
SOLD
RENTALS
2 BEDROOM SINGLE FAMILY HOME WITH OPEN CONCEPT, LARGE BEDROOMS WITH BALCONIES AND ONE
BATHROOM. FIRST FLOOR LAUNDRY, QUAINT AREA. SAUGUS $2,800 PLUS UTILITIES CALL RHONDA 781-706-0842
1 BEDROOM APARTMENT EAT-IN KITCHEN WITH PLENTY OF CABINETS. FRESHLY PAINTED AND NEW CARPETS.
LAUNDRY HOOK-UPS IN UNIT FOR AN ELECTRIC DRYER. 2 CAR OFF STREET PARKING. NO PETS AND NO
SMOKING. FIREPLACE IN BEDROOM IS DECORATIVE ONLY. GOOD CREDIT AND REFERENCES. 3 MONTHS RENT
REQUIRED TO MOVE IN. AVAILABLE 3/1-SAUGUS $1800 CALL RHONDA 781-706-0842
TWO BEDROOM, 2 BATH MODERN CONDO WITH LAUNDRY IN UNIT. 2ND FLOOR UNIT WITH HARDWOOD
FLOORING, CENTRAL AIR, EXTRA STORAGE, AND OFF STREET PARKING. SPACIOUS BEDROOMS. AVAILABLE
IMMEDIATELY. REVERE $2,800 UTILITIES NOT INCLUDED. CALL LAUREN 781-835-6989
SOLD - LYNNFIELD OFF MARKET TO ONE OF MY INVESTOR BUYER
CLIENTS. I HAVE LOTS OF CASH BUYERS WHO WILL CLOSE FAST AND
ARE NOT AFRAID OF WORK. THEY WILL ALSO CLEAN OUT YOUR
PROPERTY IF YOU DO NOT WANT TO. SO IF YOU ARE LOOKING FOR A
QUICK CASH SALE, WHERE YOU JUST NEED TO TAKE WHAT YOU WANT
AND LEAVE,
GIVE ME A CALL.
DEBBIE 617-678-9710
MOBILE HOMES
LOOKING TO
BUY OR SELL?
COMING SOON
COMING SOON-BRAND NEW
CONSTRUCTION COLONIAL LOCATED ON A
NICE SIDE STREET NOT FAR FROM
ELEMENTARY SCHOOLS AND THE CENTER
OF TOWN. 4 BEDS, 3.5 BATH WITH
HARDWOOD THROUGH-OUT. BEAUTIFUL
KITCHEN AND BATHS. EXQUISITE DETAIL AND
QUALITY BUILD. GARAGE UNDER.
SAUGUS CALL KEITH 781-389-0791
JOHN DOBBYN
617-285-7117
CALL HIM
FOR ALL YOUR
REAL ESTATE NEEDS
SPACIOUS 2 BEDROOM IN NEED OF TLC. GREAT FOR HANDYMAN. HEAT AND A/C NOT WORKING.
LARGE ADDITION.2 CAR PARKING. DANVERS $79,900
YOUNG ONE BEDROOM IN GOOD CONDITION IN A DESIRABLE PARK WITH 2 PARKING SPOTS.
SOLD AS IS. SUBJECT TO PROBATE DANVERS $99,900
SPACIOUS 2 BEDROOM IN EXCELLENT CONDITION WITH NICE YARD. LOW PARK RENT.
PEABODY $179,900
PRE-CONSTRUCTION. WELCOME TO SHADY OAKS BRAND NEW MANUFACTURED HOME
COMMUNITY. AFFORDABLE YET UPSCALE LIVING , EACH HOME HAS AMPLE SQUARE FOOTAGE
WITH 2 BEDROOMS AND 2 BATHS. ONE WILL HAVE 3 BEDROOMS AND ONE BATH. OPEN
CONCEPT PERFECT FOR ENTERTAINING. HIGH QUALITY FINISHES FROM TOP TIER APPLIANCES
TO ELEGANT FINISHES.. A SERENE WOODED SETTING WHILE BEING CONVENIENT TO
SCHOOLS, SHOPPING, DINING AND MAJOR TRANSPORTATION ROUTES. THIS IS AN
EXCEPTIONAL OPPORTUNITY TO OWN A PIECE OF THIS THRIVING COMMUNITY AT AN
UNBELIEVABLE PRICE. LOW PARK RENT OF 450 A MONTH. INCLUDES TAXES, WATER AND
SEWER, RUBBISH REMOVAL AND SNOW PLOWING. ACT NOW BEFORE PRICE INCREASE.
EXPECTED OCCUPANCY DATE APRIL 2024 DANVERS $249,900
CALL ERIC 781-223-0289
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