×‰?4×B!Ü ×‘C‘×˜š ÍU ÍUÍru×‰œ“×‰	Ú 7cassandra://gVc-qreVqaiKwZluODIX64qzscrW7MHKs9ybrmSmRD0Î ¦ºÍ`Í'Íp×‰	Ú 7cassandra://Tz3nL1IbxoAMHYXoqzzQz-9inJmvvkVSD26wZkHvorEÍ¶÷Í`ÍÍà×‰	Ú 7cassandra://wM6hALsdBMVv7cx1Dpw_fFsbyPJCo_ssgm_MOeuNW4kÍ:Í`ÌÔÍ ×h8žÅ;3ý‘× ×h8žÅ;3ý  Í°Í ÌÃ9×H»http://www.advocatenews.net××Ðˆ×ˆE×h8žÅ;3ý û×‰EÚ	ÖYOUR LOCAL NEWS & SPORTS ONLINE. SCAN HERE!
Vol. 35, No.22
-FREEwww.advocatenews.net
Free
Every Friday
City of Revereâ€™s Annual
Memorial Day Ceremony
781-286-8500
Friday, May 30, 2025
Better Safe Than Sorry
RHS Building Committee voted to cut
$10M from construction budget
Advocate Staff Report
T
he Revere High School
Building Committee late
last month voted 8 to 5 to
support city CFO Richard Viscayâ€™s
motion that the $412.5
million construction budget
for the new school be cut by
$10 million.
It wasnâ€™t an easy vote.
While the committee supported
the idea of a cut,
about half of the members
said they would rather wait
and see specifically what
was going to be cut from
the project.
â€œI would feel more comREFLECTING
ON A CALL TO FREEDOM: Pictured from left, City Council President Marc Silvestri,
Mayor Patrick Keefe, State Senator Lydia Edwards and State Representative Jessica Giannino
at the Memorial Day Ceremonies at McMackin Veterans Memorial Park Monday morning. See
photo highlights beginning on page 12â€“14. (Advocate photo)
Once Upon a Time -
Revere High School goes to Senior Prom
fortable seeing the value
management list,â€ said Susan
Gravellese.
Viscay was asked how he
arrived at his $10 million
fi gure.
â€œI think itâ€™s a reasonable
number to start with to bring
down the cost of this projectâ€
said Viscay. â€œItâ€™s easy to
get to without aff ecting the
educational programing.â€
School Superintendent Dianne
Kelly suggested that
the committee wait until
their June meeting which
would allow time to gather
a list of cuts to make up the
$10 million.
RHS BUILDING | SEE Page 2
RHS Class of 2025
Graduation Commencement
Exercises on Wed., June 4
R
EVERE â€” The school year
is almost over and, with
that, comes the Revere High
School Class of 2025 Graduation.
The commencement
takes place at Harry Della
Russo Stadium (75 Park Avenue)
at 6:00pm on Wednesday,
June 4 (rain date Thursday,
June 5).
Please be aware of heavy
traffi c delays prior to and following
the ceremony â€” students
cross Broadway from
School Street prior to the
ceremony and families disperse
into the Park Avenue
area at the end of the event.
For tickets/media admission,
please contact the Offi
ce of the Superintendent
at: (781) 286-8226.
PROM NIGHT: Daniel Hou is shown placing a corsage onto Rachel Sanchezâ€™s wrist outside the
Danversport Yacht Club where 324 students attended Revere High Schoolâ€™s senior prom themed
Once Upon a Time last Tuesday. See photo highlights on page 16â€“17. (Advocate photo)
×‰	Ú 7cassandra://wM6hALsdBMVv7cx1Dpw_fFsbyPJCo_ssgm_MOeuNW4kÍ:Í`ÌÔÍ ×h8žÅ;3ý ü×h8žÅ;3ý ûÍ
ªÍr×‘C’×˜š   ÍUÍru×‰œ“×‰	Ú 7cassandra://dX8ob1DdTFRY2jihGsSYiDrbeX7SEb_xJtrgQbqi0m0Î ó—Í`Í'Íp×‰	Ú 7cassandra://i2Qibuq4UDrIi5kn4Wxp2p6AgRdfWz_7-glG8zy831kÍ¼Í`ÍÍà×‰	Ú 7cassandra://b-DbdHMXbs-tqtyaKEe7mwx40IQQnQPXN3Q4MYQUwpYÍ6jÍ`ÌÔÍ ×h8žÅ;3ý!×˜š ÍU ÍUÍru×‰œ“×‰	Ú 7cassandra://ONRS3SXX7RyhKwI7tzDDXMMcNFdJVmOPwOEez7vcGZ0Î ò\Í`Í'Íp×‰	Ú 7cassandra://fU6om0EQ_PpM9zs4tH2wTTQ1Rhu-k_W_iE-xmlqn1zwÍ¥•Í`ÍÍà×‰	Ú 7cassandra://nhwLSHpcNckJ8HKPslSTndR0TIRAwjtzqCajQD91o4cÍ/âÍ`ÌÔÍ ×h8ž‘Å;3ý"‘× ×h8ž‘Å;3ý% ÍæÍ!Í9×HÚ  mailto:lsimeonejr@simeonelaw.net××Ðˆ×‰EÚÏPage 2
THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, MAY 30, 2025
Board of Health discusses
tobacco productsâ€™ effect on young people
Advocate Staff Report
B
onny Carroll, director of the
Six City Tobacco Initiative,
met with the Board of Health
at their last meeting to update
them on the latest generation
of nicotine products available
in the city. Carroll brought a
package of nicotine pouches
and some electronic nicotine
vapes to show board members.
She described the high nicotine
content in the products
with packaging that includes
neon colors and cartoon characters,
which demonstrates
that teens and young people
are the targeted consumers.
â€œWe see these everywhere,â€
Carroll told the board.
According to Carroll, research
shows that addiction
to nicotine is most powerful
when it occurs in someone
with an undeveloped brain.
Carroll said the brain is considered
fully developed at age 26.
â€œThese companies spend billions
of dollars to market these
products, and they know they
are marketing to young people,â€
said Carroll.
Board member Viviana Catano
asked if there has been
an increase in hospitalization
of young people with health
problems linked to new nicotine
products. Carroll said that
data wasnâ€™t available but added,
â€œThereâ€™s so much nicotine in
these products, I canâ€™t imagine
they are not being poisoned.â€
Board Chair Dr. Drew Bunker
reminded everyone that
tobacco and nicotine products
can lead to harmful addiction,
mental health problems
and issues with cardiovascular
health.
North Suffolk Public
Health Collaborative
The board voted to authoHappy
Memorial Day
Weekend!
2.79
24
Mid-grade
Regular
$3.37
24
Over 47 Years of Excellence! 1978 - 2025
Full Service
ULS
TRUCK
STOP
$2.73
Order online at
angelosoil.com
rize Bunker to sign an agreement
with Winthrop and Chelsea
outlining the governance
of the North Suffolk Public
Health Collaborative. Public
Health Director Lauren Buck
told board members that since
Covid the state has been encouraging
the regionalization
of health services. The collaborative
provides a regional epidemiologist
and a regional
public health nurse who is in
RHS BUILDING | FROM Page 1
Viscay said it would be best
to commit to the cut and work
through the details later.
Revere two days a week. The
collaborative is overseen by
the Metropolitan Area Planning
Council (MAPC) and
funded by the Public Health
Excellence grant.
Prior to this new agreement,
each member community
paid MAPC to run the collaborative.
However, now under
the new agreement, the Public
Health Excellence grant will
cover the cost of running the
collaborative.
Revere health
by the numbers
16 â€” infl uenza cases in Revere
for the month of May
15 â€” coronavirus cases in
Revere for May
1 â€” a case of measles that
Buck said was a direct contact
case
34 â€” routine food inspections
conducted
55 â€” violations issued for
accumulation of trash, litter
and debris
â€œItâ€™s very important for us to
bring down the cost of this any
way we can,â€ said Viscay.
Mayor Patrick Keefe said the
cut would not aff ect the bond
52 â€” violations issued for
overfl owing dumpsters
101 â€” violations issued for
unclean and unsanitary land,
including overgrowth and
vegetation. Director of Municipal
Inspections & Health
Agent Michael Wells reminded
residents that we are in overgrowth
season and lawns need
to be maintained throughout
the summer.
Back on track
The board voted to remove
the condemnation of homes
at 71 Pitcairn St. and 56 Ambrose
St. According to Wells,
since the board voted to condemn
the properties, permits
have been pulled and work
has been done to rehabilitate
the properties.
â€œSometimes the board has
to make tough decisions,â€ said
Wells. â€œBut the result here is
properties returned to habitable
condition and blights
[were] removed from neighborhoods.â€
authorization
and the $10 million
would move to the contingency
account for any unexpected
problems or costs.
â€œIt would move to project
contingency, and it would
live there, and we would try
to never touch it,â€ said Brian
Dakin, senior project manager.
â€œWe would be reserving it,
never aiming to spend it,â€ he
added.
Keefe said that contracts for
work on the building would be
awarded on a percentage basis
of the total budget. Thus a
$10 million cut would lead to
subsequent savings.
Still some committee members
resisted unspecifi ed cuts.
Kelly suggested that because
Viscayâ€™s motion wasnâ€™t
on the agenda, a vote on it
could be a violation of open
meeting law.
But Keefe said it was a voice
motion and there was no violation
of open meeting law
involved.
â€œI think itâ€™s prudent of us to
reduce the budget by $10 million,â€
said Keefe. â€œWeâ€™ll still be
able to do everything we want
to do. We will just make sure
we can do it within our means.â€
FLEET
CARD
Check Out Our
LOW PRICES!
×‰	Ú 7cassandra://b-DbdHMXbs-tqtyaKEe7mwx40IQQnQPXN3Q4MYQUwpYÍ6jÍ`ÌÔÍ ×h8žÅ;3ý ý×‰EÚçTHE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, MAY 30, 2025
Page 3
Rep. Giannino honors Richard T. Serino, Sr.
at inaugural statewide Military Appreciation Day
Special to Th e Advocate
S
tate Representative Jessica
Ann Giannino (D-Revere)
proudly honored Revereâ€™s
Richard T. Serino, Sr. at
the fi rst-ever Military Appreciation
Day ceremony held
in the Massachusetts State
Houseâ€™s historic House Chamber.
Military Appreciation Day
was created by the HealeyDriscoll
Administration to establish
a lasting annual tradition
that brings together local,
state and community leaders
to honor those whose service
might otherwise go unrecognized.
Each legislator was invited
to nominate a member
of their local military community
â€” whether a veteran, active-duty
service member, National
Guard member, Reservist
or military spouse â€” to be
honored during the ceremony.
More than 125 individuals
who exemplify commitment
to service and community
were recognized from districts
across Massachusetts.
â€œGrowing up in Revere, I always
knew Richie as a police
offi cer, the friendly face on the
motorcycle who served our
community for decades. What
I didnâ€™t realize until later in life
was the depth of his service to
our country as a U.S. Marine
during the Vietnam era. Honoring
him today at the State
House was incredibly special.
It was a chance not only to recognize
his military service, but
also to let him and others like
him know that their sacrifi ces
have not gone unnoticed.
Iâ€™m proud to call him a neighbor
and even more proud to
recognize him as a hero,â€ said
Representative Giannino.
Richard Serino, Sr. of Revere
is a humble family man â€” a
proud husband, father and
grandfather â€” and he is an
equally proud veteran of the
US Marine Corps. Richie takes
to heart his values, love for his
country and the camaraderie
of the U.S. Marine Corps that
were instilled in him during
his service. Richie enlisted in
the Marines in the spring 1967
and served for three years during
the Vietnam era, being
honorably discharged as a Sgt.
E-5 in 1970. He left for training
at Parris Island on the eve
of his 19th birthday on April
4, 1967, and from March 1968
to April 1969 was stationed in
Okinawa, Japan. There, he was
in the 3rd Force Service Regiment
Camp at Camp Courtney,
and part of his responsibilities
included processing
the belongings of the fallen
Marines of Vietnam to be
sent back to their families in
the United States.
Upon completion of his military
service, Richie returned
to Revere, where he continued
the path of public service.
For over 30 years, he was a patrolman
on the Revere Police
Department, known around
the city as being the motorcycle
traffi c offi cer. During his
tenure as a police offi cer, he
dedicated himself to protecting
and serving the community
he has called home for
his entire life. Richie is a patriotic
American and is known
around the city and area for
making people smile with festive
seasonal lawn displays on
his home.
The ceremony featured remarks
from Governor Maura
Healey, Lieutenant Governor
Kim Driscoll, Veterans Services
Secretary Jon Santiago and
Senate President Karen Spilka
and a keynote address by
General Joseph F. Dunford, Jr.
(Ret.), former Chairman of the
Joint Chiefs of Staff and 36th
Commandant of the U.S. Marine
Corps.
â€œThis event is about gratitude,â€
said Governor Healey.
â€œWeâ€™re here to honor the everyday
heroes â€” veterans,
active-duty service members
and military families â€” whose
courage, strength and commitment
continue to shape
our state for the better. Military
Appreciation Day is now
a Massachusetts tradition and
one weâ€™ll proudly carry forward
each year.â€
â€œMassachusetts is home to
one of the most vibrant, committed
military communities
in the country,â€ said Lieutenant
Governor Driscoll. â€œThis
day is about uplifting the stories
and contributions of those
who have sacrifi ced so much
and showing that their service
will never go unrecognized.â€
â€œEvery day, I meet veterans
and military families who continue
to lead, serve, and inspire,â€
said Secretary Santiago.
â€œAs we approach Memorial
Day, and during a month dedicated
to honoring our military,
this event refl ects what makes
Massachusetts special: a deep
respect for service, and a commitment
to those who wear
the uniform â€” and those who
stand beside them.â€
â€œMy fatherâ€™s service in the
United States Army defined
his life and deeply shaped my
HONORED | SEE Page 4
Lawrence A. Simeone Jr.
Attorney-at-Law
~ Since 1989 ~
* Corporate Litigation
* Criminal/Civil
* MCAD
* Zoning/Land Court
* Wetlands Litigation
* Workmenâ€™s Compensation
* Landlord/Tenant Litigation
* Real Estate Law
* Construction Litigation
* Tax Lien
* Personal Injury
* Bankruptcy
* Wrongful Death
* Zoning/Permitting Litigation
300 Broadway, Suite 1, Revere * 781-286-1560
lsimeonejr@simeonelaw.net
×‰	Ú 7cassandra://nhwLSHpcNckJ8HKPslSTndR0TIRAwjtzqCajQD91o4cÍ/âÍ`ÌÔÍ ×h8žÅ;3ý þ×h8žÅ;3ý ýÍ
ªÍr×‘C’×˜š   ÍUÍru×‰œ“×‰	Ú 7cassandra://fl-ZvnIW93T3Z7IMoDo9Lkh7pCgSWieiqz7S1N_ypB8Î ›ýÍ`Í'Íp×‰	Ú 7cassandra://2l6q1bR9UEhTQn23VEDitRaCEyNWvs7FIR3ZVHPFqy0Í½0Í`ÍÍà×‰	Ú 7cassandra://x-8qLkJtBpfH9gXrNy4hlsCYEa2iB-_i-DVVM2bJpwAÍ:›Í`ÌÔÍ ×h8ž’Å;3ý&×˜š ÍU ÍUÍru×‰œ“×‰	Ú 7cassandra://BN0xXKBsLHSFG5kWeqspAqS1htsNPhrocYkLV69ODzoÎ .Í`Í'Íp×‰	Ú 7cassandra://Ocd0pI3oruj5ohf7x8hVASSQ18nwjux-xoEd-F2R_PIÍ¶Í`ÍÍà×‰	Ú 7cassandra://_hC2nzlv1PC28b_Rgw_FOUqZsWtbfaLICRiLRWNi_C8Í7ìÍ`ÌÔÍ ×h8ž’Å;3ý'“× ×h8ž’Å;3ý. ÍÓÍÍZ9×H»http://WWW.SABATINO-INS.COM××Ðˆ× ×h8ž’Å;3ý- Í€Í%I9×H±http://revere.org××Ðˆ× ×h8ž’Å;3ý, Í’ÍKÌ×9×HÚ !http://ce.com/pages/responsepage.××Ðˆ×‰EÚPage 4
THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, MAY 30, 2025
HONORED | FROM Page 3
own â€” and I know the same
holds true for thousands of
service members and their
families across Massachusetts,â€
said Senate President Spilka.
â€œIt is a privilege to honor those
residents who have dedicated
themselves to serving our
country, and I am profoundly
grateful for their unwavering
commitment and sacrifi ce.â€
The keynote address delivered
by General Dunford, a
Boston native and one of the
most distinguished military
leaders in recent history. General
Dunford spoke about the
legacy of service, leadership
and community and the importance
of honoring those
who serve across generations.
â€œItâ€™s an honor to return
home to Massachusetts and
stand alongside a commu8
Norwood St.
Everett
(617) 387-9810
Open Tues. - Sat.
at 4:00 PM
Closed Sun. & Mon.
Announcing our Classic Specials
Dine In Only:
* FREE Salad with purchase of
Entree, Tuesdays & Wednesdays
* Cheese Pizza - Only $10
Catch ALL The
Live Sports
Action On Our
Large Screen
TVâ€™s
Scan & Follow Us on Facebook!
nity so deeply committed to
those who serve. Military Appreciation
Day refl ects something
Iâ€™ve long believed: that
service is not just what we do
in uniform â€” itâ€™s a lifetime of
leadership, character and sacrifi
ce,â€ said General Dunford.
â€œIâ€™m proud to join the Commonwealth
in recognizing
these remarkable individuals
and the values they represent.â€
The program also featured a
powerful performance of the
National Anthem by Springfield
native and NBCâ€™s â€œThe
Voiceâ€ fi nalist Michelle BrooksThompson.
Following the ceremony,
honorees and guests
were invited to a lunch reception
generously donated
by the Military Friends Foundation,
a Massachusetts nonprofi
t dedicated to providing
support and emergency assistance
to military families and
families of the fallen.
www.810bargrille.com
Everett
Supplies
Aluminum
10 Everett Ave., Everett
617-389-3839
Celebrating 66 Years in Business!
î‚‡î€¹îŒî‘îœî î€¶îŒî‡îŒî‘îŠ
î‚‡î€©î•îˆîˆ î€¨î–î—îŒîî„î—îˆî–
î‚‡î€¦î„î•î“îˆî‘î—î•îœ î€ºî’î•îŽ î‚‡î€©î˜îîîœ î€¯îŒî†îˆî‘î–îˆî‡
î‚‡î€§îˆî†îŽî–
î‚‡î€µî’î’f î‘îŠ
î‚‡ î€©î˜îîîœ î€¬î‘î–î˜î•îˆî‡
î‚‡ î€µîˆî“îî„î†îˆîîˆî‘î— î€ºîŒî‘î‡î’îšî–
www.everettaluminum.com
î‘îŠ
î€±î’îšî‚·î– î—î‹îˆ î—îŒîîˆ
î—î’ î–î†î‹îˆî‡î˜îîˆ î—î‹î’î–îˆ
î‹î’îîˆ îŒîî“î•î’î™îˆîîˆî‘î—
î“î•î’îîˆî†î—î– îœî’î˜î‚·î™îˆ î…îˆîˆî‘
î‡î•îˆî„îîŒî‘îŠ î„î…î’î˜î—
î„îî îšîŒî‘î—îˆî•î€„
Shown during the Inaugural Military Appreciation Day event at the State House last week, from left
to right, are City Council President Marc Silvestri, Richard Serino Jr., Trudy Serino, Richard Serino
III, Gina Serino, State Representative Jessica Giannino and honoree Richard Serino, Sr. (in the front).
(Courtesy of State Rep. Gianninoâ€™s Offi ce)
Spring
is Here!
×‰	Ú 7cassandra://x-8qLkJtBpfH9gXrNy4hlsCYEa2iB-_i-DVVM2bJpwAÍ:›Í`ÌÔÍ ×h8žÅ;3ý ÿ×‰EÚ%THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, MAY 30, 2025
Page 5
Popular Lifesavers League Course Providing Accessible
Emergency Preparedness Education to Revere Residents
Second Free Class to take Place on Thursday, June 26 at 6:00pm at Revere High School
R
EVERE, MA â€” â€˜Lifesavers
League,â€™ a program run by
the Revere Department of Public
Health Emergency Preparedness
Unit, is providing Revere
residents with free, accessible,
multilingual emergency preparedness
courses. Following
the success of their fi rst course,
which took place in April 2025,
the second â€˜Lifesavers Leagueâ€™
class, which will focus on handsonly
CPR, will take place on
Thursday, June 26 from 6:00pm7:30pm
at Revere High School.
This course will be taught by
members of the American Red
Cross and Revere Fire Prevention
in both English and Spanish.
In addition, free childcare
will be available to participants.
Mayor Patrick M. Keefe Jr. added,
â€œThe â€˜Lifesavers Leagueâ€™ empowers
residents with the ability
to react and assist others in
a crisis situation: It moves them
from bystanders to action-makers.
Though I hope residents
donâ€™t often have to use the skills
theyâ€™ve learned in these courses,
being well-equipped with
basic trainings, especially CPR,
makes for safer households,
business establishments, neighborhoods,
and community.â€
Community members can
register for the next class at the
following link: https://forms.offi
ce.com/pages/responsepage.
aspx?id=s44Jlpz6W0KbTRZnm0R7HbC6CF-hN_tPhCXroxZ2
HYRUNVExTzNVNTE4SVlPWEZN
NVRNQUJNMEoyTy4u&route=s
horturl.
Residents can also email
Adrienne Maguire at amaguire@
revere.org for a link to register.
Class schedules can be viewed
on the Public Health website, the
City of Revere Events calendar, or
by calling the Public Health Department
at 781-485-8486.
As the â€˜Lifesavers Leagueâ€™ program
continues to grow, community-based
classes will include:
â€¢
Hands-only CPR
â€¢ BeReady â€” from the Red
Cross
â€¢ Fire safety and prevention
â€¢ Importance of rental insurance
â€¢
Family preparedness in the
face of a climate emergency
Gerry
Dâ€™Ambrosio
Attorney-at-Law
Is Your Estate in Order?
Do you have an update Will, Health
Care Proxy or Power of Attorney?
If Not, Please Call for a Free Consultation.
14 Proctor Avenue, Revere
(781) 284-5657
SABATINO/MASTROCOLA
INSURANCE AGENCY
519 BROADWAY
EVERETT, MA 02149
Auto * Home * Boat *
Renter * Condo * Life
* Multi-Policy Discounts * Commercial 10% Discounts
* Registry Service Also Available
Sabatino Insurance is proud to welcome
the loyal customers of
ALWAYS READY TO SERVE YOU: Our Staff are, Emma Davidson, Jeimy Sanchez,
Josephine Leone, Marie Dâ€™Amore, Rocco Longo, Zâ€™andre Lopez, Anthony DiPierro,
Darius Goudreau, Laurette Murphy, Danielle Goudreau and Tina Davidson.
