׉?4ׁB!בCט ( (u׉׉	 7cassandra://HFXE4bkwdAA44_Y2uq9E1rXp05TTm1aKjzWoOWRF4NQ `)׉	 7cassandra://FcyADR9eeGCg_EclQbyDYTK5eGy3aF3o-UddEMCcTnY͟`J׉	 7cassandra://t3lMJy-Wo3LK3bM3snUVcDSMSoYqh8_jupJMXEmEEuI1`̰ eA4=נeA4=	 <̿9ׁHhttp://www.advocatenews.netׁׁЈ׈EeA3=׉EMaldden
alld
a
Vol. 33, No. 6
den
-FREEYour
Local News & Sports Online in 6 Languages! Subscribe Here!
AADD
Advocate Staff Report
S
ome of the most well-known
and appreciated contributors
to the sport of Baseball
in the city of Malden will soon
get their due honors. The Inaugural
Class of the new Malden
Baseball LEGACY Hall of Fame
is being announced today for
the fi rst time in the Malden Advocate.
All
those who want to share
in honoring these inaugural
honorees are welcome and invited
to attend the First Annual
Malden Baseball LEGACY Hall
INAUGURAL| SEE PAGE 9
Deano Summers with his sons, Jacky (left) and Nick, circa 1995
(Courtesy Photo)
4-PEAT! Malden High swim wins 4th straight
GBL Championship by topping Revere
Santos, Tran, Xu, Yip and Relay Teams rally Tornados,
clinching title with 88-79 win on road
CTE
CAT
AT
www.advocatenews.net
Published Every Friday
Malden Baseball LEGACY Hall of
Fame announced Inaugural 2024
Inductees for March 7 banquet
Bob Rotondi is Legacy Selection; other inductees Shawn
Brickman, Joe Caraco Sr., Kenny Mazonson, Deano
Summers, Sal Turilli, Pearl & Perry Verge Sr.
617-387-2200
By Steve Freker
M
alden School Committee
Vice Chairperson Jennifer
Spadafora sounded the alarm
once again at Monday’s regular
meeting regarding the preliminary
Chapter 70 state aid funding
fi gure that was proposed recently.
While it represented a seven
percent increase of around $5.4
million from the FY23 state budget,
Spadafora had reservations
about the equity of the numbers
that are included in Mass. Governor
Maura Healey’s second state
budget plan, citing far higher proposed
Chapter 70 aid for similar
districts in the region.
Mayor Gary Christenson, who
serves as Malden School Committee
Chairperson, echoed those
E
Friday, February 9, 2024
School Committee: Malden Public
Schools’ preliminary Chapter 70
state aid numbers are alarming
Mayor, SC members express concern over
$63.19 million proposed aid; challenge
equity of 30-year-old formula
Jennifer Spadafora
Ward 3 School Committee
Member and Vice
Chairperson
concerns, referencing an “already
tight municipal budget” that city
AID| SEE PAGE 8
Dog abandoned at Malden park
is rescued, life saved by Good
Samaritan and Malden Police
‘Big Momma’ has life after emergency
surgery and new foster ‘Dad’
“Big Momma,” the mastiff that was found recently, after being
abandoned in Trafton Park in Malden (Courtesy/NBC10)
By Steve Freker
GREAT JOB! Malden High swim Head Coach Jess Bisson congratulated the team after the GBL
title-clinching meet win over Revere. (Advocate Photo)
By Steve Freker
O
ver the past two decades-plus,
they have consistently
been the most successful
team of all the Malden High Athletics
program hosts. Since 2020,
with teams coaches by former
pool bosses Coach Barry Fitzpatrick,
Mark Gagnon and now,
SWIM| SEE PAGE 17
A
dog’s life has a bright future
after a succession of compassionate
and generous people
stepped to the forefront and
helped save her. It’s so hard to
imagine why someone would
abandon her, scared and shivering,
tied to a pole in Trafton Park
in Maplewood.
“Big Momma,” as the mastiff
has since been named, was
found in the cold the night of
Dec. 14 on a pole in Trafton Park,
“whimpering and screeching for
help,” said Kevin Alkins, Malden
Police’s animal control officer.
DOG| SEE PAGE 5
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ט ( (u׉׉	 7cassandra://gZXTuyNfyn8M5wkzu820WDxkYBtxO7AWyXpxLA49FJE Y`)׉	 7cassandra://jScT25H4D3ugRi8AGdA6CB2hB6x9ybB46V8U3z9DI20͙`J׉	 7cassandra://CrpuSRVM4L07_uhx3WwVY2L6AxQKfTyISgwJrAcTzdo.`̰ eA5=נeA5= 	ja9ׁHhttp://angelosoil.comׁׁЈנeA5= MЁ9ׁH !mailto:anthonydickinson@gmail.comׁׁЈנeA5= f19ׁHhttp://ni.comׁׁЈנeA5= ρ̽9ׁHhttp://www.maׁׁЈ׉E	ePage 2
THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, February 9, 2024
Mayor declares Feb. 5-9 National School Counseling Week
Malden School Counselors with Mayor Gary Christenson (center), Director of School Counseling, Testing & Academic Support Erin Craven (left of mayor,
holding proclamation), Ward 3 School Committee Member/Vice Chair Jennifer Spadafora (left of Erin Craven) and Superintendent Dr. Ligia Noriega-Murphy
(far right) (Courtesy of the City of Malden)
Special to Th e Advocate
I
n coordination with Malden
Public Schools’ Director of
School Counseling, Testing &
Academic Support, Erin Craven,
Mayor Gary Christenson
offi cially proclaimed February
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(617) 387-9810
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Phone: (617) 387-4900 Fax: (617) 381-1755
WWW.JMACKEYLAW.COM
5-9 National School Counseling
Week. Sponsored by the American
School Counselor Association,
National School Counseling
Week highlights the tremendous
impact school counselors
can have in helping students be
successful in school and plan for
their future.