PHONE: (617) 387-7466
FAX: (617) 381-9186
Visit us online at: WWW.SABATINO-INS.COM
×‰	Ú 7cassandra://_hC2nzlv1PC28b_Rgw_FOUqZsWtbfaLICRiLRWNi_C8Í7ìÍ`ÌÔÍ ×h8žÅ;3ý ×h8žÅ;3ý ÿÍ
ªÍr×‘C’×˜š   ÍUÍru×‰œ“×‰	Ú 7cassandra://Yw35h0pHLxUOMnQfnutvD0NgFiBs4_VMaZwnZJM6oZQÎ ÇwÍ`Í'Íp×‰	Ú 7cassandra://0ndk4aMfkZ3maMmOEyr4w9ZOo1qk9sE9G6_0AlKDWlUÍ§€Í`ÍÍà×‰	Ú 7cassandra://2j_p8Ir151Ytl6ddeUyjJcjSMP7pBV-E_ObL67vv9C4Í10Í`ÌÔÍ ×h8ž’Å;3ý/×˜š ÍU ÍUÍru×‰œ“×‰	Ú 7cassandra://4SrmlnlD0PPEkuFzbxWCYJwab_7PG-JpQYckfPme1x0Î o(Í`Í'Íp×‰	Ú 7cassandra://2gwg1-TnerGjt6R_G0cSJW8OQYPFnOR1rMZmFFQb2LEÍ“‹Í`ÍÍà×‰	Ú 7cassandra://4MfKtH4pT61jJEdM7LYTuM3F_xHzYqLDz0HSdhExgmAÍ+QÍ`ÌÔÍ ×h8ž“Å;3ý0‘× ×h8ž“Å;3ý2 Ì²ÍÍ!9×H»http://TONYSAUTOBODYLLC.COM××Ðˆ×‰EÚPage 6
THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, MAY 30, 2025
Andy Freed named
Chair of MelroseWakefield
Hospitalâ€™s Board of Trustees
î€˜î€“
M
elrose resident Andy
Freed, President & CEO of
Virtual, Inc., has been named
Chair of the Board of Trustees
of MelroseWakefi eld Hospital,
which is a leading proIf
We Happen To
Meet By Accident ...
Youâ€™ll Be Glad You Found Us!
î€·î‹îˆî•îˆ îŒî– î„ î‡îŒî…²îˆî•îˆî‘î†îˆ î…îˆî—îšîˆîˆî‘ î—î‹îˆ î•îˆî–î— î„î‘î‡ î—î‹îˆ BEST!
Celebrating 46 Years In Business!
TONYâ€™S
AUTO BODY
Call or Visit
781-321-0032
34 Sharon Street
Malden, MA 02148
TONYSAUTOBODYLLC.COM
COME VISIT OUR
STATE OF THE ART BODY SHOP
â€¢ Computerized Paint Matching
(State of the Art Spray Booth)
â€¢ Computerized Frame Machines
î‚‡ î€³î€‘î€³î€‘î€ªî€‘ î€µîˆîƒ€î‘îŒî–î‹îŒî‘îŠ î€¶îœî–î—îˆî
â€¢ R134 + 1234yf A/C Machines
Fully Insured -RS2415
Insurance Company Approval
ALL OUR WORK IS GUARANTEED!
TONY
BARTOLO
Owner
46 Years
Let Us Handle Your
Next Insurance Claim.
Go With the BEST
It Doesnâ€™t Get BETTER!
RENTAL
CARS
Available
vider of healthcare services
to those living and working
in the communities just
north of Boston. Freed has
also been appointed a Trustee
of the Board of Tufts Medicine,
an innovative health system
that brings together the
best of academic and community
medicine. In addition
to MelroseWakefi eld Hospital
and Lawrence Memorial Hospital
of Medford, Tufts Medicine
comprises Tufts Medical
Center, the principal teaching
hospital of Tufts University
School of Medicine, Lowell
General Hospital, Tufts
Medicine Care at Home, and
a population health network
of 2,300 physicians in Massachusetts
and southern New
Hampshire.
Freed was initially appointed
to the MelroseWakefi eld
Hospital Board in 2019, after
serving as a Corporator since
2009. During Freedâ€™s tenure
on the Board, MelroseWakefield
Hospital has earned
national recognition for its
heart, maternity, kidney, pulmonary
and stroke care, and
has been designated a Level
III Trauma Center by the Massachusetts
Department of
Public Health.
â€œIâ€™m proud to help MelroseWakefi
eld Hospital fulfi ll its
mission of providing extraordinary
care to our community,â€
said Freed. â€œIt is a privilege
to join my fellow Board members
in overseeing the work of
the committed team of physicians,
nurses and other staff
members who deliver high
quality, compassionate care
to hundreds of people who
count on them every day.â€
Freed, a dynamic business
executive with more than 30
years of experience delivering
growth, profit and operational
success for global
companies, has worked
with associations and nonprofi
t and political organizations
and managed a wide
range of entities, from small
startups to multimillion dollar
organizations with members
from around the world.
His expertise includes cyber
security, healthcare, technology,
government and fi nancial
services.
Freed previously served as
Vice President and CIO of the
Massachusetts Hospital Association.
He has served as the
Chairman of the Harvard Varsity
Club and is currently on
the Harvard Club of Boston
Board of Governors, where he
chairs the Membership Marketing
Committee. In 2024 he
was honored with the prestigious
Harvard Club of Boston
Presidentâ€™s Special Award,
which recognizes alumni who
exemplify extraordinary commitment,
loyalty and engagement
with Harvard athletics
and the broader Harvard
community.
Based in Wakefi eld, Mass.,
with offi ces in Ottawa, Canada
and Nashville, Tenn., Virtual,
Inc. has won multiple â€œtop
places to workâ€ awards and
has been named three times
to Inc. Magazineâ€™s list of 5,000
fastest growing private companies.
Freed
is a graduate of Harvard
University and has a
masterâ€™s degree in public policy
from Harvardâ€™s Kennedy
School of Government.
Tufts Medicineâ€™s MelroseWakefi
eld Hospital and Lawrence
Memorial Hospital provide
high-quality, community-based
care. Its two hospitals,
Breast Health Center,
Cardiovascular Center and
over 20 locations off er a wide
range of services and over 50
specialties to Melrose and the
surrounding communities
just north of Boston.
×‰	Ú 7cassandra://2j_p8Ir151Ytl6ddeUyjJcjSMP7pBV-E_ObL67vv9C4Í10Í`ÌÔÍ ×h8žÅ;3ý×‰EÚTHE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, MAY 30, 2025
Page 7
Revereâ€™s Prominent and Preeminent, World-Class,
Medical Doctors and Medical Scientists
By John J. Henry
N
ow that high school and
college graduation season
is upon us, looking back over
the years at what a number of
former students and graduates
of Revereâ€™s schools have
achieved in higher education
and in their chosen professions
and career, as they moved on
from Revere, has proved to be
very interesting. Beginning in
the 1950s and extending into
the 1980s, five world-class
doctors were raised in Revere
and received their early education
in Revere schools.
The question raised: Is their
stature as world-class medical
doctors and scientists an
expression of nature or nurture?
The nature versus nurture
debate is about which
part of a personâ€™s intellect is
more important, their inherited
qualities, which include
genes, or their personal family
and environmental life experiences
and infl uences relative
to the way that they were
raised. While the philosophical
debate has gone on for thousands
of years, whatever the
case may be, fi ve prominent
and preeminent, world-class
doctors and medical scientists
had their beginnings and
received their early education
in Revere. Here are their stories
and medical accomplishments
and achievements:
Dr. Charles A. Dinarello
ceiving his Doctor of Medicine
degree from Yale in 1969. Following
graduation from Yale,
he did his clinical training at
Massachusetts General Hospital,
and until 1996 he was
a staff physician at New England
Medical Center, as well as
a professor of Medicine at Tufts
University. Dr. Dinarello also
served as a senior investigator
at the National Institute of
Health in Bethesda, Maryland.
Dr. Dinarello has also served
on the editorial boards of several
scientifi c journals and has
published over 1,000 original
research articles and 250 reviews
and book chapters on
cytokines, particularly on Interleukin-1
and related cytokines.
Cytokines are small proteins
that serve as chemical messengers
in the immune system of
the body to help cells communicate
with each other, the socalled
â€œsoftwareâ€ that runs the
immune system to grow, behave
and interact in specific
ways, to fi ght allergens, pathogens
and harmful substances
â€” fi ghting off diseases and infection
â€” and may be the key
to understanding and treating
autoimmune disorders. Dr. Dinarelloâ€™s
pioneering research
work focuses on the development
of cytokines targeting biological
therapies for the treatment
of infl ammatory diseases
in humans, such as rheumatoid
arthritis, gout, Parkinsonâ€™s disease
and the treatment of tumor
progression in cancer. Dr.
Dinarello is considered one
of the founding fathers of cytokines,
having purified and
been the fi rst to identify Interleukin-1,
a protein that helps
the bodyâ€™s immune system
fi ght infections.
Dr. Dinarello has trained over
50 medical investigators, many
of whom are recognized as experts
in their fi elds of medicine.
The Institute for Science Information
has listed Dr. Dinarello
as the worldâ€™s fourth most cited
scientist during the 20 years
from 1983-2002.
In 1998, Dr. Dinarello was
D
r. Charles A. Dinarello graduated
from Revere High
School in 1961; he went on
to study at Boston University,
graduating in 1965 (magna
cum laude). After graduation
he entered Yale University, reelected
to the United States
National Academy of Sciences,
and in 2011 he became a
foreign member of the Royal
Netherlands Academy of Arts
and Sciences. He is a member
of the Board of Governors of
the Weizmann Institute (Israel)
and Ben-Gurion University
(Israel). He is also the former
Vice President of the American
Society of Clinical Investigation,
and he also served as
President of the International
Cytokine Society.
He has received honorary
degrees from the University
of Marseille (France), the Weizmann
Institute of Science (Israel),
the University of Frankfurt
(Germany), Roosevelt University
(USA), Albany Medical College
(USA), Radbound University
(Netherlands) and Trinity
College (Ireland). For his contributions
to the fi eld of Cytokines
and medicine, Dr. Dinarello
received the Squibb
Award (USA), the Ernest Jung
Prize in Medicine (Germany),
the Chirone Prize (Italian National
Academy of Medicine),
Carol Nachman Prize (Germany),
Sheikh Hamdan bin Rashid
al Madktoum Award (United
REVEREâ€™S | SEE Page 8
×‰	Ú 7cassandra://4MfKtH4pT61jJEdM7LYTuM3F_xHzYqLDz0HSdhExgmAÍ+QÍ`ÌÔÍ ×h8žÅ;3ý×h8žÅ;3ýÍ
ªÍr×‘C’×˜š   ÍUÍru×‰œ“×‰	Ú 7cassandra://Oo2A__cF4hNA2yoLolwF8OO0yT-dSMlbyyGuK7m1qJoÎ ½žÍ`Í'Íp×‰	Ú 7cassandra://Tsb8Rzob2VbSjQByhW5ygZQFE9H8FexzW922DjE_zc4Í·VÍ`ÍÍà×‰	Ú 7cassandra://rjZxssvrzHXI0VBoyJVkwCpKgomodNTCkX8-4OrQA6oÍ4¸Í`ÌÔÍ ×h8ž“Å;3ý3×˜š ÍU ÍUÍru×‰œ“×‰	Ú 7cassandra://fIHEmWh9kPy-jdBaGdAuBKunU5alj8ukrCQXZbDa5xUÎ FÍ`Í'Íp×‰	Ú 7cassandra://OPS0qjK6r1aHP1pj4JZA2eZFtGMLruJWPXNejF7Lv9YÍ¶ÒÍ`ÍÍà×‰	Ú 7cassandra://yiltaKLwHJa6YqNJptw6M5cVoKyWuPdnRi4cZaxZbgcÍ3ûÍ`ÌÔÍ ×h8ž“Å;3ý4‘× ×h8ž“Å;3ý6 Ì‘Í†ÌÙ9×HÚ )http://www.veterancardonations.org/dnt122××Ðˆ×‰EÚ<Page 8
Donate Your Vehicle
THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, MAY 30, 2025
REVEREâ€™S | FROM Page 7
Call (866) 618-0011 to donate
your car, truck, boat, RV,
and more today!
î‘ Support Veteran Nonprofi ts.
î‘ Free Pickup & Towing.
î‘ Top Tax Deduction.
Donate Your Vehicle Today
866-618-0011
www.veterancardonations.org/dnt122
While we appreciate every donation, in some cases, we fi nd that we are unable to accept certain vehicles, watercraft, and/or
recreational vehicles due to the prohibitive costs of acquisition. If you have any questions, please give us a call at (866) 618-0011.
Arab Emirates), Beering Prize
(USA), Albany Prize in Medical
Research (USA), Crafoord Prize
of the Royal Swedish Academy
of Sciences (Sweden) â€” presented
to Dr. Dinarello by the
King of Sweden â€” the Paul Ehrlich
and Ludwig Darnstaedter
Prize (Germany), the Stanton
Prize, also known as the Colorado
Nobel Prize (USA), the
Novartis Prize in Clinical Immunology
(Switzerland), the
Bonazinga Award (USA) and, in
2020, the Tang Prize (Taiwan).
SAVE $350when you transform
your patio into an outdoor oasis.
D
Instant shadeâ€”at the touch of a button.
Enjoy more quality time with family and friends.
Up to 10-Year Limited Warranty.
SAVE$350 TODAY!
Call 1-833-626-0576 now to
Americaâ€™s #1 Awning!
î€­î€‰
î‚‡ î€µîˆîîŒî„î…îîˆ î€°î’îšîŒî‘îŠ î€¶îˆî•î™îŒî†îˆ
î‚‡ î€¶î“î•îŒî‘îŠ î€‰ î€©î„îî î€¦îîˆî„î‘î˜î“î–
î‚‡ î€°î˜îî†î‹ î€‰ î€¨î‡îŠîŒî‘îŠ
î‚‡ î€¶î’î‡ î’î• î€¶îˆîˆî‡ î€¯î„îšî‘î–
î‚‡ î€¶î‹î•î˜î… î€³îî„î‘î—îŒî‘îŠ î€‰ î€·î•îŒîîîŒî‘îŠ
î‚‡ î€ºî„î—îˆî• î€‰ î€¶îˆîšîˆî• î€µîˆî“î„îŒî•î–
î€­î’îˆ î€³îŒîˆî•î’î—î—îŒî€ î€­î•î€‘
î€¶
î€¯î€¤î€±î€§î€¶î€¦î€¤î€³î€¨ î€‰ î€°î€¤î€¶î€²î€±î€µî€¼ î€¦î€²î€‘
î€°î„î–î’î‘î•îœ î€ î€¤î–î“î‹î„îî—
î‚‡ î€¥î•îŒî†îŽ î’î• î€¥îî’î†îŽ î€¶î—îˆî“î–
î‚‡ î€¥î•îŒî†îŽ î’î• î€¥îî’î†îŽ î€ºî„îîî–
î‚‡ î€¦î’î‘î†î•îˆî—îˆ î’î• î€¥î•îŒî†îŽ î€³î„î™îˆî•
î€³î„î—îŒî’î– î€‰ î€ºî„îîŽîšî„îœî–
î‚‡ î€¥î•îŒî†îŽ î€µîˆî€î€³î’îŒî‘î—îŒî‘îŠ
î‚‡ î€¤î–î“î‹î„îî— î€³î„î™îŒî‘îŠ
îšîšîšî€‘î€­î„î‘î‡î€¶îî„î‘î‡î–î†î„î“îˆî€îî„î–î’î‘î•îœî€‘î†î’î
î‚‡ î€¶îˆî‘îŒî’î• î€§îŒî–î†î’î˜î‘î— î‚‡ î€©î•îˆîˆ î€¨î–î—îŒîî„î—îˆî– î‚‡ î€¯îŒî†îˆî‘î–îˆî‡ î€‰ î€¬î‘î–î˜î•îˆî‡
î€™î€”î€šî€î€–î€›î€œî€î€”î€—î€œî€“
î€§îˆî–îŒîŠî‘îŒî‘îŠ î„î‘î‡ î€¦î’î‘î–î—î•î˜î†î—îŒî‘îŠ î€¬î‡îˆî„î– î—î‹î„î— î„î•îˆ î‚´î€ªî•î’î˜î‘î‡î– î‰î’î• î€¶î˜î†î†îˆî–î–î‚µ
î€¯î„î‘î‡î–î†î„î“îŒî‘îŠ
r. Dennis A. Ausiello graduated
from Revere High
School in 1963, and he went
on to study at Harvard College,
graduating (cum laude) in 1967
with a bachelorâ€™s degree in Biochemical
Science. After graduating
from Harvard he entered
the University of Pennsylvania,
Perelman School of Medicine,
where he received his Doctorate
of Medicine in 1971. After
graduation he did his clinical
training at Massachusetts General
Hospital (MGH). Dr. Ausiello
has said that he has been at
MGH, off and on, since he was
17 years old. Dr. Ausiello advanced
as a physician at MGH
to become Chief of Medicine
in 1996, serving in that position
for 17 years â€” developing
the MGH medical department
into one of the strongest
and most renowned departments
of medicine in the country.
He currently serves as Chief
of Medicine, Emeritus, at MGH.
Dr. Ausiello has also served as
the Chief of the Massachusetts
General Hospital Renal Unit
and oversaw its development
into one of the most soughtafter
research and training programs
in the world in kidney
disease. He has been closely
involved with Mass General
Brigham, linking the resources
of Massachusetts General Hospital,
Brigham and Womenâ€™s
Hospital and Dana-Farber Cancer
Institute to provide comprehensive
health care. Dr. Ausiello
has also served as director
of the MD/PhD Program at
Harvard Medical School. Harvard
Medical School where he
Dr. Dinarello donates the
monies from his prizes to the
Interleukin Foundation, which
he established in 2009 to support
research on Cytokines.
Currently, Dr. Dinarello is
the Distinguished Professor
of Medicine-Infectious Diseases
at the University of Colorado
School of Medicine in Aurora,
Colorado.
Dr. Dennis A. Ausiello
oversees the training of graduate
and undergraduate students,
post-doctorate fellows
and house offi cers at Harvard
Medical School. He has also
served as Chair of the Executive
Committee on Research
of Massachusetts General. Hospital,
where he oversaw a research
budget of $350 million
annually. He proudly describes
MGH as one of the greatest research
hospitals in the world.
Dr. Ausiello is a nationally
recognized leader in academic
medicine, having been elected
to the Institute of Medicine
of the National Academy of Sciences
in 1999 and the American
Academy of Arts and Sciences
in 2003. He served as
President of the Association of
American Physicians in 2006.
He is the recipient of the Merit
Award from the National Institute
of Health. He also served
as Chief Science Offi cer of the
General Hospital Corporation
(a subsidy of Mass General
Brigham, Inc.).
Dr. Ausiello has written for
many publications, including
The New York Times and The
Wall Street Journal, on various
health subjects, including human
genetics, clinical trials and
the relationship between the
academy and industry. He has
published widely on medicine
in the 21st
century, and he is
an internationally recognized
scientist. Dr. Ausiello has published
more than 150 papers
and book chapters and coedits
â€œCecil Textbook of Medicine,â€
now in its 22nd
edition. Dr.
Ausiello has served as a council
member of the National Institute
of Diabetes, the Digestive
and Kidney Disease Advisory
Council and the National
Advisory Council on Aging. He
served on the Board of Directors
of the Broad Institute, an
independent partnership of
Harvard and MIT faculty working
in human genetics, as well
as on the Board of Directors
of the nonprofi t organization
Research America, the leading
advocate group for investment
in biomedical research in
the United States. He previously
served on the Board of Directors
of Pfi zer Pharmaceuticals
and on the Board of Directors
of 11 other companies involved
in medical biotech and
biotech devices.
Dr. Ausiello is currently the
Director of the Center for Assessment
Technology and Continuous
Health (CATCH), which
×‰	Ú 7cassandra://rjZxssvrzHXI0VBoyJVkwCpKgomodNTCkX8-4OrQA6oÍ4¸Í`ÌÔÍ ×h8žÅ;3ý×‰EÚ-he founded as a joint eff ort between
MGH and MIT physicians,
scientists and engineers
to provide real-time measurement
of the human observable
physical characteristics
and properties in wellness and
disease. CATCH researchers are
working to improve early diagnostics
for disease, to develop
better targeted therapies and
to empower patients to use
data to guide their treatment
decisions and lifestyle choices.
CATCH represents a critical
step toward a transition in
health care that will yield benefi
ts in clinical care quality, discovery
and innovation, ultimately
providing continuous
and a fuller understanding of
human health.
Dr. Ausiello also serves as
the Jackson Distinguished Professor
of Medicine at Harvard
Medical School. Dr. Ausiello
has also made signifi cant contributions
as a renal cell biologist,
leading to a better understanding
of diseases, such as
cystic fi brosis. He is an internationally
recognized research
scientist for his substantial contributions
in cell biology.
Dr. Steve Davis
ment. Dr. Davis also received
a masterâ€™s degree in Strategic
Leadership from Michigan
State University. Dr. Davis was
appointed as Chief Operating
Offi cer of Hillcrest Hospital in
Ohio, a 500-bed facility with
2,500 employees (part of the
Cleveland Clinic system), serving
from 1996-2015.
Dr. Davis was subsequently
THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, MAY 30, 2025
Dr. Michael Viola
Page 9
appointed as Chief Operating
Offi cer of Cincinnati Childrenâ€™s
Hospital in 2015 and played a
key leadership position in the
planning and construction of
the $600 million Critical Care
Building. In 2021 Cincinnati
Childrenâ€™s Hospital named
Dr. Davis as their Chief Executive
Offi cer.
Cincinnati Childrenâ€™s Hospital
is the Cincinnati regionâ€™s
largest hospital, a $2.6 billion
nonprofi t hospital, with a
workforce of more than 16,500
employees. Dr. Davis has stated
that his goal is to change
and improve healthcare for the
children of Cincinnati and beyond
and that â€œhe envisioned
a world where children can
reach their fullest potential,
where racial and economic
disparities would be eliminated
and where the zip code you
were born into doesnâ€™t shorten
your life expectancy or your
quality of life.â€ Dr. Davis has
served as President and Chief
Executive Offi cer of Cincinnati
Childrenâ€™s Hospital and Medical
Center since 2021.
In 2022, Dr. Davis became
D
r. Steve Davis graduated
from Revere High School in
1980, and he went on to study
at Johns Hopkins University,
receiving his bachelorâ€™s degree
in 1984. After graduation he
entered the University of Vermont,
receiving his Doctor of
Medicine degree in 1989. Following
graduation, he did his
clinical training at Pittsburgh
Childrenâ€™s Hospital from 19891992,
and he served as Chief
Resident from 1992-1993. Dr.
Davis completed a fellowship
in Pediatric Critical Care Medicine
at Johns Hopkins in 1996,
and he also received a masterâ€™s
degree in Medical Management
from Heinz College
at Carnegie Mellon University,
where he served on the faculty,
teaching leadership developthe
Vice Chair of an international
network of more than
140 pediatric hospitals, â€œThe
Childrenâ€™s Hospital Solutions
for Patient Safety,â€ which has
saved more than 29,075 children
from serious harm and
has led to an estimated saving
of $635.9 million.
In 2023-2024 and again in
2024-2025 U.S. News and World
Report named Cincinnati Childrenâ€™s
Hospital as the number
one childrenâ€™s hospital in the
United States, replacing Boston
Childrenâ€™s Hospital. The
best childrenâ€™s hospitals list
also includes national ranking
across 10 pediatric specialties.
Cincinnati Childrenâ€™s Hospital
was named in the top 10
of each area and number one
in cancer care, diabetes and
endocrinology, neonatology
and urology. Dr. Davis has stated,
â€œWe are incredibility proud
and honored to be recognized
as the best pediatric hospital in
the nation.â€
D
r. Michael Viola graduated
from Immaculate Conception
High School in Revere
in 1955 and went on to study
at Princeton University, graduating
in 1959. After graduation
he entered McGill University
in Canada, graduating in
1964 and receiving his Doctor
of Medicine degree. Following
graduation from McGill, he did
his clinical training at Yale medical
center in internal medical
from 1964-1966. Dr. Viola
also did a residency in internal
medicine at New York Presbyterian
Hospital from 19681969.
He has served on the
staff of Memorial Sloane Kettering
Cancer Center in New
York, and the National Cancer
Institute of the National Institute
of Health in Washington,
D.C. Dr. Viola has also held Professorships
in medicine at a
number of medical schools, including
at the State University
of New York, where he served
as Head of Medical Oncology
and Director of the Cancer
Center. He left academic medicine
to become Director of Life
and Medical Sciences in the US
Department of Energy.
Dr. Viola credits his local doctor
in Revere, who encouraged
his interest in medicine,
while at the same time he became
aware of the medical activist
work of Dr. Albert Schweitzer,
the world-renowned
Nobel Prize winner, for his reverence
for life â€” helping the
poor and downtrodden people
in African villages. Dr. Viola
decided to chart his own
medical course beyond the
neighborhood family medical
practice to become more of a
medical activist, in reverence
for lifestyle of Dr. Schweitzer.
Dr. Violaâ€™s medical career has
been dedicated to the principle
â€” espoused by Dr. Schweitzer
â€” that â€œthe purpose
of human life is to serve, and
to show compassion and the
will to help others.â€
While serving as Director of
the Cancer Center in New York,
the Gulf War in Iraq began. As
he watched the bombing of
REVEREâ€™S | SEE Page 15
Celebrating 52 Years!
Dan
Chris
Have A Cigar on Dan!
Come on
Friday,
May 30th
and receive
a Free Cigar
to celebrate
Danâ€™s life!*
R.Y.O.
TOBACCO
&
TUBES
ON SALE!
SPECIAL
SALE!
TRAVEL
HUMIDORS
&
ALL
BONGS!
Daniel Moore - 3/31/32 - 4/6/25
A.B.C. CIGAR
170 REVERE ST., REVERE
(781) 289-4959
--------HUMIDORS
ON
SALE!
STARTING
AT $99.
COMPLETE!
--------Drop
by and
share your
memories of
ABC Cigarâ€™s
beloved
founder!
* One Cigar per customer -
offer good on 5/30/25 only
×‰	Ú 7cassandra://yiltaKLwHJa6YqNJptw6M5cVoKyWuPdnRi4cZaxZbgcÍ3ûÍ`ÌÔÍ ×h8žÅ;3ý×h8žÅ;3ýÍ
ªÍr×‘C’×˜š   ÍUÍru×‰œ“×‰	Ú 7cassandra://J5hzBp3P0Nmq4h3Jl6JiSkMTGJpz4Dk-WSnOydrXBVkÎ 8úÍ`Í'Íp×‰	Ú 7cassandra://Byrwpm5Az6ZnPjGj3cNc-3MK_h6w4NfxOtjTs2JNL3MÍ¨ÃÍ`ÍÍà×‰	Ú 7cassandra://g6xJgT0R7RWky4xHSwpgHeH9D98tCX8L7ET2YtuNdlsÍ6aÍ`ÌÔÍ ×h8ž“Å;3ý7×˜š ÍU ÍUÍru×‰œ“×‰	Ú 7cassandra://az7cOHA3nA3PqoATE0vMrDG93L9PekoaxrnCdRu6XNUÎ «Í`Í'Íp×‰	Ú 7cassandra://eknjdL4IXTMdAIiTvlIrI8bF6V2NwWkiZ4aSV0En_y8Í’Í`ÍÍà×‰	Ú 7cassandra://pjmYfrh-OTQBYj-wLgURRJA0SF1IaVvqcrtqnymVBOkÍ1iÍ`ÌÔÍ ×h8ž”Å;3ý8‘× ×h8ž”Å;3ý= ÍÙÍÔÌŽ9×H¶http://EverettBank.com××Ðˆ×‰EÚÂPage 10
THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, MAY 30, 2025
Walk-Bike-Roll maps out a new way for residents to get around
By Tara Vocino
he City of Revere, in partnership
with the Metropolitan Area
Planning Council (MAPC), hosted
a public event last Wednesday at
Revere High School in anticipation
of a new plan to improve walking,
biking and rolling conditions
throughout the city. Attendees
had the opportunity to view draft
street designs and provide feedback
on infrastructure improvements
that will make walking, biking
and rolling safer and more accessible
throughout Revere.
Shown from left to right: Green Streets Initiative Founder/Director
Janic Katz-Christy interviewed Revere High School students
Farah Meghraoua, Alisson Barrera, Meriam Benkirane and Sierra
Peti about transportation modes.
T
Chocolaff ee, Home of ManiNuts/
Las Parceritas co-owner Diana
Cardona with Josue Vides-Erazo
made a passionfruit smoothie
via bicycle.
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!
PUBLIC SKATING SCHEDULE
12-7 p.m.
Sunday
Monday
Tuesday
$10.00
Price includes Roller Skates
Rollerblades/inline skates $3.00 additional cost
Private Parties
7:30-11 p.m.
Wednesday
Thursday
Friday
Saturday
$11.00
Price includes Roller Skates
18+ Adults Only After 7 PM - ID Required
Private Parties
Private Parties
4-8 p.m. $10.00 8:30-11 p.m. $11.
18+ Adults Only After 7 PM - ID Required
12-9 p.m.
$10.00
Everyone must pay admission after 6 p.m.
Sorry No Checks - ATM on site
Roller skate rentals included in all prices
Inline Skate Rentals $3.00 additional
BIRTHDAY & PRIVATE PARTIES AVAILABLE
www.roller-world.com
Chief of Planning and Community
Development Tom Skwierawskiâ€™s
offi ce organized the
bike-a-thon at Revere High
School last Wednesday.
Joseph Gravellese put pushpins around the image of the Northgate
Plaza shopping area along Squire Road.
Howard Stein Hudson Senior Civil Engineer Matthew DiGiacomo with Howard Stein Hudson Civil Engineer
trainee Remy Fung gathered feedback on how to get to Revere Beach via bicycle, car or train.
×‰	Ú 7cassandra://g6xJgT0R7RWky4xHSwpgHeH9D98tCX8L7ET2YtuNdlsÍ6aÍ`ÌÔÍ ×h8žÅ;3ý×‰EÚâTHE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, MAY 30, 2025
Page 11
Guests Julie and Rafael Villada asked to add crosswalks to Patriot Parkway; at right is Nitsch Engineering
Senior Project Manager Bryan Zimolka, PE, who is an Envision Sustainability Professional.
Bike to the Sea Executive Director Jonah Chiarenza with Program
Director Agnes Recato rode their bicycles from the Northern
Strand Community Trail to Revere.
Shown from left to right: Healthy Living Program Coordinator Samanda
Lumaj, Community Liaison Coordinator Maddy Pineda Alvarez
and Community Health Liaison Nada Abou Hadiba.
Metropolitan Area Planning Council Senior Transportation Planner Marah Holland asked residents
for their feedback on street improvements. (Advocate photos by Tara Vocino)
All Deposits Are Insured In Full | Member FDIC Member DIF
Visit EverettBank.com and open your account in minutes.
*Annual Percentage Yield (APY) is accurate of the date posted and is subject to change
without notice. APY assumes the interest remains on deposit until maturity. A penalty
îƒ°îƒ¤îƒ¼ îƒ¥îƒ¨ îƒ¬îƒ°îƒ³îƒ²îƒ¶îƒ¨îƒ§ îƒ©îƒ²îƒµ îƒ¨îƒ¤îƒµîƒ¯îƒ¼ îƒºîƒ¬îƒ·îƒ«îƒ§îƒµîƒ¤îƒºîƒ¤îƒ¯î€„ îƒ˜î„Ÿîƒ¨îƒµ îƒ°îƒ¤îƒ¼ îƒ¥îƒ¨ îƒºîƒ¬îƒ·îƒ«îƒ§îƒµîƒ¤îƒºîƒ± îƒ¤îƒ· îƒ¤îƒ±îƒ¼ îƒ·îƒ¬îƒ°îƒ¨î€„ îƒŠ îƒ°îƒ¬îƒ±îƒ¬îƒ°îƒ¸îƒ°
îƒ²îƒ© î¸î€£î€žî€ž îƒ¬îƒ¶ îƒµîƒ¨îƒ´îƒ¸îƒ¬îƒµîƒ¨îƒ§ îƒ·îƒ² îƒ²îƒ³îƒ¨îƒ± îƒ¤ îƒŒîƒ¨îƒµîƒ·îƒ¬î„¢îƒ¦îƒ¤îƒ·îƒ¨ îƒ²îƒ© îƒîƒ¨îƒ³îƒ²îƒ¶îƒ¬îƒ· îƒ¤îƒ±îƒ§ îƒ¨îƒ¤îƒµîƒ± îƒ·îƒ«îƒ¨ îƒ¤îƒ§îƒ¹îƒ¨îƒµîƒ·îƒ¬îƒ¶îƒ¨îƒ§ îƒŠîƒ™îƒ¢î€„
Thereâ€™s Every Bank, Then Thereâ€™s
×‰	Ú 7cassandra://pjmYfrh-OTQBYj-wLgURRJA0SF1IaVvqcrtqnymVBOkÍ1iÍ`ÌÔÍ ×h8žÅ;3ý×h8žÅ;3ýÍ
ªÍr×‘C’×˜š   ÍUÍru×‰œ“×‰	Ú 7cassandra://ljakksRxuC80hGDDnYBTQQCp47gt6R_d5SRUbL4vjykÎ ˜íÍ`Í'Íp×‰	Ú 7cassandra://YaDW5m9wstE8aoQA0s1DXREi6IHUDl95w9ENM5cYKYAÍ¾ÔÍ`ÍÍà×‰	Ú 7cassandra://OU_G-5Q2EXqxEJRNifkEsym06OQnP_PmyOmYb873I4IÍ=ªÍ`ÌÔÍ ×h8ž”Å;3ý<×˜š ÍU ÍUÍru×‰œ“×‰	Ú 7cassandra://9lJeeChr8VOmYUa3vgBgskZmbE-NItp3qHtlIRP4jl4Î †–Í`Í'Íp×‰	Ú 7cassandra://NYcjGQ_77qA9FgSsmnhGHzZI4e5he0O4UKy9oqRZDGUÍ¦„Í`ÍÍà×‰	Ú 7cassandra://JGUSu3QbnOwiDseW3-5xxTT1oPEudkUJKi3dMOe1Zi8Í5ïÍ`ÌÔÍ ×h8ž”Å;3ý>×‰EÚðPage 12
THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, MAY 30, 2025
City of Revereâ€™s Annual Memorial Day Ceremony â€”
Reflecting on a Call to Freedom
O
n Monday morning Mayor
Patrick Keefe and the City
of Revere paid tribute to those
who made the ultimate sacrifi
ce for our countryâ€™s freedom.
McMackin Veterans Memorial
Park was fi lled with veterans,
families, friends and elected
offi cials giving thanks and
remembering comrades and
family members who died in
service of our country.
Mayor Patrick Keefe presents
his Memorial Day remarks.
Revereâ€™s Historian, Jeff Pearlman,
spoke on the Battle of
Chelsea Creek, which took place
on May 27, 1775 â€” the fi rst naval
battle in Americaâ€™s history.
Cadet Valerie Moscone performed the National Anthem.
US Army MAJ (retired) Deborah
Bowker, leader of the RHS
7 Battalion Champions, directed
2,000 RHS JROC Cadets in
her 13 years of service to Revere,
and has a distinguished
military service record.
State Representative Jessica Giannino
is shown addressing the
attendees.
Project 351 Ambassador from
the Susan B. Anthony School 8th
Grade, representing Governor
Maura Healey, Ranya Ghouta.
Placing the wreaths: Cadets Kamilla Souza and Katelyn Giovanniello.
The RHS Patriot Battalion Honor Guard, commanded by Diego Leal.
×‰	Ú 7cassandra://OU_G-5Q2EXqxEJRNifkEsym06OQnP_PmyOmYb873I4IÍ=ªÍ`ÌÔÍ ×h8žÅ;3ý×‰EÚTHE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, MAY 30, 2025
Page 13
Mayor Patrick and Jenn Keefe with Ward 2 Councillor Ira Novoselsky.
Mayor Patrick Keefe and RPD Offi cer and U.S. Army Veteran Joseph Singer place the wreath on the
World War II Memorial.
Taps performed by Dakota Hernandez
from the Unity Music
School of Revere.
Olivia Freni performed â€œGod
Bless America.â€
Councillor-at-Large Tony
Zambuto with RPD Lt. Robert
Impemba.
City Council President Marc Silvestri
and Master of Ceremonies
Joe Singer, both combat
and U.S. Army veterans.
At the City of Revereâ€™s Memorial
Day Ceremony, Chaplain Danny
Hernandez gave the Benediction
and Reverend Tim Bogertman
gave the Invocation.
MEMORIAL DAY CEREMONY | SEE Page 14
Posting of the Colors by the Revere Fire Department Honor Guard.
×‰	Ú 7cassandra://JGUSu3QbnOwiDseW3-5xxTT1oPEudkUJKi3dMOe1Zi8Í5ïÍ`ÌÔÍ ×h8žÅ;3ý×h8žÅ;3ýÍ
ªÍr×‘C’×˜š   ÍUÍru×‰œ“×‰	Ú 7cassandra://xMmVWpxnlWQ9NVWQk7bKvlTMgedD_7kWD8hwlDWF7WUÎ ïÏÍ`Í'Íp×‰	Ú 7cassandra://sVrZFhQmGiUyBjlpZJEWn84D-I-1G7TOCbxABJ93w6UÍ¯ûÍ`ÍÍà×‰	Ú 7cassandra://vKF1sSfjSaNcl6I907L4YTkUJfabCNfJGUgytXoxPtkÍ:uÍ`ÌÔÍ ×h8ž”Å;3ý@×˜š ÍU ÍUÍru×‰œ“×‰	Ú 7cassandra://ZxMe2GLeYIXbZXq1yfmlTelyrcoj2xtr-x6ujnWLZ5gÎ HÍ` Í'Íp×‰	Ú 7cassandra://hGov1in6RZnAA4MasmYcZJk_ronyh0OVFUwxVAYu_2UÍº¯Í`ÍÍà×‰	Ú 7cassandra://uKMbg6h2jpY_ppHXxk3r_ekA7v0FfptbqPi-TWv90-kÍ.ýÍ`ÌÔÍ ×h8ž”Å;3ýA×‰EÚPage 14
THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, MAY 30, 2025
Keepers of the fl ag: Cadet Christopher Guerrero and the RHS Patriot Battalion.
MEMORIAL DAY
CEREMONY |
FROM Page 13
State Representative Jessica
Giannino with Revereâ€™s
First Lady, Jennifer Keefe,
and Ward 5 Councillor
Angela Guarino-Sawaya.
The Keynote Speaker, Major Deborah Bowker (right), with Revere School Committee members Vice
Chair Jacquline Monterroso, Fred Sannella, Anthony Cogliandro, Stacey Rizzo and John Kingston.
Councillor-at-Large Michelle Kelley with members of the RPD Honor
Guard, Andrew Lauria, Sgt. Joe Internicola and Robert Marks.
Pictured from left to right: Mayor Patrick and Jenn Keefe (center) welcomed state and city elected offi cials: School Committee member Anthony Caggiano, Councillors
Paul Argenzio, Anthony Cogliandro, Joanne McKenna, Ira Novoselsky, City Council President Marc Silvestri and Angela Guarino-Sawaya, State Senator Lydia Edwards,
State Representative Jessica Giannino and Councillors Bob Haas III, Tony Zambuto and Michelle Kelley.
×‰	Ú 7cassandra://vKF1sSfjSaNcl6I907L4YTkUJfabCNfJGUgytXoxPtkÍ:uÍ`ÌÔÍ ×h8žÅ;3ý	×‰EÚ"ÞTHE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, MAY 30, 2025
Page 15
Suffolk Downs announces Thursday Nights @ The Yard
Enjoy outdoor live music, Bingo, dance classes and Yappy Hours at Suffolk Downsâ€™ Beachmont Square this summer
R
ecently, The HYM Investment
Group (HYM), in partnership
with Wicked Fun Consulting,
announced Thursday
Nights @ The Yard, a rotating
series of weekly activations
taking place in Beachmont
Square at Suffolk Downs all
summer long. Kicking off on
June 5, Thursday Nights @ The
Yard will run every Thursday
from 6 p.m. to 9 p.m. through
September 25. These evenings
will bring entertainment, food
and community activations
to Suff olk Downsâ€™ Beachmont
Square neighborhood, making
for the perfect after-work
meetup or summer night out.
REVEREâ€™S | FROM Page 9
Baghdad on TV, he knew that
fi ve million residents of Baghdad
were experiencing tragedy
on the ground, with no
electricity, no water and no
sewerage systems. It was a
public health crisis. So, in 1991
Dr. Viola founded and directed
Medicine for Peace (MFP),
a medical relief and advocacy
organization dedicated to
providing care to victims of
war. Dr. Viola and MFP have
conducted medical programs
during armed conflicts, and
natural disasters, in El Salvador,
Iraq, Bosnia and Haiti. In
1995, MFP focused on Bosnia,
in the wake of the massacre
of more than 8,000 Muslim
men and boys who were
killed. MFP launched a schoolbased
mental health project
and remained in Bosnia providing
services for more than
fi ve years. MFPâ€™s more recent
humanitarian work operates
outside the theatre of war. In
Haiti MFP established a cervical
cancer detection program
in mobile clinics and helped to
improve the cancer treatment
infrastructure of Haiti. Dr. Viola
has been Director of Medicine
for MFP for more than 25 years.
Dr. Viola has received a number
of humanitarian awards,
including the International
Award from the Christian Organization,
Pax Christi, which
recognizes grassroots activists
working against violence
and injustice in ongoing confl
icts. He also received an honorary
degree in humane letThursday
Nights @ The Yard
will off er rotating themes each
week, including live music with
local bands, Bingo nights, Yappy
Hours with dog-friendly activities,
and dance classes featuring
Latin dance, line dancing
and more. Suff olk Downsâ€™
new brewery, Twisted Fate, will
also be popping up at Thursday
Nights throughout the summer
so be sure to sign up for
updates and announcements.
Boston-area bands â€” including
Gracie Curran and the High
Falutinâ€™ Band, The Pointe, Locust,
and singer Rich DiMare â€”
are slated to perform throughout
the summerâ€™s live music
ters from St. Josephâ€™s College
in New York. He is the recipient
of the McGill University Medical
Alumni, Global Award for
Community Service, for treating
patients in war-torn Iraq
and Bosnia and for setting
up cancer detection clinics in
Haiti. The award stated that
through his community service
Dr. Viola has shown that a
physician not only diagnoses
ailments but can identify human
rights abuses and treats
more than just individuals but
can rally other doctors to help
heal entire populations.
Dr. Viola also received the
2019 TASSC International Human
Rights Award for providing
medical services to alleviate
suff ering to survivors of
torture. Dr. Viola also received
the Princeton University Plasma
Physics Laboratory Award
for his service in transferring
his research from the laboratory
to the marketplace, and
to the world. Dr. Viola has been
highlighted on ABC and â€œNBC
Nightly News,â€ â€œGood Morning
Americaâ€ and â€œThe McLaughlin
Reportâ€ and in featured articles
in numerous newspapers
throughout the country,
including The New York Times
and New York Newsday. Dr. Viola
has been featured in two
award-winning documentaries,
â€œChildren of the Cradleâ€
and â€œOpening Hearts,â€ which
recounts the story of Dr. Violaâ€™s
work with Iraqi children.
Dr. Viola is currently a medical
internist in Hyattsville, Maryland,
with over 60 years of experience
in the medical fi eld.
Thursday Nights @ The Yard.
For the dance class-themed
nights, guests will join in country
line dancing lessons from
JP Line Dance as well as tango,
salsa, merengue and bachata
classes from the Veronica
Robles Cultural Center. Yappy
Hours will welcome pups
and their owners to explore local
dog-friendly vendors, such
as East Boston pet store Hungry
Tails and dog portrait photographer
Beyond the Fence.
These events will also feature
rotating live music from local
musician Kali Loops and artists
Sunset Studios Boston. Donâ€™t
miss monthly Bingo for eveDr.
Leonard Guarente
D
nings of fun and friendly competition,
happening once a
month all summer long.
Local food trucks rotating
between Bono Appetit, Crepe
Shop, Mi Corazon Taqueria,
Daddyâ€™s Bonetown Burgers
and more will be available onsite
each Thursday, offering
guests a variety of delicious
eats to enjoy while taking part
in the music, dancing and festivities.
â€œThe
Yard @ Beachmont
Square is quickly becoming a
popular community gathering
place in Greater Boston, and
weâ€™re thrilled to further this
with the new Thursday Nights
@ The Yard activities this summer,â€
said HYM Managing Partner/CEO
Thomas N. Oâ€™Brien.
â€œThese weekly activations at
The Yard will off er something
for everyone and further our vision
of making Suff olk Downs
a vibrant, welcoming destination
for all, through fun, community,
and entertainment.â€
â€œWeâ€™re excited to see Thursday
Nights @ The Yard bring
new energy and opportunities
for residents, families, and visitors
to connect in Beachmont
SUFFOLK DOWNS |
SEE Page 31
r. Leonard Guarente attended
the Revere Public
Schools from 1952-1966. He
went on to study at Boston College
High School, graduating
fi rst in his class in 1970. He subsequently
entered Massachusetts
Institute of Technology
(MIT), graduating in 1974 with
a BS degree in biology. Following
graduation from MIT he entered
Harvard University, graduating
in 1978 with a Doctor of
Philosophy degree in molecular
biology. In 1981 Dr. Guarente
returned to MIT as a professor,
achieving tenure in 1986.
I n 1991 Dr. Guarente
launched the Aging Studies
Program at the MIT Center on
Aging to answer the age-old
questions: Why do living things
age? What genes infl uence aging?
Is it possible to extend
youthfulness by means of genetic
manipulation? Dr. Guarente
has been analyzing these
questions throughout his academic
career.
In 1995 Dr. Guarente developed
the theory that longevity
genes, which help organisms
withstand stressful conditions,
off er protective benefi ts
that can extend lifespan and
improve overall health if activated
long enough. Dr. Guarente
has shown that the longevity
genes produce proteins
called Sirtuins, which control a
myriad of cells activating or inactivating
these proteins. Using
this mechanism in response to
stress, Dr. Guarente believes Sirtuins
can act as a master regulator
of cells in response to stress.
Dr. Guarente has been focusing
his studies on Sirtuins and
how they coordinate a variety
of hormonal networks, regulatory
proteins and other genes,
with a net effect of keeping
cells alive and healthy. Sirtuins
play an essential role in cell survival,
energy metabolism, infl
ammation and aging and are
potential therapeutic targets of
type 2 diabetes and cancer. Dr.
Guarente has stated that Sirtuins
are not likely to substantially
extend life but can make a major
impact on the extension of
our good health. Dr. Guarente
feels that Sirtuins could be the
key not to how long we live but
an improvement in how long
we stay healthy, increasing our
health span. Dr. Guarente is
hopeful that Sirtuin-boosting
drugs, which will slow aging,
will appear as a pharmaceutical
drug within the next 10 to
20 years.
In 2000 Dr. Guarente was appointed
as Novartis professor
of biology at MIT. In 2023 Dr.
Guarente authored the book
â€œAgeless Quest, One Scientistâ€™s
Search for Genes That Prolong
Youth.â€ Dr. Guarente is currently
the Director of the Paul F. Glenn
Center for Biology of Aging Research
at MIT.
Our fi ve local doctors have
risen to both prominence and
preeminence in their respective
fi elds of medical science. They
have made signifi cant contributions
to medical science,
and they have earned and deserve
the deepest admiration of
our community for their dedication
to medicine. Their contributions
to medical science
have and will continue to shape
medical science now and into
the future, ensuring that both
current and future generations
benefit from their dedicated
work as they continue to fulfi ll
their responsibility and obligation
of what it is to be a doctor,
as stated by Hippocrates, the
ancient Greek founder of medicine,
â€œThat wherever the art of
medicine is loved, there is also
a love of humanity.
John J. Henry served as City
Clerk of the City of Revere for
32 years from 1977-2009. He
has written numerous articles
about Revere and its people.
×‰	Ú 7cassandra://uKMbg6h2jpY_ppHXxk3r_ekA7v0FfptbqPi-TWv90-kÍ.ýÍ`ÌÔÍ ×h8žÅ;3ý
×h8žÅ;3ý	Í
ªÍr×‘C’×˜š   ÍUÍru×‰œ“×‰	Ú 7cassandra://IaerrMNfyWvxLXm_upFXCsqqSRpP5UTii2mBdiNBUVcÎ ÆÍ`Í'Íp×‰	Ú 7cassandra://v37-UKv9O52P9tY07jhTDd1UDo6cQYmJzdRfGe1bwDwÍ¢Í`ÍÍà×‰	Ú 7cassandra://6zJuIK7GPQ6U9ZMgo44qOoCGY2Sxvy_xlKi6W7FIHS0Í7yÍ`ÌÔÍ ×h8ž•Å;3ýD×˜š ÍU ÍUÍru×‰œ“×‰	Ú 7cassandra://80N8Tyi1U5oelxwLhFFsMZfqiaubDny1a8pf-WXeSYkÎ èëÍ`Í'Íp×‰	Ú 7cassandra://Ynpj91ZlqpN_c8Tzvv0ISbSYhP3lbfVTSjxs84VCwWYÍ_Í`ÍÍà×‰	Ú 7cassandra://MuUsDuKcOcxutQABv8U6WnZw3_e1zrv_RuTEqtrpntkÍ52Í`ÌÔÍ ×h8ž•Å;3ýE×‰EÚ#Page 16
THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, MAY 30, 2025
T
hree hundred and
24 students attended
Revere High Schoolâ€™s
senior prom â€” themed
Once Upon a Time â€”
at the Danversport Yacht
Club last Tuesday.
Once Upon a Time -
Revere High School goes to Senior Prom
Shown from left to right, are: Endurance Nkeh, Yassmine
Alahyane, Nada Fenni, and Isha Hassan.
Shown from left to right, are: 12th grade teacher Courtney
Guadagno-Avila, class advisor Anna DiCenso, guidance
counselor Cara Mitchell and former teacher Emily St. Peter.
Shown from left to right, are: Mariah Ayala, Susie
Nicolas, Santo Mirtell and Santiago Aganez.
Indrie and Ina Tannizi.
Kayliana Rodriguez and Aiden
Joyce.
Gabriela Souza with Nathaniel
Rubio.
Shown from left to right, are: Vittoria Giangregorio, Ryleigh
Jordan and Leo Santos Garza.
Shown from left to right, are: Kristel Alvarez, Khawan Dias, Vita Sonboun, Giovanni
Yuong, Laura Pereira and Hind El Kahlisaoui.
Leonardo Mayorga.
Daniel Flores during last Tuesdayâ€™s Revere
High School Senior Prom at the
Danversport Yacht Club.
×‰	Ú 7cassandra://6zJuIK7GPQ6U9ZMgo44qOoCGY2Sxvy_xlKi6W7FIHS0Í7yÍ`ÌÔÍ ×h8žÅ;3ý×‰EÚÅTHE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, MAY 30, 2025
Page 17
Shown from left to right, are: Student Council board member
Nada Fenni, board member Isha Hassan, secretary Kayliana
Rodriguez, Vice President Nicole DaSilva and President
Endurance Nkeh.
Shown from left to right, are: Daniel Hou, Rachel Sanchez
and Mikayla Hayes.
Shown from left to right, are: Joshua Mercado with
his proud parents, Rona and Bogs.
Shown from left to right, are: Valeria
Salas with Issra Areslan.
Shown from left to right, are: Rose
Can with Leah Zuniga.
Kristel Alvarez with Khawan Dias.
Shown from left to right, are: Tina Kerr, Brady Kerry
and Joseph Kerr.
Students were interviewed on the red carpet. (Advocate photos by Tara Vocino)
×‰	Ú 7cassandra://MuUsDuKcOcxutQABv8U6WnZw3_e1zrv_RuTEqtrpntkÍ52Í`ÌÔÍ ×h8žÅ;3ý×h8žÅ;3ýÍ
ªÍr×‘C’×˜š   ÍUÍru×‰œ“×‰	Ú 7cassandra://OwTlG0huDVQpiw5cTNdLZvWupmnYZ-GjpwniIxrjcRUÎ ÃËÍ`Í'Íp×‰	Ú 7cassandra://CsCx0HxcaDfsJefaiI2tFotoFM7-xle_n300wBCoqLQÍ¥[Í`ÍÍà×‰	Ú 7cassandra://8_blgXMqN_SC9J57H8GEbDO_lsiMEt9Es0Zd_UB7LCIÍ7·Í`ÌÔÍ ×h8ž•Å;3ýH×˜š ÍU ÍUÍru×‰œ“×‰	Ú 7cassandra://bfvQ2yN8TUSIxFt_981B1g89CGjwN4w-VlZdpZZAQEcÎ êjÍ`Í'Íp×‰	Ú 7cassandra://Ssys6acX80hrAHQptng52QPZhN7ASr8r4SUEi2176R4ÍŒ²Í`ÍÍà×‰	Ú 7cassandra://GAnxw6K0LtUpZNHzoFEB4YEqkzdqby5RgAZpjfZp9nUÍ/¿Í`ÌÔÍ ×h8ž•Å;3ýI×‰EÚPage 18
THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, MAY 30, 2025
Councillor at-Large Tony Zambuto hosts successful
campaign kickoff at DeMainoâ€™s Restaurant
P
opular Revere Councillorat-Large
Tony Zambuto
kicked off his reelection campaign
last week at DeMainoâ€™s
Restaurant on Malden Street.
Councillor Tony Zambuto with School Committee member John
Kingston and Mayor Patrick Keefe
Councillor Zambuto welcomes
his friend John Festa.
Jack Satter House Tenants Association
President Roxanne
Aiello was on hand to support
her friend Councillor Zambuto.
Campaign Manager Diane Santoro is always by Councillor Tony
Zambutoâ€™s side â€” greeting his supporters at the door of DeMainoâ€™s
or at votersâ€™ front doors.
Revere Ward 4 School Committee candidate Stephen Damiano Jr.
and Ward 1 Councillor candidate Jimmy Mercurio at DeMainoâ€™s
supporting Councillor Tony Zambuto
Councillor-at-Large Tony Zambuto
is shown with candidate
for Councillor-at-Large Anthony
Parziale.
Former City of Revere Head of Finance George Anzuoni and businessman
Dominic Bucchino with Councillor-at-Large Tony Zambuto
Councillor Tony Zambuto with Lou Markakis and Constantino
Buttiglieri
Councillor-at-Large Tony Zambuto stands by his decision to â€œalways
tell the truthâ€ and looks forward to his continued service to
the city and residents of Revere.
A total commitment to Revere â€” State Representative Jeff rey Turco, former Ward 3 Councillor Arthur
Guinasso and former Speaker of the House of Representatives Bob DeLeo showing support for
longtime Councillor-at-Large Tony Zambuto.
×‰	Ú 7cassandra://8_blgXMqN_SC9J57H8GEbDO_lsiMEt9Es0Zd_UB7LCIÍ7·Í`ÌÔÍ ×h8žÅ;3ý×‰EÚYTHE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, MAY 30, 2025
Page 19
Vera Carducci, the Republican State Committeewoman for the 3rd
Suff olk District â€” Boston, Revere and Winthrop â€” introduces her
friend Councillor-at-Large Tony Zambuto.
Councillor Tony Zambuto greets Mayor Patrick Keefe and supporters Ralph and Stacey Sevinor.
School Committee member John Kingston and School Committee
candidates for Ward 4 and Ward 2, Stephen Damiano Jr. and Alex
Rhalimi, respectively, with host Councillor-at-Large Tony Zambuto
Republican State Committee members Paul Ronukaitus
and Vera Carducci were on hand to support
Councillor Tony Zambuto.
Always welcomed in Revere â€” former Speaker
of the House Bob DeLeo and Vikki Mucci are with
host Councillor Tony Zambuto.
City councillors showing support for their colleague, State Representative Jeff rey Turco: Ward 2 Councillor Ira Novoselsky, Ward 1 Councillor/candidate for Councillorat-Large
Joanne McKenna, Ward 5 Councillor Angela Guarino-Sawaya, Ward 4 Councillor Paul Argenzio, City Council President/Councillor-at-Large Marc Silvestri and
Ward 3 Councillor Anthony Cogliandro.
×‰	Ú 7cassandra://GAnxw6K0LtUpZNHzoFEB4YEqkzdqby5RgAZpjfZp9nUÍ/¿Í`ÌÔÍ ×h8žÅ;3ý×h8žÅ;3ýÍ
ªÍr×‘C’×˜š   ÍUÍru×‰œ“×‰	Ú 7cassandra://7qxbfSSN7nXpVi7xcjxYxIV-4eACDvT2Rf5dabA4jRwÎ Í÷Í`Í'Íp×‰	Ú 7cassandra://gMJixhq10lBeJlXvJmQATuw8P9EH2LZPYrCuGRylNK0Í¨¸Í`ÍÍà×‰	Ú 7cassandra://6cbLz3lne4bYtp3sf7CbQW0bP2bUaZfNE4yvPmRhUwkÍ9¤Í`ÌÔÍ ×h8ž•Å;3ýK×˜š ÍU ÍUÍru×‰œ“×‰	Ú 7cassandra://LcMPhtRoqzB23LeS8WbrF8Ulynxvxawxrb9XpnGH-N0Î ÓuÍ`Í'Íp×‰	Ú 7cassandra://SQIvq6LwqmnVpb3M5aC-qqXcHpTtRww8XMTHeW-zdQAÍ´üÍ`ÍÍà×‰	Ú 7cassandra://URIHfwJVLAz4wjuMdnMFpoLW1ZVCV2q-DaNfAcyuJ1YÍ9ËÍ`ÌÔÍ ×h8ž•Å;3ýL×‰EÚöPage 20
THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, MAY 30, 2025
T
he Revere High School Patriots
Boysâ€™ Varsity Volleyball
Team shared their collegiate
choices during last Fridayâ€™s
Senior Night at the RHS
Field House.
Revere High School Boysâ€™ Volleyball
Team Honored on Senior Night
CauÃ£ Berger was accompanied by his proud mother Paula Vieira, his father Leandro
Berger, his brother Christyan Berger and his friends, Andrew Sorrier, Daniella
Prestone and Julianna Prestone. Berger plans to work for his father then enroll
in trade school.
Kawan Almeida was accompanied by his proud mother Jany Dias, father Mike Dias,
girlfriend Kristel Alvarez, aunt Wellida Machado, and her daughters, Maria Machado
and Ana Machado, and Uncle Tony Almeida. Almeida plans to study architecture
at North Shore Community College.
Lucas Jiminez was accompanied by his proud father
Jaime Jimenez, mother Lina and girlfriend Hanna Mor.
Jiminez plans to study psychology at North Shore Community
College.
Shown from left to right, are; seniors Lucas Jiinez,
Kawan Almeida, CauÃ£ Berger and Head Coach Lianne
Mimmo Oâ€™Hara during last Fridayâ€™s Senior Night.
The Basketball Pats are shown huddled together prior to tip-off . (Advocate photos by Tara Vocino)
A sheet cake celebrated the seniors.
×‰	Ú 7cassandra://6cbLz3lne4bYtp3sf7CbQW0bP2bUaZfNE4yvPmRhUwkÍ9¤Í`ÌÔÍ ×h8žÅ;3ý×‰EÚ	THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, MAY 30, 2025
Page 21
Revere High School Patriots Boysâ€™
Baseball Team unveil college picks
Ivan Chavarria Garcia was accompanied by his proud mother Yessica,
sister Amy and friends Manela and Thomas with Head Coach
Sebastian Salvo. Garcia plans to enter trade school.
CJ Flores was accompanied by his proud mother
Loida and sisters Gabby and Lulu with Head
Coach Sebastian Salvo. Flores plans to enter
trade school.
S
eniors shared their collegiate
plans during Mondayâ€™s
Revere High School Patriots
Boysâ€™ Varsity Baseball
Team Senior Night at Revere
High School.
Danny Hou was accompanied by his proud teammate,
Sergio Peguero and Head Coach Sebastian
Salvo. Hou plans to play football at Framingham
State to study health and wellness.
Brendan Sack was accompanied by his proud mother Dianne,
Head Coach Sebastian Salvo, father Scott, and Grandmother Dianne.
Sack plans to attend Bunker Hill Community College to play
baseball and study business.
Shown from left to right, are: Assistant Coach Rich DiMarzo and Head Coach Sebastian Salvo with
seniors Ivan Garcia, Danny Hou, Ismael El Gharbi, Brendan Sack, Seth Sullivan, Christian Flores and
Assistant Coaches Scott Sack with Michael Croke.
Ismael El Gharbi was accompanied by his proud mother Johanna,
Head Coach Sebastian Salvo and brother Asley. Gharbi plans to
attend Vermont State to play baseball and study business.
Seniors took a photo with their proud parents and coaches behind them during Mondayâ€™s Revere
High School Boysâ€™ Varsity Baseball Patriots Teamâ€™s Senior Night at Revere High School.
Seth Sullivan was accompanied by his proud mother Leanne, father
Scott, sister Joli, girlfriend Ella, Head Coach Sebastian Salvo
and nephew Reign. Sullivan plans to play baseball at Salem State
University and study sports and movement science.
Back row, shown from left to right, are: Assistant Coach Rich DiMarzo, Head Coach Sebastian Salvo,
Nicholas Rupp, Danny Hou, Frankie Annuziata, Ismael El Gharbi, Sergio Peguero, Brendan Sack, Vittorio
DeSimone, Thomas Waldron, George Papalambros, Seth Sullivan, Assistant Coach Scott Sack
and Assistant Coach Mike Croke. Top row, shown from left to right, are: Marc Maisano, Ivan Garcia,
Christian Flores, Domenic Bellia, and Joseph Angiulo. (Advocate photos by Tara Vocino)
×‰	Ú 7cassandra://URIHfwJVLAz4wjuMdnMFpoLW1ZVCV2q-DaNfAcyuJ1YÍ9ËÍ`ÌÔÍ ×h8žÅ;3ý×h8žÅ;3ýÍ
ªÍr×‘C’×˜š   ÍUÍru×‰œ“×‰	Ú 7cassandra://oZocShVYiUBz6JyiY6krPgYkIXmhWnJc7ebI3migWVAÎ uëÍ`Í'Íp×‰	Ú 7cassandra://EzSAyIEtxdAiDIb4nC_ZDN7LYntzzEHVdHjxZUZt2dUÍ¸ÂÍ`ÍÍà×‰	Ú 7cassandra://n2WDmgz3xDD5EClGOI8J-fjfzHoZqHIdgy17y2TtENIÍ2âÍ`ÌÔÍ ×h8ž–Å;3ýN×˜š ÍU ÍUÍru×‰œ“×‰	Ú 7cassandra://nTAu9bK0aNwA9_xuigCtHGs2orzVuBLRo8L86cjKvA4Î 	‰Í` Í'Íp×‰	Ú 7cassandra://qquoXLVARdjFt0Q1cJmJIK1ElMCvlNiiTN3qibxAAkAÍ´]Í`ÍÍà×‰	Ú 7cassandra://U6zhwO9JuunXtTGge9iCrwZPOefsXHG3_Na7Kd2BPc4Í.ÖÍ`ÌÔÍ ×h8ž–Å;3ýO×‰EÚñPage 22
THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, MAY 30, 2025
REVERE HIGH SCHOOL PATRIOTS SPRING SPORTS ROUNDUP
By Dom Nicastro
Reedâ€™s bat, Randallâ€™s
arm lead the way;
Stamatopoulos breaks
another school record
T
he Revere High School
spring sports teams were in
wrap-up mode this past week.
The postseason has arrived,
with softball and boys volleyball
awaiting their postseason
fate as of press time.
The softball team closed its
regular season with a pair of
gritty performances, including
a come-from-behind win over
Lynn Classical. The girls track
and field program earned
yet another school record â€”
this time in the 400 meters â€”
while boys volleyball wrapped
its season with a 15th win and
a playoff berth in Division 1.
Stamatopoulos sets
another record
G
emma Stamatopoulos
added to her growing legacy
with another school record
â€” this time in the 400
meters. She ran a 63.63 at the
Joe Tranchita Last Chance to
Qualify Meet, surpassing the
previous record of 63.7 (hand
time) set in 2015.
â€œThis is the third individual
record set by Gemma just this
year,â€ said Head Coach RacR
Gemma
Stamatopoulos
Revere girls track
quel MacDonald-Ciambelli.
â€œHer athletic ability and tenacity
never cease to amaze me.â€
The senior standout now
owns school records in the
400, 800 and high jump, and
she recently led the team to a
GBL title with 163 team points.
Softball splits
down the stretch
evere softball came back
from a 6-1 defi cit to beat
Lynn Classical 10-6 in extra innings,
powered by a massive
fi ve-hit day from Frankie Reed
and clutch late-game heroics
across the lineup. Reed went
fi ve-for-fi ve with two doubles,
three singles and two stolen
bases. Her performance helped
key a seventh-inning rally that
saw Revere put up fi ve runs to
tie the game before tacking on
four more in the eighth.
Caleigh Joyce hit the goahead
home run in the top of
the eighth to center fi eld, and
Jordan Martelli followed with
a run-scoring single for insurance.
Martelli fi nished threefor-four
with three RBI, while
Shayna Smith had three hits
and a triple that tied the game
in the seventh.
Danni Hope Randall earned
the win in the circle, striking
out seven over eight innings
while working around seven
R
hits and fi ve walks. Revere totaled
13 hits and drew seven
walks in the comeback win.
Randall delivered another
dominant eff ort against Whittier
RVT, striking out 10 and
allowing just four runs (two
earned) in a tough 4-1 loss.
Off ensively, Revere struggled
against Whittierâ€™s ace, who
struck out 18 and didnâ€™t allow
a walk. Anna Doucette, Smith
and Reed each had a hit, with
Doucette driving in Revereâ€™s
lone run.
As of press time, the Patriots
await their MIAA Division
1 playoff fate.
Baseball falls
to Classical
evere baseball finished
the season 6-11. The Patriots
couldnâ€™t hold an early
lead in an 11-4 loss to Lynn
Classical. The Patriots struck
fi rst in the second inning but
surrendered four runs in the
fourth and never recovered.
George Papalambros took the
loss, giving up eight runs (fi ve
earned) on seven hits in 4.2 innings.
Sergio Peguero had Revereâ€™s
lone RBI. Ismael El Gharbi,
Christian Flores, Brendan
Sack and Domenic Bellia all recorded
hits.
Revere suffered another
tough loss to Medford, falling
19-0 after surrendering 12
runs in the fi rst inning. Medford
took advantage of early
errors, walks and timely hits
to break the game open. The
visitors added four more in
the second and three in the
third. Bellia and Thomas Waldron
each had a hit for Revere,
and the defense turned a double
play.
Revere staged a late rally to
beat Malden, 8-6, thanks to
clutch hitting in the bottom
of the fi fth. With the game tied
6-6, El Gharbi ripped a tworun
double to give Revere the
lead for good. El Gharbi fi nished
a perfect three-for-three
with two RBIs. Joseph Angiulo
also had three hits, and
Nicholas Rupp and Sack added
two hits apiece. Papalambros
earned the win, striking
out three and allowing three
earned runs over 5.2 innings.
Bellia picked up the save. Revere
totaled 11 hits and turned
a double play to hold off a 12hit
attack by Malden.
Boys volleyball
wins 15th
R
evere improved to 15-5
on the season after a 3-1
victory over Lynn Classical.
Larry Claudio posted 23 assists
and 11 kills, while Chris
Choc Chavez added 18 assists.
Kawan Dias tallied 14 kills and
Juan Perez fi nished with 11.
The team awaits its Division
1 playoff seed.
Mass. Dept. of Correction Lowers Minimum Age
to Become a Correction Officer to 19
M
ILFORD â€” The Massachusetts
Department of CorNew
Policy Aims to Boost Recruitment and Build Future Workforce
said Governor Maura Healey.
rection is proud to announce
a change in its hiring policy,
lowering the minimum age requirement
to become a Correction
Offi cer from 21 to 19. The
adjustment is part of a broader
eff ort to expand recruitment,
attract younger candidates,
and establish a new pathway
for individuals interested in a
career in public service.
The newly established minimum
appointment age was
implemented to attract motivated
candidates who are eager
to serve their communities.
By expanding the candidate
pool, the Department
is creating new opportunities
for young adults to serve
their communities and explore
long-term careers in corrections.
â€œReducing
the minimum age
to become a Correction Offi cer
will allow us to recruit more
dedicated, highly skilled workers
to these important roles,â€
â€œThis change will help us build
the next generation of corrections
professionals to deliver
on our goals of protecting public
safety and supporting rehabilitation.â€
â€œThe
change in the minimum
appointment age allows
the DOC to address staff -
ing needs while also cultivating
a future workforce dedicated
to upholding our core
values,â€ said Lieutenant Governor
Kim Driscoll. â€œI encourage
anyone who is eligible and
interested in making a positive
impact on public safety to consider
pursuing this rewarding
opportunity.â€
â€œExpanding the candidate
pool enhances our ability to
inform individuals about the
rewarding career opportunities
available at the Massachusetts
Department of Correction,â€
said Public Safety and
Security Secretary Terrence
Reidy. â€œIt is essential that we
adapt and fi nd innovative ways
to recruit more professionals
into our public safety system.â€
â€œThe implementation of this
age of appointment gives the
DOC the fl exibility to bring in
more qualifi ed applicants while
providing them with early access
to a fulfi lling career in corrections,â€
said DOC Commissioner
Shawn Jenkins. â€œThe
Massachusetts Department of
Correction appreciates working
collaboratively with MasMASS.
DEPT. | SEE Page 29
×‰	Ú 7cassandra://n2WDmgz3xDD5EClGOI8J-fjfzHoZqHIdgy17y2TtENIÍ2âÍ`ÌÔÍ ×h8žÅ;3ý×‰EÚ$THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, MAY 30, 2025
Page 23
State Fire Marshal Highlights
Summer Fire Safety
Grilling, Gasoline, and Smoking Among Outdoor Fire Hazards
S
TOWâ€”As Massachusetts approaches
Memorial Day weekend
and the unoffi cial start of summer,
State Fire Marshal Jon M. Davine
is asking residents to practice
outdoor fi re safety in the weeks and
months ahead.
â€œAs the weather gets warmer and
we start spending more time outside,
outdoor fi res also start to increase,â€
State Fire Marshal Davine
said. â€œUnfortunately, many of these
fi res cause serious injuries and property
damage â€” but almost all of
them can be prevented.â€
Grilling Safety
About two-thirds of grilling fi res in
Massachusetts occur between May
and August. About 75% take place
on residential properties â€” most
often one- and two-family homes.
Memorial Day is a leading day for
cookouts with family and friends,
so stay safe when using your gas or
charcoal grill:
â€¢ Always grill outdoors, never inside.
â€¢ A burning grill should always be
attended by an adult.
â€¢ Never use a gas or charcoal grill
on a porch, balcony, or fi re escape.
â€¢ Place grills at least 10 feet away
from buildings and deck railings.
Make sure grills are not under
eaves or overhanging branches.
â€¢ Gas grills may be used on fi rst fl oor
decks or patios only if there is an
outdoor stairway to the ground,
or it is at ground level.
â€¢ Always keep matches, lighters,
and lighter fl uid away from children.
â€¢
Create a three-foot â€œcircle of safetyâ€
around grills. Keep children
and pets at least three feet away
on all sides.
When using a gas grill, open the
lid before you light it to avoid the
ignition of built-up propane. If you
smell gas while cooking, turn off
the grill, move away, and call 9-1-1
from a safe location. Do not move
the grill. Always turn off the burners
and close the propane cylinder
when youâ€™re done cooking.
If using a charcoal grill, only use
charcoal starter fluid. Do not use
gasoline or kerosene to start a fi re
in a grill, and never add any fl ammable
liquid to burning briquettes
or hot coals. Allow the coals to burn
out completely and then cool for 48
hours before disposal. If you must
dispose of ashes before they are
completely cooled, thoroughly soak
them in water before putting them
in a metal container.
Fire Pits and Chimineas
Outdoor burning is prohibited in
Massachusetts from May 1 to January
15. While regulations allow exceptions
for fi res that are used for
cooking, local fi re chiefs and municipalities
may prohibit or impose
additional restrictions on these fi res,
including the use of fire pits and
chimineas. Even where allowed, an
adult must always be present with
the tools necessary to extinguish
such a fi re immediately because of
the inherent risk. Brush and structure
fi res in Agawam, Florida, Goshen,
and Haverhill in recent weeks all
started with fi re pits that were unattended
or improperly used. Any
burning that creates a nuisance, a
condition of air pollution, or hazard
to others is always prohibited.
Gasoline Safety
Serious gasoline-related burns
peak in the summer months, with
about 40% reported from June
through August. Always be cautious
when using gasoline, especially in
the area of any heat source:
â€¢ Gasoline should only be used as
fuel for an engine, not as a solvent.
â€¢ Never use gasoline to start a fi re
or add it to any fi re.
â€¢ Store gasoline only outside the
home, such as in a locked shed,
and always in an approved container.
Never store gasoline in the
home or basement.
â€¢ Refuel lawnmowers, leaf blowers,
mopeds, and other devices only
when the engine is cool. Never refi
ll while it is hot.
â€¢ Keep gasoline away from all heat
sources, such as smoking materials,
campfi res, and grills.
Smoking Safety
Smoking materials have been the
leading cause of fi re deaths in Massachusetts
for decades, and carelessly
discarded cigarette butts are
a common factor in structure fi res
that start on porches and nearby
dry vegetation. Mulch is especially
prone to combustion caused by
careless smoking. Smoking fi res are
particularly dangerous because they
may smolder undetected and then
erupt into fl ames that grow rapidly.
A fi re that starts on a porch, balcony,
or exterior stairway can extend
to the home before smoke alarms
inside detect them and alert you to
the danger.
â€œIf you still smoke, or if you have
guests who do, please do it responsibly,â€
said State Fire Marshal Davine.
â€œAlways use a deep, sturdy ashtray or
a can with sand or water. Donâ€™t toss
smoking materials into the mulch,
leaves, grass, or planters, and donâ€™t
stub them out on the porch railing
or stairs. Remember to put it out, all
the way, every time.â€
Brush and Wildland
Fire Safety
Almost all outdoor fi res are caused
by human behavior. In the warm,
dry weather expected Sunday and
Monday, these fi res may spread to
dangerous sizes quickly and require
numerous fi refi ghting resources to
contain and extinguish. And because
about 50% of Massachusetts
homes are in Wildland-Urban Interface
or Intermix zones, outdoor
fi res can easily threaten people and
property.
â€¢ Practice fi re safety with grills, fl ammable
liquids, smoking materials,
and power equipment.
â€¢ Before setting up a campfi re, be
sure it is permitted by checking
with the local fi re department.
â€¢ Clear away dry leaves and sticks
and overhanging low branches
and shrubs.
â€¢ Keep campfi res small so they are
easier to control and attend to
them at all times.
â€¢ Always have a hose, bucket of water,
or shovel and dirt or sand nearby
to put out the fi re.
â€¢ Make sure your campfire is out
cold before leaving.
â€¢ If using an ATV, dirt bike, or other
off -road vehicle, be sure the spark
arrestor is properly installed, as required
by Massachusetts law.
â€¢ Donâ€™t park a vehicle or power
equipment such as a lawnmower
on or near dry vegetation. A hot
engine or exhaust can ignite dry
grass, leaves, or debris.
â€œWe saw last fall just how quickly
brush and wildland fires can
grow to sizes that require a large
response by local and regional fire
departments,â€ said State Fire Marshal
Davine. â€œThese fires strain our
resources and make it harder to respond
to other emergencies. If you
see an outdoor fire, please call 9-11
to report it as soon as possible.â€
V
RevereTV
Spotlight
ictoria Fabbo continues to showcase
healthy seasonal recipes every month. In
the exciting new episode of â€œFabulous Foods,â€
Victoria Fabbo is joined by special guest Chef
Mai Nguyen, a celebrated pastry chef in the
Boston area known for her delicious desserts.
Victoria and Chef Mai whip up the perfect
springtime macaroons with a blueberry
buttercream fi lling. Watch on the Community
Channel or on YouTube to follow along
as they prepare this delightful treat together,
and make it at home yourself!
In Episode 2 of â€œAll About Nonprofi ts,â€ Revere
Chamber of Commerce Nonprofi t Liaison Judie
VanKooiman, who is also the Founder of
Those Who Can, For Those In Need, is joined
by Ruthâ€™s Way for Women Founder/Executive
Director Nicole Oâ€™Brien. Nicole shares what inspired
her to start this nonprofi t and discusses
the programs and support they off er. This is
an inspiring conversation focused on empowering
and supporting women on their journey
to recovery and independence. â€œAll About
Nonprofi tsâ€ is currently a monthly program
playing on the Community Channel. Since it
is produced in partnership with RTV, it is also
posted to view on RevereTVâ€™s YouTube page.
Revere Youth Baseball and Softball starts off
the season each year with a parade from DiSalvo
Park by the Whelan School to Griswold Park
by St. Maryâ€™s Parish. This parade was held last
weekend, and RevereTV captured some sights
and sounds of the event. Hundreds of children
and their families attended both the parade
and the celebration afterwards. Watch it now
on the Community Channel and YouTube.
On May 9, 2025, Revere High School hosted
its Annual Rock Ensemble. This year there
were three bands performing at this extralong
concert. The concert is now playing on
the Community Channel almost nightly and
includes performances by the Rumney Marsh
Percussion Ensemble, the Revere High School
Pop Ensemble and the Revere High School
Rock Ensemble. This year the Rock Ensemble
chose to focus on the music library of Santana.
You can also enjoy this concert at your
convenience on YouTube.
RevereTV was present at the City of Revereâ€™s
Memorial Day Ceremony at McMackin
Veterans Memorial Park on Broadway. The
keynote speaker this year was Maj. Deborah
A. Bowker. Many local veterans and city offi -
cials were there for the ceremony, and it was
open to the public. Watch replays of RTVâ€™s live
event coverage on the Community Channel
and YouTube. The Community Channel is 8
and 1072 on Comcast and 3 and 614 on RCN.
As always, tune in to RTV GOV for all of
the cityâ€™s government meetings. RTV GOV is
channel 9 on Comcast and channels 13 and
613 on RCN. The current replay rotation includes
the Revere City Council, Commission
on Disabilities, Aff ordable Housing Board of
Trustees, Traffi c Commission, Planning Board,
License Commission and Revere Board of
Health. All meetings stream live on RTV GOV
and YouTube.
×‰	Ú 7cassandra://U6zhwO9JuunXtTGge9iCrwZPOefsXHG3_Na7Kd2BPc4Í.ÖÍ`ÌÔÍ ×h8žÅ;3ý×h8žÅ;3ýÍ
ªÍr×‘C’×˜š   ÍUÍru×‰œ“×‰	Ú 7cassandra://ORBJ0G24H988zX1rbn5cqgDJRSzSpwQq5VCUUNMYlhwÎ 	z‰Í`Í'Íp×‰	Ú 7cassandra://u27H2-6ePGugvaVG4Q4LBwylvHGNzpE1NLu1BMF317IÍµëÍ`ÍÍà×‰	Ú 7cassandra://sms2-kfmzZdm3AGGcUxS7wlHOMLMjASWXKpbNY7gRCMÍ.çÍ`ÌÔÍ ×h8ž—Å;3ýQ×˜š ÍU ÍUÍru×‰œ“×‰	Ú 7cassandra://DTDQ6ztGLHetYFLesb-pehL0KYQ3_-etPnSMcsv3JUAÎ 
‹šÍ` Í'Íp×‰	Ú 7cassandra://kiXV-_Bvf0egekDHw2IEdVAIos0JRlx5CmQNvX872zkÍ¸±Í`ÍÍà×‰	Ú 7cassandra://bp0Zvu07WzztBVA1gq7sdb3pfuyDcrTN1t6QTMBjV1sÍ-KÍ`ÌÔÍ ×h8ž—Å;3ýR’× ×h8ž—Å;3ýU ZÍq9×H¶http://massterlist.com××Ðˆ× ×h8ž—Å;3ýT nÌòÌÛ9×HÚ !mailto:bob@beaconhillrollcall.com××Ðˆ×‰EÚ Page 24
THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, MAY 30, 2025
this system has worked well for
many years.
Critics say that most of the
By 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
GET A FREE SUBSCRIPTION
TO MASSTERLIST â€” Join more
than 30,000 people, from movers
and shakers to political junkies
and interested citizens, who
start their weekday morning
with MASSterListâ€”the popular
newsletter that chronicles news
and informed analysis about
whatâ€™s going on up on Beacon
Hill, in Massachusetts politics,
policy, media and influence.
The stories are drawn from major
news organizations as well as
specialized publications.
MASSterList will be e-mailed
to you FREE every Monday
through Saturday morning and
will give you a leg up on whatâ€™s
happening in the blood sport
of Bay State politics. For more
information and to get your
free subscription, go to: www.
massterlist.com
THE HOUSE AND SENATE:
Beacon Hill Roll Call records local
senatorsâ€™ and representativesâ€™
votes on roll calls from
the week of May 19-23. All Senate
roll calls were related to the
Senate version of a $61.4 billion
fi scal 2026 state budget.
â€œBEHIND THE SCENES OF THE
SENATE BUDGET DEBATEâ€
Of the 1,058 amendments
fi led by senators, only 21 came
to a roll call vote. Many others
were simply approved or rejected
one at a time on voice votes,
some with debate and some
without debate.
To move things along even
faster, the Senate also did
its usual â€œbundlingâ€ of many
amendments. Instead of acting
on each amendment one
at a time, hundreds of the proposed
amendments are bundled
and put into two pilesâ€”
one pile that will be approved
and the other that will be rejected,
without a roll call, on voice
votes where it is impossible to
tell which way a senator votes.
Senate President Karen Spilka,
or the senator who is fi lling in
for her at the podium, orchestrates
the approval and rejection
of the bundled amendments
with a simple: â€œAll those
in favor say â€˜Aye,â€™ those opposed
say â€˜No.â€™ The Ayes have it and the
amendments are approved.â€ Or:
â€œAll those in favor say â€˜Aye,â€™ those
opposed say â€˜No.â€™ The Noâ€™s have
it and the amendments are rejected.â€
Senators
donâ€™t actually vote
â€œYesâ€ or â€œNo,â€ and, in fact, they
donâ€™t say a word. The outcome
was predetermined earlier behind
closed doors. Supporters
of the system say that any senator
who sponsored an amendment
that is in the â€œNoâ€ pile
can bring it to the floor and
ask for an up or down vote on
the amendment itself. They say
time members do not bring
their amendment, which was
destined for the â€œNoâ€ pile, to the
floor for an up-or-down vote
because that is not the way the
game is played. It is an â€œexpected
traditionâ€ that in most cases
you accept the fate of your
amendment as determined by
Democratic leaders.
APPROVE $530 MILLION FISCAL
2025 SUPPLEMENTAL BUDGET
(H 4150)
House 149-1, approved a
$530 million fi scal 2025 supplemental
budget that will carry a
net cost to the state of $318.2
million after federal reimbursements.
Provisions
include $189 million
for childcare fi nancial assistance;
$134 million for the Medical
Assistance Trust Fund; $60
million for Home Care Services;
$42.9 million for the Residential
Assistance for Families in Transition
(RAFT) program; and $15
million in grants to support municipal
celebrations of the 250th
anniversary of the American independence.
â€œAmid
President Trumpâ€™s dismantling
of the Department of
Education, and amid sweeping
cuts at the federal level to programs
that millions of Americans
rely on, this supplemental
budget makes key investments
that will ensure continued
funding for state programs
that support many of the commonwealthâ€™s
most vulnerable
residents,â€ said House Speaker
Ron Mariano (D-Quincy).
â€œThis supplemental budget
will fund critical programs such
as childcare fi nancial assistance,
home care services and food insecurity
that require immediate
attention,â€ said Rep. Aaron
Michlewitz (D-Boston), Chair of
the House Committee on Ways
and Means.
â€œThe policies of kill, maim,
medicate and indoctrinate our
children continue, as does the
policy of putting illegal immigrants
ahead of our citizens,â€
said Rep. John Gaskey (R-Carver),
the only members to vote
againt the budget. â€œ[Speaker]
Marianoâ€™s hint at a lower budget
to help struggling taxpayers
turned into a free-for-all as
the House budget ballooned
all week long.â€
(A â€œYesâ€ vote is for the budget.
A â€œNoâ€ vote is against it.)
Rep. Jessica Giannino Yes Rep.
Jeff Turco Yes
ENGLISH LEARNERS (H 4150)
House 150-1, approved an
amendment that would enshrine
protections for English
language learners and students
with disabilities currently provided
under federal law into
state law, ensuring that these
students receive both English
language development and
Special Education services in a
coordinated, culturally and linguistically
appropriate manner,
regardless of school district
or demographic. The amendment
also prohibits discrimination
in public schools based on
immigration, citizenship status
or disability.
â€œThis is a strong step toward
ensuring English learners are
fairly evaluated and appropriately
supported in special education,â€
said amendment sponsor
Rep. Alice Peisch (D-Wellesley).
â€œThis will help ensure our
English Language Learners students
receive the same opportunities
to succeed as every other
student.â€
â€œThis is a requirement that further
burdens an already struggling
education system but,
show me where this isnâ€™t already
happening,â€ said amendment
opponent Rep. John Gaskey (RCarver).
â€œThe schools have every
resource they need available
to them. If there is a signifi cant
problem and parents need to
be involved, translators are always
available. The state wants
to provide translators for nonEnglish
speakers but refuses to
allow teachers to speak to parents
when their children are
suff ering mental health breaks,
declaring they are the opposite
sex.â€
(A â€œYesâ€ vote is for the amendment.
A â€œNoâ€ vote is against it.)
Rep. Jessica Giannino Yes Rep.
Jeff Turco Yes
SENATE APPROVES $61.4 BILLION
FISCAL 2026 STATE BUDGET
(S 3)
Senate 38-2, approved a $61.4
billion fi scal 2026 state budget
after three days of debate. The
House has already approved a
diff erent version, and a HouseSenate
conference committee
will eventually craft a compromise
plan that will be presented
to the House and Senate for
consideration and then sent to
Gov. Maura Healey.
â€œThis budget refl ects the Senateâ€™s
commitment to a commonwealth
that carefully balances
investing in our people
with responsible money management
so we can protect our
residents, communities and
economy for years to come,â€
said Senate President Karen
Spilka (D-Ashland). â€œThe Senateâ€™s
statewide approach to investment
delivers resources to
every part of the state and protects
our most vulnerable residents,
while our continued focus
on education and mental
health ensures that residents
have the keys to unlock the
doors of opportunity.â€
â€œThis budget is a testament
to the Senateâ€™s collective values
and our shared responsibility
to invest in every community
and every person in the commonwealthâ€”from
the Connecticut
River Valley to Cape
Cod,â€ said Sen. Jo Comerford (DNorthampton),
Vice Chair of the
Senate Committee on Ways and
Means. â€œBy prioritizing education,
transportation, health care
and support for municipalities,
we are not only addressing immediate
needs but also laying
the foundation for a more equitable
and resilient commonwealth
amid a time of great national
turbulence and strife.â€
â€œConstituents and businesses
from across my district are exhausted
by Gov. Healeyâ€™s budget
priorities that underfund
core local services, overfund
benefi ts for non-residents with
billions of tax dollar and burden
them with ever-increasing taxes
and energy costs,â€ said Sen.
Ryan Fattman (R-Sutton), one
of only two senators to vote
against the budget. â€œMassachusetts
residents are going to keep
voting with their feet as they
move out-of-state if we continue
with the status quo â€” itâ€™s unsustainable
and must end.â€
×‰	Ú 7cassandra://sms2-kfmzZdm3AGGcUxS7wlHOMLMjASWXKpbNY7gRCMÍ.çÍ`ÌÔÍ ×h8žÅ;3ý×‰EÚ$ëTHE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, MAY 30, 2025
Page 25
(A â€œYesâ€ vote is for the budget.
A â€œNoâ€ vote is against it.)
Sen. Lydia Edwards Yes
PRESCRIPTION DRUGS (S 3)
Senate 34-5, approved an
amendment that would allow
Health Policy Commission regulators
to place a maximum price
limit on some medications, capping
what patients, providers,
pharmacies and others in Massachusetts
would pay.
â€œI was supportive of this
amendment because of the
impact high prescription drug
prices have had on the most
vulnerable in my communityâ€
said Sen. Pavel Payano (D-Lawrence).
â€œNobody should have to
make a choice between paying
their bills and paying for their
prescriptions.â€
â€œWhile I agree with the intention
behind this amendment, I
believe that the subject matter
needs to be addressed. I voted
no â€¦ because I believe, given
its magnitude, that it should go
through the regular committeereview
process,â€ said Sen. John
Keenan (D-Quincy). â€œWhile versions
of the legislation that this
amendment refl ect have been
fi led in previous sessions, this
amendment includes new language
that deserves a committee
hearing and additional committee
review.â€
â€œIf this doesnâ€™t belong in a
budget, Iâ€™m not sure where else
it belongs,â€ said amendment
sponsor Sen. Cindy Friedman
(D-Arlington). â€œThis is having a
profound eff ect on how we use
our resources in the commonwealth,
and if we donâ€™t address
this issue sooner rather than later,
we will be in major trouble.
Our hospitals are in major trouble
because of this, our insurers
are in major trouble, our state is
in major trouble, so this, in my
mind, is absolutely the right
place for this.â€
(A â€œYesâ€ vote is for the amendment.
A â€œNoâ€ vote is against it.)
Sen. Lydia Edwards Yes
HUMAN TRAFFICKING (S 3)
Senate 12-28, rejected an
amendment that would mandate
human trafficking training
for all hotel, motel, lodging
house or bed and breakfast establishment
employees in the
Bay State, from the front desk
to housekeeping and food service,
in order to equip them to
recognize and respond to traffi
cking situations. The measure
also requires these establishments
to post in plain view, in
the lobby and in any public restroom
in their establishment,
a written notice developed by
the attorney general, which
must include the national human
trafficking hotline telephone
number.
Amendment sponsor Sen.
Mark Montigny (D-New Bedford)
said the passage of the
amendment will send a message
to survivors that we support
them. He noted that almost
no one traffi cking people is in
jail in Massachusetts and said
that when people call him and
ask him why, he doesnâ€™t have an
answer. Training front-line people
in hotels to recognize trafficking
and posting a hotline
number might give a victim a
chance. He said he has worked
with hundreds of survivors and
advocates on this and they always
stress why is there so
much inaction on Beacon Hill.
Sen. Mike Rodrigues (D-Westport),
who voted against the
amendment, said the goals are
laudable, but this is a situation
where you really donâ€™t create a
mandate that every hotel employee,
no matter their job, is
required to be trained to recognize
human traffi cking without
extensive discussions with the
labor unions that represent the
employees. He noted this mandate
could arguably involve
tens of thousands of individuals.
(A â€œYesâ€ vote is for the amendment.
A â€œNoâ€ vote is against it.)
Sen. Lydia Edwards No
CAPITAL GAINS TAX DISTRIBUTION
(S 3)
Senate 5-34, rejected an
amendment that would require
any excess revenue in capital
gains revenue over $1 billion
to annually automatically
be transferred as follows: 80
percent to the Rainy Day Fund;
10 percent to the stateâ€™s Pension
Liability Fund; and 10 percent to
the State Retiree Benefi ts Trust
Fund. The amendment would
replace a section that distributes
5 percent to the Rainy Day
Fund; 90 percent to the stateâ€™s
Pension Liability Fund; and 5
percent to the State Retiree Benefi
ts Trust Fund.
Sen. Bruce Tarr (R-Gloucester),
the amendment sponsor,
said that putting only 5 percent
into the stabilization fund
at a time when we recognize
thereâ€™s a possibility of a downturn
in federal support for our
budget is not a good idea. He
noted we have a stabilization
fund to ensure we have those
resources when we need them.
Sen. Mike Rodrigues (D-Westport),
who voted against the
amendment, said the Rainy Day
Fund is currently already funded
at an impressive gold standard
of $8.1 billion. He argued
that putting the majority of the
funds into the Pension Liability
Fund would be wiser and would
boost the stateâ€™s bond rating.
(A â€œYesâ€ vote is for the amendment.
A â€œNoâ€ vote is against it.)
Sen. Lydia Edwards No
INCREASE ESTATE/DEATH TAX
EXEMPTION (S 3)
Senate 5-34, rejected an
amendment that would increase
from $2 million to $5 million
the amount of money that
is tax exempt from the value of
a personâ€™s estate when calculating
the stateâ€™s estate/death tax
that a person is required to pay
following their death before distribution
to any benefi ciary. The
increase to $5 million would be
implemented over three years.
Most Republicans are against
any such tax and coined the
name â€œdeath taxâ€ to imply that
the government taxes you even
after you die. Most Democrats
support the tax and call it an â€œesBEACON
| SEE Page 26
5 OR 5 POWER
A
5 or 5 power provides a
benefi ciary of a Trust the
power in any calendar year
to withdraw the greater of
$5,000 or 5% of the Trust
principal. Therefore, for any
Trust that has assets less than
$100,000, the beneficiary
can withdraw up to $5,000.
For any Trust that has more
than $100,000 in assets, the
beneficiary can withdraw
up to 5% of the Trust assets.
The situation usually occurs
when the Settlor of a revocable
Trust dies, which in turn
results in the Trust becoming
irrevocable and the Trust
then provides for the benefi t
of a surviving spouse.
Per the Internal Revenue
Code, there has to be a limit
on what the beneficiary
can withdraw each year in
order to avoid any negative
tax consequences. If a Trust
provision allowed the benefi -
ciary to withdraw more than
$5,000 or 5% of the Trust
principal each year, then the
IRS would consider this to be
a â€œgeneralâ€ power of appointment
and some or all of the
Trust assets could be included
in the benefi ciaryâ€™s estate
for estate tax purposes.
What is one advantage of
including such a provision
in a trust document? Such
a provision might be suitable
in a situation of a second
marriage wherein one
spouse does not want the
surviving spouse to have
unfettered control over the
Trust assets. Such a power
would provide a minimum
of a $5,000 withdrawal on
the part of the surviving
spouse each year. This could
be important if the Trust itself
generated very little income
for the year that was
required to be distributed
to the surviving spouse pursuant
to the terms of the
Trust. Alternatively, if the
Trust principal ended up being
$1,000,000 at the time of
the fi rst spouseâ€™s death, the
surviving spouse could take
up to $50,000 each year (5%
of $1,000,000). Furthermore,
such a right might put some
of the Trustâ€™s assets at risk if
the surviving spouse was involved
in litigation. Generally
speaking, creditors can reach
what you can reach as a benefi
ciary of a Trust.
The 5 or 5 power also allows
the benefi ciary to withdraw
up to 5% of the Trustâ€™s
assets, even if the withdrawal
is not for an ascertainable
standard such as for
the health, education and
support of the surviving
spouse. This allows the surviving
spouse to simply take
a withdrawal without meeting
any such standard. The
surviving spouse would not
have to answer to a Trustee
that might not be so cooperative
when it comes to Trust
distributions.
The other benefi t of the 5
or 5 power is that so long as
the surviving spouse does
not exceed its parameters,
upon the surviving spouseâ€™s
death, the assets in the Trust
not subject to the 5 or 5 power
will not be included in her
taxable estate for estate tax
purposes. In this situation,
the first spouse to die has
the ability to exempt $13.9
million in assets from his or
her taxable estate by funding
the so-called â€œfamily trustâ€
portion of a marital deduction
trust wherein the surviving
spouse still would enjoy
rights to income, discretionary
Trustee distributions
of principal to the surviving
spouse based upon a health,
education and support standard
and the 5 or 5 power.
Upon the surviving spouseâ€™s
death, the remaining Trust
assets not subject to the 5
or 5 power will be distributed
free of estate tax to the
children of the fi rst spouse to
die. However, the Trust assets
subject to the 5 or 5 power
in the hands of the surviving
spouse would be taxable
in her estate upon her
death. If her federal taxable
estate ends up being $13.9
million or less, there would
be no federal estate tax anyway.
If there were $5,000,000
of Trust assets, at most, only
$250,000 would be taxable
in the surviving spouseâ€™s estate.
It also looks as though
Congress may extend most
of the key provisions of the
2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act
meaning the federal estate
tax exemption may not be
dropping down to approximately
$6million as of January
1, 2026. A huge diff erence
from an estate planning
standpoint.
Joseph D. Cataldo is an Estate Planning/Elder Law Attorney, Certifi ed Public Accountant, Certifi ed
Financial Planner, AICPA Personal Financial Specialist and holds a Masterâ€™s Degree in Taxation.
×‰	Ú 7cassandra://bp0Zvu07WzztBVA1gq7sdb3pfuyDcrTN1t6QTMBjV1sÍ-KÍ`ÌÔÍ ×h8žÅ;3ý×h8žÅ;3ýÍ
ªÍr×‘C’×˜š   ÍUÍru×‰œ“×‰	Ú 7cassandra://DIhlNkAOyxH5oliiad3qeodi-Gw_0mptry3ONbjRS1kÎ 	ZrÍ`Í'Íp×‰	Ú 7cassandra://_SoHEF7TDAR48Y21g4BJ3FLM8io8ZytwvJ3slN9QlzYÍÃ‘Í`ÍÍà×‰	Ú 7cassandra://iAr01Hg_Dpd7LWHoXjaMBT0OVMp4eby4fjyGuuDGv98Í3YÍ`ÌÔÍ ×h8ž˜Å;3ýV×˜š ÍU ÍUÍru×‰œ“×‰	Ú 7cassandra://z-qbIoDBDg1LGNvu21wu-031qHAkh7_LBKZrP7MrzT8Î &yÍ` Í'Íp×‰	Ú 7cassandra://-65LI6MKKmkkNec7cKW4rm4gTkE5CJJfaQ7G8fcpAZYÍ¹[Í`ÍÍà×‰	Ú 7cassandra://yWB6crQQaxMamLdaPPFl_ZECtyLh2hW4UlDt-_3qdRsÍ/ÀÍ`ÌÔÍ ×h8ž˜Å;3ýW× ×h8ž™Å;3ýf Í	mÍ»ÌÏ9×H½http://www.thewarrengroup.com××Ðˆ× ×h8ž™Å;3ýe ÍþÍ ÌŠ9×H¶http://SavvySenior.org××Ðˆ× ×h8ž™Å;3ýd Í	kÍXh9×H²http://force50.com××Ðˆ× ×h8ž™Å;3ýc Í	kÍ›[9×H±http://s4hire.org××Ðˆ× ×h8ž™Å;3ýb Í	kÍ`v9×H³http://mentjobs.com××Ðˆ× ×h8ž™Å;3ýa Í	kÍyh9×H±http://brains.com××Ðˆ× ×h8ž™Å;3ý` Í}ÍXs9×H²http://grandma.com××Ðˆ× ×h8ž™Å;3ý_ Í}Í›N9×H°http://tions.org××Ðˆ× ×h8ž™Å;3ý^ ÍÚÍŠy9×H³http://linkedin.com××Ðˆ× ×h8ž™Å;3ý] ÍÆÍdj9×H±http://indeed.com××Ðˆ× ×h8ž™Å;3ý\ ÍÍÌ›9×H¶http://reeronestop.org××Ðˆ× ×h8ž™Å;3ý[ ÍÍZ9×H¯http://aarp.org××Ðˆ× ×h8ž™Å;3ýZ Í‰ÍÀ<9×H¯http://call.com××Ðˆ×‰EÚŠPage 26
THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, MAY 30, 2025
BEACON | FROM Page 25
tate taxâ€ to imply that this tax is
mostly paid by the wealthy.
Amendment supporters said
that Massachusetts is one of
only 12 states that have an estate/death
tax and that the Bay
Stateâ€™s is the most aggressive of
the 12. They said that in light of
the high value of houses, with
the average home price more
than $500,000, the $1 million
threshold of this â€œunfair and regressiveâ€
tax is too low and noted
the federal tax exempts the
fi rst $12 million. They noted that
Massachusetts is losing many
residents who move to Florida
and other states where this tax
does not even exist.
Sen. Jamie Eldridge (D-Marl1.
On May 30, 1942, over
1,000 British bombers fl ew
to what city with a name
similar to perfume?
2. How are alewife, clown and
dog similar?
3. What Secretary of the Treasury
was born in the British
Leeward Islands and was
orphaned?
4. On May 31, 1977, the TransAlaska
Pipeline was completed
between Prudhoe
Bay and what?
5. In what country is â€œThe Jungle
Bookâ€ set: the Congo,
India or Malaysia?
6. What Massachusetts city
was originally called Mystic
Side?
7. On June 1, 1494, Scottish
Friar John Cor made the
fi rst-known written record
of what beverage?
8. How are Blue, Cabinet and
The Situation similar?
9. How are bell, Carolina reaper
and Scotch bonnet similar?
10.
On June 2, 1886, Frances
Folsom married what U.S.
president (with a last name
that is a cityâ€™s name) and
became the youngest First
Lady at 21?
11. Which song won the
2025 Eurovision contest:
Answers
â€œWasted Days and Wasted
Nights,â€ â€œWasted Loveâ€ or
â€œWastedâ€?
12. What is pommes frites?
13. On June 3, 1906, what
French entertainer (with
the same fi rst name as â€œLittle
Womenâ€ sister) was born
in Saint Louis, Missouri?
14. Which singer was called the
Empress of the Blues: Bessie
Smith, Billie Holiday or
Bonnie Raitt?
15. The 2025 Beach Soccer
World Cup fi nal was won by
what country that originated
the sport?
16. On June 4, 1937, what
â€œfirstâ€ in grocery shopping
debuted at Oklahoma
Cityâ€™s Humpty Dumpty
stores?
17. In 1980 what disease was
declared eradicated: AIDS,
polio or smallpox?
18. What is Rancho Obi-Wan in
Petaluma, California?
19. Reportedly, semicolons
are less popular; what wartime
U.S. president said,
â€œâ€¦I must say that I have a
great respect for the semicolon;
itâ€™s a very useful little
chapâ€?
20. On June 5, 2012, what author
of â€œFahrenheit 451â€
died?
borough) Senate Chair of the
Committee on Revenue, said
he voted against the increased
exemption because the Legislature
in a bipartisan manner already
raised the threshold last
session from $1 million to $2
million, providing tax relief to
many middle class and working
families. â€œFurther raising the
threshold would not only further
reduce state revenue at a
time when federal budget cuts
are looming, but such a change
would only make our tax system
more regressive, disproportionately
benefi ting Massachusettsâ€™
wealthiest families,â€ said
Eldridge.
(A â€œYesâ€ vote is for increasing
the exemption to $5 million.
A â€œNoâ€ vote is against increasing
it.)
Sen. Lydia Edwards No
ALLOW GOLD STAR MOTHERS
TO RECEIVE ANNUITY EVEN OIF
THEY REMARRY (S 3)
Senate 39-0, approved an
amendment that would repeal
a current law that restricts a surviving
spouse from receiving
the Gold Star annuity if they remarry.
â€œAs
we near Memorial Day, a
day where we remember and
honor those who made the ultimate
sacrifice in service to
our nation, we can never forget
those they left behind,â€ said
amendment sponsor Sen. John
Velis (D-Westfi eld). â€œIt is truly so
cruel to me that these husbands
and wives, who lost their loved
ones, who have sacrificed so
much themselves, are told that
their sacrifice will no longer
matters to the commonwealth
if they decide to remarry.â€
(A â€œYesâ€ vote is for the amendment.)
Sen.
Lydia Edwards Yes
$400,000 FOR PEDIATRIC PALLIATIVE
CARE (S 3)
Senate 39-0, approved an
amendment increasing funding
for a pediatric palliative
care program by $400,000 (from
$10.4 to $10.8 million). This program
provides invaluable comprehensive
care for children living
with life-limiting or end-oflife
illnesses, as well as support
for their families.
â€œI am proud to secure additional
funding for this critical
program which will help clear
the waiting list for these services
and support the staff who
work with these children,â€ said
amendment sponsor Sen. Sal
DiDomenico (D-Everett). â€œFamilies
who are seeking pediatric
palliative care do not have time
to wait on a waitlist. These children
deserve quality care and
support throughout the duration
of their illness and at the
end of their lives, and their families
deserve the support they
need as they face one of the
most traumatic times of their
lives. This program has been
one of my top priorities during
my 15 years in the Senate and I
will continue to ensure that all
families have access to these vital
services.â€
(A Yesâ€ vote is for the $400,000.)
Sen. Lydia Edwards Yes
ALSO UP ON BEACON HILL
HEALTHY PUBLIC COLLEGES
(S 949) â€” The Higher Education
Committee will hold a hearing
on June 3rd to hear testimony
and consider legislation that
would establish a Green and
Healthy Public College and University
Building Planning Commission
to evaluate and make
recommendations on campus
infrastructure â€” focusing on
energy efficiency, indoor air
quality, accessibility, life safety
and overall public health.
The proposal creates a trust
fund to alleviate campus debt
and lower student fees currently
used to fi nance aging infrastructure.
It also ensures longterm
investments so that all
public higher education campuses
meet Green and Healthy
standards by 2037. The bill prioritizes
renovations for buildings
in greatest need and addresses
longstanding environmental
and health inequities
across campuses.
â€œI filed this bill because every
student deserves to learn
in an environment that is safe,
healthy and sustainable,â€ said
sponsor Sen. Jake Oliveira (DLudlow).
â€œBy investing in our
public college and university infrastructure
now, we can reduce
student debt, eliminate health
disparities and build a more equitable,
climate-resilient future
for higher education in Massachusetts.â€
SENIOR
SHELTERS (H 787) â€”
The Committee on Elder Aff airs
will hold a hearing on June 24th
to consider a bill that would establish
a special commission to
study the feasibility of dedicated
senior shelters in Massachusetts.
The commission would
examine the unique needs of
homeless seniors, evaluate existing
resources and propose
recommendations to address
gaps in services and housing for
this population.
Supporters say that homeless
seniors are a growing part of
the homeless population in the
Bay State. They note they face
unique challenges and need
specialized support because of
limited retirement savings, rising
housing costs and a lack of
aff ordable housing options.
Rep. Sean Reid (D-Lynn), the
sponsor of the measure, did not
respond to repeated requests
by Beacon Hill Roll Call asking
him to comment on his bill.
$500,000 FOR ENVIRONMENT
â€” The Healey Administration
announced nearly $500,000 in
grants from the inaugural Environmental
Justice Capacity
Building Grant Program to help
empower local organizations to
build organizational capacity,
strengthen local advocacy, advance
community-driven solutions
and improve the health
and wellbeing of underserved
communities. The Healey Administration
said the grants
represent an ongoing commitment
to addressing environ1.
Cologne, Germany
(Eau de Cologne
originated there in
1709.)
2. They are names of
types of fi sh.
3. Alexander Hamilton
4. Valdez Harbor
5. India
6. Malden
7. Scotch whiskey
8. They are names of
rooms at the White
House.
9. They are types of
pepper.
10. Grover Cleveland
11. â€œWasted Loveâ€ by JJ
12. French fries (in
French)
13. Josephine Baker
14. Bessie Smith
15. Brazil
16. Shopping carts
17. Smallpox
18. The worldâ€™s largest
collection of Star
Wars memorabilia
19. â€œHonest Abeâ€ Lincoln
20.
Ray Bradbury
×‰	Ú 7cassandra://iAr01Hg_Dpd7LWHoXjaMBT0OVMp4eby4fjyGuuDGv98Í3YÍ`ÌÔÍ ×h8žÅ;3ý×‰EÚ  THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, MAY 30, 2025
Page 27
mental inequities and ensuring
that all Massachusetts residents,
particularly those in lowincome
and marginalized communities,
have the tools and resources
they need to tackle climate
change and other environmental
challenges.
â€œWe are committed to ensuring
every community in Massachusetts
has a seat at the table
in shaping the decisions that
impact our families and environment,â€
said Offi ce of Energy
and Environmental Aff airs Secretary
Rebecca Tepper. â€œFrom
growing culturally relevant produce
in community gardens to
creating youth environmental
employment opportunities â€”
these organizations serve as vital
resources in neighborhoods
across Massachusetts.â€
$22.2 MILLION TO MODERNIZE
AFFORDABLE HOUSING INTERNET
â€” The Healey Administration
announced $22.2 million
in grants to upgrade internet access
for 15,793 aff ordable housing
units across 54 communities
in Massachusetts. The projects
will install modern fi ber-optic
cables in public and aff ordable
housing properties that will increase
residentsâ€™ access to highquality,
reliable and aff ordable
broadband service.
â€œMassachusetts is leading the
nation in its eff orts to improve
internet access and adoption
statewide,â€ said Massachusetts
Interim Economic Development
Secretary Ashley Stolba. â€œThe
Residential Retrofi t Program is
a key component of our strategy
to upgrade broadband infrastructure
statewide and will
expand economic opportunity
to residents by enabling them
to access essential online tools.â€
â€œThe Residential Retrofi t Program
is an ambitious eff ort to
revamp decades-old wiring affecting
low-income families and
weâ€™re already seeing how much
of an impact this work has had,â€
said Massachusetts Broadband
Institute Director Michael Baldino.
â€œThis round of Residential
Retrofi t Program grantees demonstrated
a dedication to serving
affordable housing residents
and providing them with
access needed to thrive in the
digital age.â€
HOW LONG WAS LAST WEEKâ€™S
SESSION?
Beacon Hill Roll Call tracks the
length of time that the House
and Senate were in session
each week. Many legislators
say that legislative sessions are
only one aspect of the Legislatureâ€™s
job and that a lot of important
work is done outside
of the House and Senate chambers.
They note that their jobs
also involve committee work,
research, constituent work and
other matters that are important
to their districts. Critics say
that the Legislature does not
meet regularly or long enough
to debate and vote in public
view on the thousands of pieces
of legislation that have been
fi led. They note that the infrequency
and brief length of sessions
are misguided and lead to
irresponsible late-night sessions
and a mad rush to act on dozens
of bills in the days immediately
preceding the end of an annual
session.
During the week of May 1923,
the House met for a total
of seven hours and 15 minutes
while the Senate met for a total
of 33 hours and two minutes.
Mon. May 19 House 11:04 a.m.
to 11:08 a.m.
Senate 11:08 a.m. to 3:53 p.m.
Tues. May 20 No House session.
Senate
11:05 a.m. to 7:54 p.m.
Wed. May 21 House 11:01 a.m.
to 6:09 p.m.
Senate 10:38 a.m. to 7:48 p.m.
Thurs. May 22 House 11:01
a.m. to 11:04 a.m.
Senate 10:06 a.m. to 8:24 p.m.
Fri. May 23 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.
Top Job Search Resources
for Older Job Seekers
Dear Savvy Senior,
What websites or apps can
you recommend to help older
people find employment opportunities?
Iâ€™m 60 and have
been out of work for nearly a
year now and need some help.
Seeking Employment
Dear Seeking,
To help you fi nd employment,
there are a number
of job-search websites and
apps specifi cally tailored to
older workers seeking fulltime,
part-time or remote positions.
Here are 10 great options
that are recommended
by U.S. News & World Report
for 2025, most of which are
completely free to use.
AARP Job Board (jobs.
aarp.org): Designed for
workers 50 and older, AARPâ€™s
job board allows users to
search by job title, keyword,
company or location. The
platform also off ers search
fi lters for full-time, part-time
and remote work opportunities.
Employers who are part
of AARPâ€™s Employer Pledge
Program are committed to
hiring older workers.
CareerOneStop (careeronestop.org):
Sponsored
by the U.S. Department
of Labor, you can use
this site to explore career opportunities,
access training
programs and job-search resources.
Youâ€™ll also fi nd help
looking for a remote job, fi lling
out a job application,
getting started as a self-employed
person and choosing
a path thatâ€™s right for your
stage in life.
Indeed (indeed.com): One
of the largest job search engines
in the world, Indeed
will help you sift through millions
of available positions.
You can include a variety of
specifi cations to fi nd a job,
including whether you want
to work remotely, your salary
requirements, preferred location,
experience level and
education. If you upload your
resume, employers can fi nd
you as well.
LinkedIn (linkedin.com):
If you donâ€™t have a LinkedIn
account, create one to showcase
your experience, knowledge
and skills. You can gather
news and insights related
to your industry by looking
at what others are posting
and share your content as
well. The site allows you to
conduct job searches and set
alerts for new opportunities.
NEW Solutions (newsolutions.org):
This site connects
professionals aged 55 and
older with part-time and fulltime
positions in government
agencies. Users can browse
openings by state, apply online
and receive guidance
through the hiring process.
Rent A Grandma (rentagrandma.com):
If you want to
work as a nanny, chef, domestic
staff or pet care provider,
this site is a great resource, but
they do charge a $25 registration
fee. It also off ers opportunities
for tutors and personal
assistants. After you sign up,
clients can contact you about
job opportunities.
Retired Brains (retiredbrains.com):
This site can
help you fi nd remote, fl exible,
freelance and workfrom-home
jobs. Youâ€™ll also
be able to access resources
to start a business. You can
search by location, keyword
or job title and access career
advice on resume building
and interview preparation.
RetirementJobs (retirementjobs.com):
This site specializes
in job opportunities
for workers over 50, with retail,
caregiving, transportation,
sales and fi nance listings.
It also features certifi ed agefriendly
employers and off ers
webinars on job searching,
networking and overcoming
age bias. You can learn how to
utilize LinkedIn, improve your
interview skills and understand
how your job could impact
Social Security benefi ts.
Seniors4Hire (seniors4hire.org):
For job seekers
aged 50 and older, at this
site you can register for free,
post your resume and search
for jobs. Employers use the
platform to fi nd experienced
workers for part-time, fulltime
and remote positions.
Workforce50 (workforce50.com):
At this site you
can view jobs specifi cally posted
by companies looking for
older workers. Youâ€™ll also be
able to access resources related
to resume building, shifting
from military to civilian life
and fi nding a federal job.
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.
REAL ESTATE TRANSACTIONS
BUYER1
Delao, Brian
Tashkin, Ipek
Valdez, Veronica Y
BUYER2
Delao, Jennifer Y
Tashkin, Abdulhaq
Mollet, Cele L
SELLER1
Flores, William
Tremblay Mary A Est
Maria Ferrante RET
Huxley, Robert P
Ferrante, Maria E
SELLER2
ADDRESS
91 Pomona St
42 Madison St
266 Reservoir Ave
Revere
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
DATE PRICE
05.06.25 955000
05.09.25 520000
05.05.25 645000
×‰	Ú 7cassandra://yWB6crQQaxMamLdaPPFl_ZECtyLh2hW4UlDt-_3qdRsÍ/ÀÍ`ÌÔÍ ×h8žÅ;3ý×h8žÅ;3ýÍ
ªÍr×‘C’×˜š   ÍUÍru×‰œ“×‰	Ú 7cassandra://LX16h_-LTbYHOnf4_fq36UKDXlFya_B7D64IfdvziJEÎ XiÍ`Í'Íp×‰	Ú 7cassandra://k4QK-PMATqSovjeu9HlwW9S-1kGNmA5XMX2QbdC9N5sÍÎÍ`ÍÍà×‰	Ú 7cassandra://vXXtLMZAYZ7nzetvJukGe_JkTEuKZezvuK2Mq97g-s8Í>¯Í`ÌÔÍ ×h8ž™Å;3ýY×˜š ÍU ÍUÍru×‰œ“×‰	Ú 7cassandra://vxmrEkDh0rplMe6kPaGNdQZjH02Pr-VJHhJX839q-5AÎ EÇÍ`Í'Íp×‰	Ú 7cassandra://EeA1A9k3UOk457LNH2E-dsBoYtbIufclY1X0fP8xcJQÍ»ªÍ`ÍÍà×‰	Ú 7cassandra://gYjx8bdBF0fk_eCRkQrYKpfWbbx_aYTrDRS7rJ83GX8Í6„Í`ÌÔÍ ×h8ž™Å;3ýg’× ×h8ž™Å;3ýl Í=Í,Í9×HÚ !http://Carrijohomeimprovement.com××Ðˆ× ×h8ž™Å;3ýk Í‰ÍÌà9×H¿mailto:DOC-Recrutiment@mass.gov××Ðˆ×‰EÚPage 28
THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, MAY 30, 2025
C B&
Landscaping, Inc.
781-233-0348
* Landscaping Maintenance * Mulch
* Lawn Mowing & Dethatching
* Spring & Fall Clean-ups * Owner-Operated
FREE ESTIMATES * CANDBLANDSCAPINGINC.COM
î€©î•î„î‘îŽ î€¥îˆî•î„î•î‡îŒî‘î’
î€°î€¤ î€¯îŒî†îˆî‘î–îˆ î€–î€”î€›î€”î€”
î‚‡ î€•î€— î€ î€«î’î˜î• î€¶îˆî•î™îŒî†îˆ
î‚‡ î€¨îîˆî•îŠîˆî‘î†îœ î€µîˆî“î„îŒî•î–
î€¥î€¨î€µî€¤î€µî€§î€¬î€±î€²
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—
The Kid Does
Clean Outs
From 1 item to 1,000
* Basements * Homes * Backyards
* Commercial Buildings
The cheapest prices around!
Call Eric: (857) 322-2854
~ School Bus Drivers Wanted ~
7D Licensed School Bus Drivers
Malden Trans is looking for reliable drivers for
the new school year. We provide ongoing training
and support for licensing requirements. Applicant
preferably lives local (Malden, Everett, Revere).
Part-time positions available and based on AM &
PM school hours....15-30 hours per week. Good
driver history from Registry a MUST! If interested,
please call David @ 781-322-9401.
CDL SCHOOL BUS DRIVER WANTED
Compensation: $28/hour
School bus transportation company seeking
active CDL drivers who live LOCALLY (Malden,
Everett, Chelsea and immediate surrounding
communities).
- Applicant MUST have BOTH S and P endorsements
î„î– îšîˆîî î„î– î€°î„î–î–î„î†î‹î˜î–îˆî—î—î– î–î†î‹î’î’î î…î˜î– î†îˆî•î—îŒî‚¿î†î„î—îˆî€‘
Good driver history from Registry a MUST!
- Part-time hours, BUT GUARANTEED 20-35
HOURS PER WEEK depending on experience.
Contact David @ 781-322-9401.
AAA Service â€¢ Lockouts
Trespass Towing â€¢ Roadside Service
Junk Car Removal
617-387-6877
26 Garvey St., Everett
MDPU 28003 ICCMC 251976
ADVOCATE
Call now!
781-286-8500
advertise on the web at
www.advocatenews.net
We follow Social Distancing Guidelines!
î€­î€‘î€© î€‰ î€¶î’î‘ î€¦î’î‘î—î•î„î†î—îŒî‘îŠ
î€¶î‘î’îš î€³îî’îšîŒî‘îŠ
î€±î’ î€­î’î… î—î’î’ î–îî„îîî€„ î€©î•îˆîˆ î€¨î–î—îŒîî„î—îˆî–î€„
î€¦î’îîîˆî•î†îŒî„î î€‰ î€µîˆî–îŒî‡îˆî‘î—îŒî„î
î€šî€›î€”î€î€™î€˜î€™î€î€•î€“î€šî€›
î€ î€³î•î’î“îˆî•î—îœ îî„î‘î„îŠîˆîîˆî‘î— î€‰ îî„îŒî‘î—îˆî‘î„î‘î†îˆ
American Exterior and
Window Corporation
Contact us for all of your
home improvement projects
and necessities.
Call Jeff or Bob
Toll Free: 1-888-744-1756
617-699-1782 / îšîšîšî€‘î„îîˆî•îŒî†î„î‘îˆî›î—îˆî•îŒî’î•îî„î€‘î†î’î
î€ºîŒî‘î‡î’îšî–î€ î€¶îŒî‡îŒî‘îŠî€ î€µî’î’îƒ€î‘îŠî€ î€¦î„î•î“îˆî‘î—î•îœ î€‰ î€°î’î•îˆî€„
All estimates, consultations or inspections completed
î…îœ î€°î€¤ îîŒî†îˆî‘î–îˆî‡ î–î˜î“îˆî•î™îŒî–î’î•î–î€‘ î€î€²î™îˆî• î€˜î€“ îœîˆî„î•î– îˆî›î“îˆî•îŒîˆî‘î†îˆî€‘
î€î€¥îˆî—î—îˆî• î€¥î˜î–îŒî‘îˆî–î– î€¥î˜î•îˆî„î˜ î€°îˆîî…îˆî•î–î‹îŒî“î€‘
Insured and
Registered
Complete Financing Available.
No Money Down.
î€¶î‹î’î™îˆîîŒî‘îŠ î€‰ î•îˆîî’î™î„î
î€¯î„î‘î‡î–î†î„î“îŒî‘îŠî€ î€¨îîˆî†î—î•îŒî†î„îî€ î€³îî˜îî…îŒî‘îŠî€ î€³î„îŒî‘î—îŒî‘îŠî€ î€µî’î’îƒ€î‘îŠî€ î€¦î„î•î“îˆî‘î—î•îœî€ î€©î•î„îîŒî‘îŠî€
î€§îˆî†îŽî–î€ î€©îˆî‘î†îŒî‘îŠî€ î€°î„î–î’î‘î•îœî€ î€§îˆîî’îîŒî—îŒî’î‘î€ î€ªî˜î—î€î’î˜î—î–î€ î€­î˜î‘îŽ î€µîˆîî’î™î„î î€‰ î€§îŒî–î“îˆî•î–î„îî€
î€¦îîˆî„î‘ î€¸î“î–î€ î€¼î„î•î‡î–î€ î€ªî„î•î„îŠîˆî–î€ î€¤î—î—îŒî†î– î€‰ î€¥î„î–îˆîîˆî‘î—î–î€‘ î€·î•î˜î†îŽ î‰î’î• î€«îŒî•îˆî€ î€¥î’î…î†î„î— î€¶îˆî•î™îŒî†îˆî–î€‘
WASTE REMOVAL &
BUILDING MAINTENANCE
â€¢ Landscaping, Lawn Care, Mulching
â€¢ Yard Waste & Rubbish Removal
â€¢ Interior & Exterior Demolition (Old
Decks, Fences, Pools, Sheds, etc.)
â€¢ Appliance and Metal Pick-up
â€¢ Construction and Estate Cleanouts
â€¢ Pick-up Truck Load of Trash
starting at $169
â€¢ Carpentry
LICENSED & INSURED
Call for FREE ESTIMATES!
î€²î‰¤î†îˆî€ î€‹î€šî€›î€”î€Œ î€•î€–î€–î€î€•î€•î€—î€—
Clean-Outs!
We take and dispose
from cellars, attics,
garages, yards, etc.
Call Robert at:
781-844-0472
Classifieds
×‰	Ú 7cassandra://vXXtLMZAYZ7nzetvJukGe_JkTEuKZezvuK2Mq97g-s8Í>¯Í`ÌÔÍ ×h8žÅ;3ý×‰EÚŽTHE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, MAY 30, 2025
Page 29
Our Lady of Lourdes Outdoor Mass
on Sunday, June 15
T
here will be an outdoor
Catholic Mass at the Our
Lady of Lourdes Grotto Park
on Endicott Avenue in Beachmont,
Revere, on Fatherâ€™s Day,
Sunday, June 15 at 10 a.m. â€”
rain or shine. There will be seating,
music and refreshments at
the park following the celebration.
Fr. Leonardo will be the
celebrant.
The Church was closed in
9/1/2004 and after a nine-year
canonical appeal the Church
MASS. DEPT. | FROM Page 22
sachusetts Correction Offi cers
Federated Union and their support
as we work together to increase
our professional workforce.â€
Program
participants will
receive training at the DOCâ€™s
Recruit Academy, exposure
to correctional facility operations,
and mentorship from experienced
professionals. This
initiativeâ€™s goal is to create a
steady pipeline of qualified
and committed individuals
ready to carry out the DOCâ€™s
vital mission and uphold the
highest standards of service.
Eligibly Requirements for
the Correction Offi cer Position:
â€¢ High school diploma, an
equivalency certificate or
served at least three years
in the Armed Forces of the
United States
â€¢ Correction Offi cers hired under
the age of 21 will not be
assigned to posts or duties
that require a fi rearm; however,
any individual hired for
the position must maintain
eligibility to obtain a license
to carry a fi rearm
â€¢ All applicants will undergo
a comprehensive screening
process and enter a 12-week
Recruit Academy upon acceptance
The
DOC is actively recruiting
motivated individuals to
join its dedicated team. The
DOC off ers competitive salaries,
comprehensive benefi ts,
ongoing professional development,
and the opportunity
to make a meaningful diff erence
in the lives of others. Individuals
interested in pursuing
a rewarding career in corrections
are encouraged to
call 1-866-WRK-4DOC, email
was sold in 2014 to the Menebere
Leule Medhane Ethiopan
Orthodox Church Inc. The Outdoor
mass started back on October
2005 and have been celebrating
mass consistently between
the park and a local VFW
and have had at least one mass
each year at least annually since
2014. The park was rededicated
in 2013 as property of Immaculate
to save the park as a catholic
park open to the public
The former parishioners lead
DOC-Recrutiment@mass.gov,
or visit the Departmentâ€™s website
for more information on
career opportunities and upcoming
academy classes.
About the
Massachusetts
Department
of Correction
The Massachusetts Department
of Correction (DOC)
manages the custody, care,
and rehabilitation of approximately
6,000 individuals
Licensed
& Insured
by Carol Smith of OLL still meet
monthly on a Saturday and say
the Rosary
A special â€˜Thank Youâ€™ to all
that are assisting â€” Jim Mercurio,
the Beachmont Improvement
Committee, the City of
Revere and the Mayor and the
Knights of Columbus â€” for
their support, as well as the
media.
What better way to celebrate
Fatherâ€™s Day than at Mass with
the Lord. The Mass is open to all.
across 13 state facilities. The
DOC emphasizes evidencebased
programming, traumainformed
care, and educational
and vocational training to
reduce recidivism and is committed
to fostering accountability,
personal growth, and
successful reentry. Through
partnerships with community
organizations and stakeholders,
the DOC delivers innovative
services tailored to the diverse
needs of incarcerated individuals
while advancing equity,
inclusion, and long-term
public safety.
Free
Estimates
Carpentry * Kitchen & Bath * Roofs * Painting
Decks * Siding * Carrijohomeimprovement.com
Call 781-710-8918 * Saugus, MA
General Contractor * Interior & Exterior
î€´î•î†î‘î” î€´î•îîî‘î” î€³î†îƒî–îŠîî• îî“ î€³î†î‘î‚îŠî“î†î…
î€¤î‰îŠîŽîî†îš î€³î†îƒî–îŠîî• îî“ î€³î†î‘î‚îŠî“î†î…
î€©îî–î”î† î€§îî–îî…î‚î•îŠîî î€­î†î‚îŒî” î€³î†î‘î‚îŠî“î†î…
î€¢îî î€£î‚î”î†îŽî†îî• î€³î†î‘î‚îŠî“î”
î€¤î‰îŠîŽîî†îš î€ªîî”î‘î†î„î•îŠîî
î€³îîî‡îŠîîˆ î€‡ î€´îŠî…îŠîîˆ
î€®î‚î”îîî“îš î€³î†î‘î‚îŠî“î”
î€¸îŠîî…îî˜ î€ªîî”î•î‚îîî‚î•îŠîî î€‡ î€³î†î‘î‚îŠî“î”
î€¥î“îšî˜î‚îî î€‡ î€¤î‚î“î‘î†îî•î“îš
î€¸î‚î•î†î“î‘î“îîî‡îŠîîˆ
FOR RENT - EVERETT
1 & 2 Bedroom Apts. All New -
î€²ï‚‡î€î€¶î—î•îˆîˆî— î€³î„î•îŽîŒî‘îŠ î€ î€¦îˆî‘î—î•î„î î€¤î€¦ î€
î€ªî„î– î€«îˆî„î— î€ î€«î„î•î‡îšî’î’î‡ î€©îî’î’î•î–î€‘
î€ªî’îŒî‘îŠ î€©î„î–î—î€„ î€¦î„îîî€
(617) 839-8954 & leave message
Discount Services
- Raccoons
- Squirrel
Removal
781-269-0914
Discount Tree Service
781-269-0914
Professional
TREE
REMOVAL
& Cleanups
24-HOUR SERVICE
×‰	Ú 7cassandra://gYjx8bdBF0fk_eCRkQrYKpfWbbx_aYTrDRS7rJ83GX8Í6„Í`ÌÔÍ ×h8žÅ;3ý×h8žÅ;3ýÍ
ªÍr×‘C’×˜š   ÍUÍru×‰œ“×‰	Ú 7cassandra://AqT09IdMdyDvMGTgwxGbVthLH5PZdgm4NeQVhaAL-tkÎ -êÍ`Í'Íp×‰	Ú 7cassandra://l8iSZybjd_PiCqF72p5ZG_8lWsjyDZq9VtlMv9D-oSMÍ»Í`ÍÍà×‰	Ú 7cassandra://oG5AqMOwR4TdOYJmu_7EtSVzHh6U3Hs0avCdfnftzFEÍ8¹Í`ÌÔÍ ×h8žšÅ;3ým×˜š ÍU ÍUÍru×‰œ“×‰	Ú 7cassandra://Jsoe3y4yCz15J0JDChwjlysk_i_1o9FTamlHkJhSXHMÎ ¨OÍ`Í'Íp×‰	Ú 7cassandra://zPhylyPyqKcnn1i0Of18dyjLuGG84DFnAD_Q7lhASsIÍ¦DÍ`ÍÍà×‰	Ú 7cassandra://fbh3OFSXRS4gq2x8CcjqejJtxfvWKvtzbYb_YLMKIDEÍ/¾Í`ÌÔÍ ×h8žšÅ;3ýn–× ×h8ž›Å;3ýw Í$Í®ÌÛ9×H¹http://TrinityHomesRE.com××Ðˆ× ×h8ž›Å;3ýv Í€Í2[9×H²http://sulting.com××Ðˆ× ×h8ž›Å;3ýu Í€Í¤Ì„9×H¶http://investments.com××Ðˆ× ×h8ž›Å;3ýt Í‰Í¸s9×H´http://folkdowns.com××Ðˆ× ×h8ž›Å;3ýs Í‰ÌæÌà9×HÚ "http://www.eventbrite.com/cc/thurs××Ðˆ× ×h8ž›Å;3ýr Í¤Ì§ÌÅ9×H¾http://olkdowns.com/blog/thurs××Ðˆ×‰EÚ:Page 30
THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, MAY 30, 2025
î€²î€³î€¨î€± î€«î€²î€¸î€¶î€¨î€¶î€„
î€¼î€²î€¸î€Šî€µî€¨ î€¬î€±î€¹î€¬î€·î€¨î€§î€„ î€¨î€»î€³î€¯î€²î€µî€¨ î€²î€¸î€µ î€±î€¨î€ºî€¨î€¶î€· î€¯î€¬î€¶î€·î€¬î€±î€ª
î€¤î€· î€·î€«î€¨ î€°î€¤î€±î€ªî€² î€µî€¨î€¤î€¯î€·î€¼ î€²î€³î€¨î€± î€«î€²î€¸î€¶î€¨î€‘
î†¤î†¤
î€œ î€¬î€±î€§î€¬î€¤î€± î€µî€²î€¦î€® î€§î€µî€ î€¶î€¤î€¸î€ªî€¸î€¶
î€¦î€¤î€¯î€¯ î€¯î€¨î€¤ î€¤î€· î€™î€”î€šî€î€˜î€œî€—î€î€œî€”î€™î€—
î€²î“îˆî‘ î€«î’î˜î–îˆî€ î€·î‹î˜î•î–î‡î„îœî€ î€°î„îœ î€•î€œî€ î€•î€“î€•î€˜ îŸ î€˜î€î€“î€“ î€³î€° î± î€šî€î€“î€“ î€³î€°
î€ºîˆîî†î’îîˆ î—î’ î—î‹îŒî– î–î—î˜î‘î‘îŒî‘îŠ î–î“îîŒî—î€îˆî‘î—î•îœî€ î—î˜î•î‘î€îŽîˆîœ î‹î’îîˆ îî’î†î„î—îˆî‡ îŒî‘ î—î‹îˆ
î‹îŒîŠî‹îîœ î–î’î˜îŠî‹î—î€î„î‰î—îˆî• î€¬î‘î‡îŒî„î‘ î€µî’î†îŽ î‘îˆîŒîŠî‹î…î’î•î‹î’î’î‡î€„ î€¥î’î„î–î—îŒî‘îŠ î’î™îˆî• î€–î€î€•î€“î€“ î–î”î€‘
î‰î—î€‘ î’î‰ î…îˆî„î˜î—îŒî‰î˜îîîœ î‰îŒî‘îŒî–î‹îˆî‡ îîŒî™îŒî‘îŠ î–î“î„î†îˆî€ î—î‹îŒî– î‹î’îîˆ î‰îˆî„î—î˜î•îˆî– î–î“î„î†îŒî’î˜î–
î…îˆî‡î•î’î’îî–î€ î˜î“î‡î„î—îˆî‡ î…î„î—î‹î•î’î’îî–î€ î„î‘î‡ îŠîˆî‘îˆî•î’î˜î– î†îî’î–îˆî— î–î“î„î†îˆ î—î‹î•î’î˜îŠî‹î’î˜î—î€‘
î€¨î‘îî’îœ î„ îî’î‡îˆî•î‘ îŽîŒî—î†î‹îˆî‘î€ î„ î…î•î„î‘î‡ î‘îˆîš îî’îšîˆî•î€îîˆî™îˆî îŽîŒî—î†î‹îˆî‘îˆî—î—îˆ îšîŒî—î‹ î‹îŒîŠî‹î€
îˆî‘î‡ î‰îŒî‘îŒî–î‹îˆî–î€ î„î‘î‡ î„ î†î’îîœ î€–î€î–îˆî„î–î’î‘ î“î’î•î†î‹î€ î“îˆî•î‰îˆî†î— î‰î’î• îˆî‘î—îˆî•î—î„îŒî‘îŒî‘îŠ îœîˆî„î•î€
î•î’î˜î‘î‡î€‘ î€·î‹îˆ îî˜î›î˜î•îŒî’î˜î– î“î•îŒîî„î•îœ î–î˜îŒî—îˆ î’î‰î‰îˆî•î– î™î„î˜îî—îˆî‡ î†îˆîŒîîŒî‘îŠî–î€ î‡î˜î„î î†îî’î–îˆî—î–î€
î„î‘î‡ î„ î–î“î„î€îîŒîŽîˆ îˆî‘î–î˜îŒî—îˆ î…î„î—î‹î€‘ î€¶îŒî—î—îŒî‘îŠ î’î‘ î„ î“î•îŒîîˆ î†î’î•î‘îˆî• îî’î—î€ î—î‹îˆ î…î„î†îŽîœî„î•î‡
îŒî– î„ î–î‹î’îšî–î—î’î“î“îˆî• îšîŒî—î‹ î„ î‹îˆî„î—îˆî‡ î–î„îî—îšî„î—îˆî• îŒî‘î€îŠî•î’î˜î‘î‡ î“î’î’îî€ î„ î‘îˆîš
îŠî„îîˆî…î’î€ î„î‘î‡ î„îî“îîˆ î–î“î„î†îˆ î‰î’î• î’î˜î—î‡î’î’î• îˆî‘îî’îœîîˆî‘î—î€‘ î€¤ î—îšî’î€î†î„î• îŠî„î•î„îŠîˆî€
îî˜îî—îŒî“îîˆ î‹îˆî„î—îŒî‘îŠ îî’î‘îˆî–î€ î„î‘î‡ î„ î‰îŒî‘îŒî–î‹îˆî‡ îî’îšîˆî• îîˆî™îˆî î“î•î’î™îŒî‡îˆ îŒî‡îˆî„î
î‰îîˆî›îŒî…îŒîîŒî—îœ î‰î’î• îˆî›î—îˆî‘î‡îˆî‡ î‰î„îîŒîîœî€ î„ î‹î’îîˆ î’î‰î‰îŒî†îˆî€ î’î• îŠîœîî€‘ î€¤îî î—î‹îŒî–î€ îŒî‘ î’î‘îˆ î’î‰
î€¶î„î˜îŠî˜î–î€Š îî’î–î— î‡îˆî–îŒî•î„î…îîˆ î†î’îîî˜î‘îŒî—îŒîˆî–î€ î„ î—î•î˜îˆ î†î’îîî˜î—îˆî•î€Šî– î‡î•îˆî„îî€„ î€§î’î‘î€Šî—
îîŒî–î– îœî’î˜î• î†î‹î„î‘î†îˆ î—î’ î—î’î˜î• î—î‹îŒî– îˆî›î†îˆî“î—îŒî’î‘î„î î“î•î’î“îˆî•î—îœî€‘ î€©î’î• îî’î•îˆ
îŒî‘î‰î’î•îî„î—îŒî’î‘î€ î†î’î‘î—î„î†î— î€¯îˆî„ î„î— î€™î€”î€šî€î€˜î€œî€—î€î€œî€”î€™î€—
î€‡î€”î€î€˜î€“î€“î€’îî’î‘î—î‹
î€±îˆîš î€¦î’îîîˆî•î†îŒî„î î€µîˆî‘î—î„îî– î‰î•î’î î€°î„î‘îŠî’
î€µîˆî„îî—îœ î± î€¶î„î˜îŠî˜î– î€‰ î€µî’î†îŽî“î’î•î—
î€¥î’î’î–î— î€¼î’î˜î• î€¥î˜î–îŒî‘îˆî–î– îŒî‘ î€³î•îŒîîˆ î€¯î’î†î„î—îŒî’î‘î–î€„
î€§îŒî–î†î’î™îˆî• î‹îŒîŠî‹î€î™îŒî–îŒî…îŒîîŒî—îœ î†î’îîîˆî•î†îŒî„î î–î“î„î†îˆî– î‘î’îš î„î™î„îŒîî„î…îîˆ îŒî‘ î€¶î„î˜îŠî˜î–
î„î‘î‡ î€µî’î†îŽî“î’î•î—î€ î…î•î’î˜îŠî‹î— î—î’ îœî’î˜ î…îœ î€°î„î‘îŠî’ î€µîˆî„îî—îœî€‘ î€·î‹îˆî–îˆ î™îˆî•î–î„î—îŒîîˆ
î“î•î’î“îˆî•î—îŒîˆî– î„î•îˆ îŒî‡îˆî„î î‰î’î• î•îˆî—î„îŒîî€ î’î‰î‰îŒî†îˆî€ î’î• î„ î™î„î•îŒîˆî—îœ î’î‰ î†î’îîîˆî•î†îŒî„î î˜î–îˆî–î€
î“îˆî•î‰îˆî†î— î‰î’î• î—î„îŽîŒî‘îŠ îœî’î˜î• î…î˜î–îŒî‘îˆî–î– î—î’ î—î‹îˆ î‘îˆî›î— îîˆî™îˆîî€‘ î€¶î„î˜îŠî˜î–î€ î€¯î’î†î„î—îˆî‡ îŒî‘
î„ î‹îŒîŠî‹î€î—î•î„î‰î‰îŒî† î„î•îˆî„ îšîŒî—î‹ îˆî„î–îœ î„î†î†îˆî–î– î—î’ îî„îî’î• î‹îŒîŠî‹îšî„îœî–î€ î–î‹î’î“î“îŒî‘îŠ
î†îˆî‘î—îˆî•î–î€ î„î‘î‡ îî’î†î„î î„îîˆî‘îŒî—îŒîˆî–î€‘ î€µî’î†îŽî“î’î•î—î€ î€¤ î†î‹î„î•îîŒî‘îŠ î†î’î„î–î—î„î î—î’îšî‘
î–îˆî—î—îŒî‘îŠî€ îŒî‡îˆî„î î‰î’î• î…î’î˜î—îŒî”î˜îˆ î…î˜î–îŒî‘îˆî–î–îˆî– î„î‘î‡ î“î•î’î‰îˆî–î–îŒî’î‘î„î î–îˆî•î™îŒî†îˆî–î€‘
î€§î’î‘î€Šî— îîŒî–î– î—î‹îˆ î’î“î“î’î•î—î˜î‘îŒî—îœ î—î’ îŠî•î’îš îœî’î˜î• î…î˜î–îŒî‘îˆî–î– îŒî‘ î—î‹îˆî–îˆ î–î’î˜îŠî‹î—î€î„î‰î—îˆî•
îî’î†î„î—îŒî’î‘î–î€„ î€¦î’î‘î—î„î†î— î€°î„î‘îŠî’ î€µîˆî„îî—îœ î—î’î‡î„îœ î—î’ î–î†î‹îˆî‡î˜îîˆ î„ î“î•îŒî™î„î—îˆ î—î’î˜î• î’î•
îîˆî„î•î‘ îî’î•îˆ î„î…î’î˜î— î†î˜î•î•îˆî‘î— î„î™î„îŒîî„î…îŒîîŒî—îœî€‘
î€–î€—î€˜ î€¦îˆî‘î—î•î„îî€ î€¶î„î˜îŠî˜î– î€°î€¤
î€­î˜î–î— î€‡î€”î€î€˜î€“î€“î€’î€°î’î‘î—î‹î€„ î€¹îˆî•î–î„î—îŒîîˆ î€œî€“î€“ î–î”î€‘ î‰î—î€‘ î’î‰î‰îŒî†îˆî€’î•îˆî—î„îŒî î–î“î„î†îˆ
îŒî‘ î„ î‹îŒîŠî‹î€î™îŒî–îŒî…îŒîîŒî—îœ î€¶î„î˜îŠî˜î– î€¦îˆî‘î—îˆî• îî’î†î„î—îŒî’î‘î€„ î€¬î‘î†îî˜î‡îˆî– î€˜î€˜î€“ î–î”î€‘
î‰î—î€‘ î–î—î•îˆîˆî—î€îîˆî™îˆî î–î—î’î•îˆî‰î•î’î‘î— î„î‘î‡ î€–î€˜î€“ î–î”î€‘ î‰î—î€‘ î‰îŒî‘îŒî–î‹îˆî‡ î…î„î–îˆîîˆî‘î—î€
îŒî‡îˆî„î î‰î’î• î“î•î’î‰îˆî–î–îŒî’î‘î„îî– î’î• î–îî„îî î…î˜î–îŒî‘îˆî–î–îˆî– î–î˜î†î‹ î„î– îî„îš
î‰îŒî•îî–î€ î„î†î†î’î˜î‘î—î„î‘î—î–î€ î–î„îî’î‘î–î€ î’î• î‰îŒî—î‘îˆî–î– î–î—î˜î‡îŒî’î–î€‘ î€¤î‰î‰î’î•î‡î„î…îîˆ
îîˆî„î–îˆ î—îˆî•îî–î€ î€©îŒî•î–î— îî’î‘î—î‹î€ î–îˆî†î˜î•îŒî—îœ î‡îˆî“î’î–îŒî—î€ î„î‘î‡ î’î‘îˆî€îî’î‘î—î‹
î…î•î’îŽîˆî• î‰îˆîˆî€‘ î€·îˆî‘î„î‘î— î“î„îœî– îˆîîˆî†î—î•îŒî†î€‘ î€²îšî‘îˆî• î†î’î™îˆî•î– îšî„î—îˆî•î€
î–îˆîšîˆî•î€ î—î„î›îˆî–î€ î„î‘î‡ îˆî›î—îˆî•îŒî’î• îî„îŒî‘î—îˆî‘î„î‘î†îˆî€‘ î€¦î„îî î€³îˆî—îˆî• î„î— î€šî€›î€”î€
î€›î€•î€“î€î€˜î€™î€œî€“ î—î’ î–î†î‹îˆî‡î˜îîˆ îœî’î˜î• î–î‹î’îšîŒî‘îŠ î—î’î‡î„îœî€„
î€‡î€”î€î€•î€“î€“î€’îî’î‘î—î‹
î€—î€•î€“ î€¯îŒî‘î†î’îî‘ î€¤î™îˆî‘î˜îˆî€ î€¶î„î˜îŠî˜î– î€°î€¤
î€¦îîŒî‰î—î’î‘î‡î„îîˆ î€¶î”î˜î„î•îˆ î± î€²î‰î‰îŒî†îˆ î€¶î“î„î†îˆ î‰î’î• î€µîˆî‘î—î€‘ î€¤î—î—î•î„î†î—îŒî™îˆ î€•î‘î‡î€
î‰îî’î’î• î’î‰î‰îŒî†îˆ îšîŒî—î‹ î€— î–î“î„î†îŒî’î˜î– î•î’î’îî–î€ î“î•îŒî™î„î—îˆ î…î„î—î‹î•î’î’îî€ î„î‘î‡
î’î‘î€’î’î‰î‰î€î–î—î•îˆîˆî— î“î„î•îŽîŒî‘îŠî€‘ î€³îˆî•î‰îˆî†î— î‰î’î• î“î•î’î‰îˆî–î–îŒî’î‘î„îî–î‚‹îî„îšîœîˆî•î–î€
î„î†î†î’î˜î‘î—î„î‘î—î–î€ î‡î’î†î—î’î•î–î€ î„î•î†î‹îŒî—îˆî†î—î–î€ î„î‘î‡ îî’î•îˆî€‘ î€²î‘îîœ
î€‡î€”î€î€•î€“î€“î€’îî’î‘î—î‹î€‘ î€©îîˆî›îŒî…îîˆ îîˆî„î–îˆ î€‹îî’î‘î—î‹î€î—î’î€îî’î‘î—î‹ î’î• îœîˆî„î•îîœî€Œ îšîŒî—î‹
î‘î’ î–îˆî†î˜î•îŒî—îœ î‡îˆî“î’î–îŒî—î€‘ î€­î˜î–î— î€‡î€•î€î€“î€“î€“ î—î’ îî’î™îˆ îŒî‘ î€‹îŒî‘î†îî˜î‡îˆî– î‰îŒî•î–î—
îî’î‘î—î‹ î€‰ î…î„î†îŽîŠî•î’î˜î‘î‡ î†î‹îˆî†îŽî€Œî€‘ î€¦î„îî î€³îˆî—îˆî• î„î— î€šî€›î€”î€î€›î€•î€“î€î€˜î€™î€œî€“ î±
î€§î’î‘î€Šî— îîŒî–î– î’î˜î—î€„
î€‡î€”î€î€–î€“î€“î€’îî’î‘î—î‹
î€–î€“ î€°î„îŒî‘ î€¶î—î•îˆîˆî—î€ î€µî’î†îŽî“î’î•î— î€°î€¤
î€³î•îŒîîˆ î€µî’î†îŽî“î’î•î— î€¦î’îîîˆî•î†îŒî„î î€¶î“î„î†îˆ î± î€µî„î•îˆ î€²î“î“î’î•î—î˜î‘îŒî—îœî€„
î€²î‰î‰îˆî•îˆî‡ î‰î’î• î—î‹îˆ î‰îŒî•î–î— î—îŒîîˆ îŒî‘ î€•î€“ îœîˆî„î•î–î€„ î€¯î’î†î„î—îˆî‡ îŒî‘ î—î‹îˆ î‹îˆî„î•î— î’î‰
î€µî’î†îŽî“î’î•î—î€Šî– î€¦î˜îî—î˜î•î„î î€§îŒî–î—î•îŒî†î—î€ î—î‹îŒî– î…îˆî„î˜î—îŒî‰î˜îîîœ î˜î“î‡î„î—îˆî‡ î–î“î„î†îˆ îŒî–
îŒî‡îˆî„î î‰î’î• î„ î…î’î˜î—îŒî”î˜îˆî€ îŠî„îîîˆî•îœî€ î’î• î’î‰î‰îŒî†îˆî€‘ î€¶î—îˆî“î– î‰î•î’î î€©î•î’î‘î— î€¥îˆî„î†î‹ î€‰
î€¶î‹î„îîŒî‘ î€¯îŒî˜î€ îšîŒî—î‹ î‹îŒîŠî‹ î‰î’î’î— î—î•î„î‰î‰îŒî† î„î‘î‡ îˆî›î†îˆî“î—îŒî’î‘î„î î™îŒî–îŒî…îŒîîŒî—îœî€‘
î€©îˆî„î—î˜î•îˆî–î€ î‰î•îˆî–î‹ î“î„îŒî‘î—î€ î‘îˆîš î‰îî’î’î•îŒî‘îŠî€ î“îˆîîîˆî— î–î—î’î™îˆî€ î˜î“î‡î„î—îˆî‡
î…î„î—î‹î•î’î’îî€ î‰î˜î•î‘îŒî–î‹îˆî‡ îšîŒî—î‹ î‡îˆî–îŽî€ î†î‹î„îŒî•î€ î‡îŒî–î“îî„îœ î†î„î…îŒî‘îˆî—î–î€ î€«î€§ î€·î€¹î€
î—î•î„î†îŽ îîŒîŠî‹î—îŒî‘îŠî€ î„î•î— î‹î„î‘îŠîŒî‘îŠ î–îœî–î—îˆî î€‰ î€¤î€’î€¦î€‘ î€§î’î‘î€Šî— îîŒî–î– î’î˜î— î± î†î„îî
î€­îˆî„î‘îŒî‘îˆ î„î— î€™î€”î€šî€î€–î€”î€•î€î€•î€—î€œî€” î—î’î‡î„îœî€„
î€¥îˆî‹îŒî‘î‡ îˆî™îˆî•îœ î–î˜î†î†îˆî–î– î–î—î’î•îœ î„î— î€°î„î‘îŠî’ î€µîˆî„îî—îœ îŒî– î„ î—îˆî„î î’î‰
î“î„î–î–îŒî’î‘î„î—îˆî€ îŽî‘î’îšîîˆî‡îŠîˆî„î…îîˆî€ î„î‘î‡ î‹î„î•î‡îšî’î•îŽîŒî‘îŠ î•îˆî„î îˆî–î—î„î—îˆ
î“î•î’î‰îˆî–î–îŒî’î‘î„îî–î€‘ î€²î˜î• î„îŠîˆî‘î—î– î„î•îˆ îŽî‘î’îšî‘ î‘î’î— î’î‘îîœ î‰î’î• î—î‹îˆîŒî• îî„î•îŽîˆî—
îˆî›î“îˆî•î—îŒî–îˆ î…î˜î— î‰î’î• î—î‹îˆîŒî• î˜î‘îšî„î™îˆî•îŒî‘îŠ î‡îˆî‡îŒî†î„î—îŒî’î‘ î—î’ î’î˜î• î†îîŒîˆî‘î—î–î€Š îŠî’î„îî–î€‘
î€·î’îŠîˆî—î‹îˆî•î€ îšîˆ î‰î’î•î î„ î†î’îîî„î…î’î•î„î—îŒî™îˆ î“î’îšîˆî•î‹î’î˜î–îˆî€ î„îîšî„îœî– î•îˆî„î‡îœ î—î’ îŠî’
î—î‹îˆ îˆî›î—î•î„ îîŒîîˆî€‘ î€¦î’î‘î‘îˆî†î— îšîŒî—î‹ î˜î– î—î’î‡î„îœ î„î‘î‡ îˆî›î“îˆî•îŒîˆî‘î†îˆ î—î‹îˆ î€°î„î‘îŠî’
î‡îŒî‰î‰îˆî•îˆî‘î†îˆî€„
î€¶î€¸î€¨ î€³î€¤î€¯î€²î€°î€¥î€¤
î€™î€”î€šî€î€›î€šî€šî€î€—î€˜î€˜î€–
î€¦î€¨î€² î€²î€© î€°î€¤î€±î€ªî€² î€µî€¨î€¤î€¯î€·î€¼
î€—î€˜ î€³î€µî€¬î€±î€¦î€¨î€·î€²î€± î€µî€§ î€°î€¤î€¯î€§î€¨î€±î€ î€°î€¤
î€²î“îˆî‘ î€«î’î˜î–îˆî€ î€¶î„î—î˜î•î‡î„îœî€ î€°î„îœ î€–î€” îŸ î€”î€”î€î€“î€“ î€¤î€° î± î€”î€î€“î€“ î€³î€°
î€¶î˜î‘î‡î„îœî€ î€­î˜î‘îˆ î€” îŸ î€”î€•î€î€“î€“ î€³î€° î± î€”î€î€“î€“ î€³î€°
î€³î•îŒîîˆ î€·îšî’î€î€©î„îîŒîîœ î€«î’îîˆ îŒî‘ î€°î„îî‡îˆî‘ î± î€¤ î€µî„î•îˆ î€²î“î“î’î•î—î˜î‘îŒî—îœî€„
î€«îˆî•îˆî€Šî– îœî’î˜î• î†î‹î„î‘î†îˆ î—î’ î’îšî‘ î„ î…îˆî„î˜î—îŒî‰î˜îîîœ îî„îŒî‘î—î„îŒî‘îˆî‡ î—îšî’î€î‰î„îîŒîîœ î‹î’îîˆ îŒî‘
î’î‘îˆ î’î‰ î€°î„îî‡îˆî‘î€Šî– îî’î–î— î–î’î˜îŠî‹î—î€î„î‰î—îˆî• î‘îˆîŒîŠî‹î…î’î•î‹î’î’î‡î–î€„ î€³î•î’î˜î‡îîœ î†î„î•îˆî‡ î‰î’î•
î…îœ î—î‹îˆ î–î„îîˆ î‰î„îîŒîîœ î‰î’î• î‡îˆî†î„î‡îˆî–î€ î—î‹îŒî– î™îˆî•î–î„î—îŒîîˆ î“î•î’î“îˆî•î—îœ îŒî– îî’î™îˆî€îŒî‘
î•îˆî„î‡îœ î„î‘î‡ îŒî‡îˆî„î î‰î’î• îŒî‘î™îˆî–î—î’î•î–î€ îî˜îî—îŒî€îŠîˆî‘îˆî•î„î—îŒî’î‘î„î îîŒî™îŒî‘îŠî€ î’î• î•îˆî‘î—î„î
îŒî‘î†î’îîˆî€‘ î€¨î„î†î‹ î˜î‘îŒî— î‰îˆî„î—î˜î•îˆî– î˜î“î‡î„î—îˆî‡ îŽîŒî—î†î‹îˆî‘î– î„î‘î‡ î…î„î—î‹î–î€ îî’î‡îˆî•î‘
î‰îî’î’î•îŒî‘îŠî€ î–î—î„îŒî‘îîˆî–î– î–î—îˆîˆî î„î“î“îîŒî„î‘î†îˆî–î€ î„î‘î‡ îŒî‘î€î˜î‘îŒî— îî„î˜î‘î‡î•îœî€‘ î€¨î‘îî’îœ î•îˆîî„î›îŒî‘îŠ
î’î‘ î—î‹îˆ îšîˆîî†î’îîŒî‘îŠ î‰î„î•îîˆî•î€Šî– î“î’î•î†î‹ î’î• îˆî‘î—îˆî•î—î„îŒî‘îŒî‘îŠ î’î‘ î—î‹îˆ î–î“î„î†îŒî’î˜î– î•îˆî„î•
î‡îˆî†îŽî–î€‘ î€³îˆî•î‰îˆî†î—îîœ î–îŒî—î˜î„î—îˆî‡ î‘îˆî„î• î‡î’îšî‘î—î’îšî‘ î€°î„îî‡îˆî‘ î„î‘î‡ î€°îˆîî•î’î–îˆ îšîŒî—î‹
îˆî„î–îœ î„î†î†îˆî–î– î—î’ î–î†î‹î’î’îî–î€ î–î‹î’î“î“îŒî‘îŠî€ î„î‘î‡ î“î˜î…îîŒî† î—î•î„î‘î–î“î’î•î—î„î—îŒî’î‘î€ î—î‹îŒî– î‹î’îîˆ
î†î’îî…îŒî‘îˆî– î†î’îî‰î’î•î—î€ î™î„îî˜îˆî€ î„î‘î‡ î“î•îŒîîˆ îî’î†î„î—îŒî’î‘î€‘ î€¦î„îî î€³îˆî—îˆî• î„î— î€šî€›î€”î€î€›î€•î€“î€
î€˜î€™î€œî€“ î—î’î‡î„îœ î‰î’î• îî’î•îˆ î‡îˆî—î„îŒîî–î€‘ î€§î’î‘î€Šî— îîˆî— î—î‹îŒî– îŒî‘î†î•îˆî‡îŒî…îîˆ î’î“î“î’î•î—î˜î‘îŒî—îœ î“î„î–î–
îœî’î˜ î…îœî€„
î€¦î€²î€±î€·î€¤î€¦î€· î€¸î€¶ î€©î€²î€µ î€¤ î€©î€µî€¨î€¨ î€¦î€²î€°î€³î€¤î€µî€¤î€·î€¬î€¹î€¨ î€°î€¤î€µî€®î€¨î€·
î€¤î€±î€¤î€¯î€¼î€¶î€¬î€¶ î€²î€© î€¼î€²î€¸î€µ î€³î€²î€µî€³î€¨î€µî€·î€¼ î€·î€²î€§î€¤î€¼
î€¦î„îîî€ î€‹î€šî€›î€”î€Œ î€˜î€˜î€›î€î€”î€“î€œî€”
î€·îˆî›î—î€ î€‹î€™î€”î€šî€Œ î€›î€šî€šî€î€—î€˜î€˜î€–
îŒî‘î‰î’îšîŒî—î‹îî„î‘îŠî’î€£îŠîî„îŒîî€‘î†î’î
î€ºîˆ îšîˆîî†î’îîˆ îœî’î˜ î—î’ î™îŒî–îŒî— î’î˜î• î’î‰î‰îŒî†îˆî–
î€–î€› î€°î„îŒî‘ î€¶î— î€¶î„î˜îŠî˜î– î€°î€¤ î€“î€”î€œî€“î€™
î€˜î€™î€– î€¥î•î’î„î‡îšî„îœ î€¨î™îˆî•îˆî—î—î€ î€°î€¤ î€“î€•î€”î€—î€œ
î€–î€• î€°î„îŒî‘ î€¶î—î•îˆîˆî— î€µî’î†îŽî“î’î•î—î€ î€°î€¤ î€“î€”î€œî€™î€™
î€³îˆî—îˆî• î€°î„î‘î’î’îŠîŒî„î‘
î€‹î€™î€”î€šî€Œ î€–î€›î€šî€î€™î€—î€–î€•
î€¯î€¨î€¤ î€§î€²î€«î€¨î€µî€·î€¼
î€™î€”î€šî€î€˜î€œî€—î€î€œî€”î€™î€—
î€°î€¤î€µî€¬î€¨ î€µî€¬î€¦î€«î€¨î€°î€²î€±î€§
î€™î€“î€œî€î€˜î€˜î€–î€î€šî€—î€•î€š
î€­î€¨î€¤î€±î€¬î€±î€¨ î€°î€²î€¸î€¯î€§î€¨î€±
î€™î€”î€šî€î€–î€”î€•î€î€•î€—î€œî€”
î€µî€²î€¶î€¤ î€µî€¨î€¶î€¦î€¬î€ªî€±î€²
î€šî€›î€”î€î€›î€•î€“î€î€“î€“î€œî€™
î€¦î€¤î€µî€¯ î€ªî€µî€¨î€¨î€±î€¯î€¨î€µ
î€šî€›î€”î€î€™î€œî€“î€î€”î€–î€“î€š
î€µîˆî„î î€¨î–î—î„î—îˆ î€¥î•î’îŽîˆî•
î€±î€²î€µî€°î€¤ î€³î€¤î€µî€½î€¬î€¤î€¯î€¨
î€™î€”î€šî€î€˜î€œî€“î€î€œî€”î€—î€–
î€µî€²î€¶î€¨ î€¦î€¬î€¤î€°î€³î€¬
î€™î€”î€šî€î€œî€˜î€šî€î€œî€•î€•î€•
î€µîˆî„î î€¨î–î—î„î—îˆ î€¥î•î’îŽîˆî•
î€µî’î‘ î€¹îŒî–î†î’î‘î—îŒ
î€‹î€™î€”î€šî€Œ î€–î€›î€šî€î€™î€—î€–î€•
î€¦î€«î€µî€¬î€¶î€·î€¬î€±î€¨ î€§î€¨î€¶î€²î€¸î€¶î€¤
î€™î€“î€–î€î€™î€šî€“î€î€–î€–î€˜î€–
î€­î’îˆ î€§îŒî‘î˜îîî’
î€™î€”î€šî€î€™î€›î€“î€î€šî€™î€”î€“
×‰	Ú 7cassandra://oG5AqMOwR4TdOYJmu_7EtSVzHh6U3Hs0avCdfnftzFEÍ8¹Í`ÌÔÍ ×h8žÅ;3ý×‰EÚ'SUFFOLK DOWNS |
FROM Page 15
Square,â€ said Mayor Patrick M.
Keefe, Jr. â€œThese events refl ect
the welcoming, vibrant spirit
of Revere, and we look forward
to seeing our community
come together to enjoy them
all summer long.â€
â€œWeâ€™re thrilled to help bring
Thursday Nights @ The Yard
to life this summer,â€ said Wicked
Fun Consulting Owner Jessica
Feroli. â€œThese events are
all about celebrating local talent
and creating space for connection
within the community.
Our goal is to create welcoming,
energetic events where
people can come together,
discover something new, have
fun, and enjoy all that Revere
and Beachmont Square has
to off er. Whether youâ€™re dancing,
dining, or just hanging out
with friendsâ€”two- or fourleggedâ€”we
hope these nights
become a weekly favorite.â€
Every Thursday night event
is free to attend. Walk-ups are
welcome; however, registration
for all Thursday nights
will be encouraged so keep an
eye out for updates on weekly
lineups and themes.
The full schedule of events
THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, MAY 30, 2025
About The HYM
Page 31
with more information about
each weekâ€™s evolving offerings
is available at https://atsuff
olkdowns.com/blog/thursday-nights-the-yard/.
Registration
is available at https://
www.eventbrite.com/cc/thursday-nights-the-yard-4319053?
utm-campaign=social&utmcontent=creatorshare&utmmedium=discovery&utmterm=odclsxcollection&utmsource=cp&aff
=escb For more
information on The Yard @
Beachmont Square and Suffolk
Downs, please visit atsuffolkdowns.com.
About
Suffolk Downs
In 2017, Suffolk Downs,
which is located in both East
Boston and Revere along two
MBTA Blue Line Stops, was
purchased by HYM and its investors
with a vision to create
a welcoming neighborhood
designed around new ways of
living and working. Today, the
161-acre site at Suff olk Downs
is being reborn as a new urban
district with a dynamic mix of
uses and off erings connected
and supported by public open
space, neighborhood retail,
and civic spaces.
Investment Group, LLC
HYM is a premier development
company that is
leading the development of
more than 20 million square
feet of real estate throughout
Greater Boston. The
company creates mixed-use
communities that strive to
push the needle on sustainability,
creativity and technology
for a more productive
and resilient future. For
more info, access www.hyminvestments.com
About
Wicked Fun
Consulting, LLC
Wicked Fun Consulting is a
creative agency that brings
bold ideas to life through
dynamic activations, experiences
and community-driven
events. The agency collaborates
with local businesses,
brands, nonprofit
organizations, real estate
developers and proper ty
owners to create meaningful
connections and lasting
impressions. For more info,
access www.wickedfunconsulting.com
TRINITY
REAL ESTATE
321 MAIN STREET | SAUGUS, MA | VILLAGE PARK
TrinityHomesRE.com
36 Essex Street, 3, Saugus -List Price: $339,000
Move-in ready 2-bedroom condo in the heart of Cliftondale
Square! Enjoy an updated kitchen boasting cherry cabinets,
granite counters, ceramic tile back splash, stainless
appliances, breakfast bar and hardwood flooring, open to a
sunny living room with slider to your private balcony. Freshly
painted, new carpeting, wall a/c, deeded parking, laundry
room in building, low condo fee includes heat & hot water.
Listing Agent: Lori Johnson
o fee
781.718.7409
14 Aaron Street, Melrose
List Price: $649,000
Nestled on a quiet residential street in Melrose, this oldstyle
9 room, 5 bedroom, 2 full bathroom Colonial has been
in the same family for many years and is ready for its next
chapter. A great opportunity for buyers looking to restore
and personalize this property located in a desirable
community.
Listing Agent: Lucia Ponte
e
781.883.8130
101 Waite Street, A7, Malden
List Price: $259,999
Fantastic opportunity for investors or homeowners
looking to build instant sweat equity!
This spacious 1-bedroom condo features large living
room, dining area and lots of closets! Incredible
potential! Enjoy common laundry room on same floor, a
deeded parking space, and plenty of on-street parking.
Listing Agent: Diane Horrigan
781.526.6357
781.231.9800
332 Lynnfield Street, Lynn
List Price: $499,900
This Ranch style home features 2 spacious bedrooms, 1 full bath, and
hardwood floors throughout. Convenient to schools, commuter
routes, shopping, and Lynn/Swampscott beaches. Great home for first
time home buyers, or if you are looking to down size. Also, superb
condo alternative. Come bring your ideas to personalize this home or
do nothing but unpack and enjoy!
Listing Agent: Lucia Ponte
781.883.8130
New Listing: 2 Inwood Drive, 3003, Woburn -List Price: $839,900
Must see lovely 3-bedroom condominium at Deerpoint
Condominiums featuring high ceilings and open floor plan that creates
a spacious airy feel throughout.. Enjoy a cozy fireplace, in-unit
laundry. and gourmet kitchen boasting stainless steel appliances and
an oversized island, perfect for entertaining. 3rd bedroom currently
being used as gym Additional highlights include a 2-car garage, 2
storage units.
Listing Agent: Annemarie Torciva
781.983.5266
21 Wormwood Street, U220, Boston-List Price: $839,000
Grand brick and beam loft in the iconic Fort Point Place. #220
affords a wide-open concept space complete with oversized windows
and high 11-foot ceilings. With maple wood floors throughout, the
spacious living room and bedroom area flow seamlessly into the
dining room and kitchen. Washer and dryer hookup in the
bathroom. Parking space is a double wide space big enough to fit 2
cars. Enjoy quick access to major highways, public transportation,
shopping, restaurants and the vibrant seaport district.
Listing Agent, Broker/Owner: Ronnie Puzon
917.992.3689
9
Providing Real Estate Services for Nearly Two Decades
Servicing Saugus, Melrose, Wakefield, Malden, all North Shore communities, Boston and Beyond.
î€©î’îîî’îš î€¸î–
×‰	Ú 7cassandra://fbh3OFSXRS4gq2x8CcjqejJtxfvWKvtzbYb_YLMKIDEÍ/¾Í`ÌÔÍ ×h8žÅ;3ý×h8žÅ;3ýÍ
ªÍr×‘C‘×˜š   ÍUÍru×‰œ“×‰	Ú 7cassandra://IezuUCbxdrUK1NIsLSiAyZp23aC5VOd8eYDRNkCiQpMÎ 4ÝÍ`Í'Íp×‰	Ú 7cassandra://eAu2aqtNiqCJCwP9vpzlaBU_42Avj16JB-v2cGAVd_UÍ£zÍ`ÍÍà×‰	Ú 7cassandra://Rp9RhgrgQUQEhbllqUxnB9_FMqprtImTj7vY_nTDzAUÍ36Í`ÌÔÍ ×h8ž›Å;3ýp×‰EÚ 5Page 32
THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, MAY 30, 2025
×‰	Ú 7cassandra://Rp9RhgrgQUQEhbllqUxnB9_FMqprtImTj7vY_nTDzAUÍ36Í`ÌÔÍ ×h8žÅ;3ý×ˆE×h8žÅ;3ý×h8žÅ;3ýÍ
ªÍr,ºRevere Advocate 05/30/2025ºRevere Advocate 05/30/2025×h8žŒ8²Q,$,†¡