School counseling plays a pivotal
role in fostering the development
and well-being of students,
transcending the traditional
role of academic guidance.
As educational institutions
navigate the complex terrain
of modern challenges, the
importance of school counseling
has become increasingly
evident. Beyond assisting students
in academic planning
and course selection, counselors
serve as advocates for mental
health, providing invaluable
support to students grappling
with emotional distress, anxiety
or personal struggles. School
counseling also plays a pivotal
role in facilitating post-secondary
transitions and career
exploration.
More than 25 school counselors
were in attendance along
with Ward 3 School Committee
Member Jennifer Spadafora
and Superintendent of Schools
Dr. Ligia Noriega-Murphy as the
Mayor offi cially thanked them
for their important work in the
district and issued a Proclamation
on behalf of the City of
Malden.
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Page 3
Malden High School Alumni Hall
of Fame seeks new nominations
Banquet, induction ceremony set for Friday, May 3
Distinguished Malden High
Alumni enshrined in the MHSAA
Hall of Fame
By Steve Freker
M
The deadline to submit
nominations for this year’s
Malden High School Alumni
Association (MHSAA) Hall of
Fame is February 28.
Bobby Sager
By Steve Freker
C
alling all Maldonians, past
and present! The Malden
High School Alumni Association
(MHSAA) needs your help.
The 6th biennial MHSAA Hall of
Fame is hosting another banquet
and induction ceremony,
which will be held on Friday,
May 3, at Anthony’s (111 Canal
St., Malden).
The MHSSA is asking for nominations
for this year’s induction
class. MHSSA President Anthony
Dickinson said input from
the community is vital. “Family,
graduates, teachers or administrators
or former attendees
know who among their colleagues
have made exceptional
achievements in their chosen
careers or made outstanding
contributions to society and
should receive Hall of Fame recognition,”
Dickinson said.
An individual is eligible for
nomination 10 years after graduation,
or 10 years after attending
Malden High School. Inductees
may be selected from the
following categories: Arts, Business,
Community Service, Education,
Government, Media, Military,
Sciences, Technology.
Nomination forms reiterating
the qualifi cations for selection
to the Malden High School
Alumni Association Hall of Fame
are available online at the website
www.maldenhighalumni.com
or at the Main Offi ce at
Malden High School, 77 Salem
St., Malden.
The deadline to submit
nomination forms is Wednesday,
February 28. They may
be sent to:
MHSAA, Inc.
P.O. Box 47
Malden, MA 02148
Advertise in
The Advocate
617-387-2200
Former Governor John Volpe
To be considered, and to help
a special Selection Committee
make its decision, all applications
must be completely fi lled
out, including a brief narrative
expanding on the specifi c qualities
and achievements of the
nominee. The Selection Committee
will select the nominees
to be honored from the submitFormer
Judge Emma
(Fall) Schofi eld
ted forms as well as from previous
nomination forms that are
kept in consideration for three
event cycles.
The MHS Alumni Hall of Fame
was founded in 2014 to recognize
exceptional MHS alumni.
Any questions? contact MHSAA
President Anthony Dickinson:
anthonydickinson@gmail.com
Gary Cherone
any notable Malden High
School alumni are already
enshrined in the MHSAA Hall
of Fame, with outstanding accomplishments
in many diff erent
fi elds and professions.
From internationally renowned
billionaire entrepreneur,
photographer and
philanthropist Bobby Sager
(Class of 1972) to worldclass
rocker Gary Cherone,
the leader of fabulously successful
band Extreme (Class of
1979), former Massachusetts
Governor John Volpe (Class of
1926B), Malden’s longest-serving
Mayor, Richard Howard
(Class of 1970), a noted judge,
Emma (Fall) Schofi eld (Class of
1902), and Pulitzer Prize-winning
Boston Globe columnist
and author Kevin Cullen
(Class of 1977), the list of previous
honorees is illustrious
and lengthy.
Following is a list of the enshrined
members of the MHSAA
Hall of Fame.
Inducted in inaugural Hall of
Fame Class of 2014: Gary Cherone
(MHS 1979, Arts), Kevin
Cullen (MHS 1977, Media),
Heather (Kahn) Braver (MHS
1985, Media), Keith Knight,
Jr. (MHS 1984. Arts/Media),
James Matisof (MHS 1954, Education),
Judge Philip Weiner
(MHS 1972, Govt. & Law), Judge
Emma (Fall) Schofield (MHS
1902, Govt. & Community Service),
Dr. George Holland (MHS
1955, Education)
****
Inducted in Hall of Fame
Class of 2015: Daniel DiSano
(MHS 1986, Business); Paula
Sneed (MHS 1965, Business);
Bobby Sager (MHS 1972,
Business); Dr. Stanton Shernan
(MHS 1977, Science); Marie
(Colantuoni) Coyle (MHS
1949, Science); Lt. Richard V.
Dargie, Posthumously (MHS
MHSAA | SEE PAGE 10
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THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, February 9, 2024
Malden Community Electricity program approved by DPU
City of Malden preparing its launch in 2024
M
ayor Gary Christenson,
Councillor-at-Large Carey
McDonald, State Senator Jason
Lewis and State Representatives
Paul Donato, Steve Ultrino and
Kate Lipper-Garabedian were
pleased to announce that the
City of Malden has received approval
of its Malden Community
Electricity program from the Massachusetts
Department of Public
Gerry
D’Ambrosio
Attorney-at-Law
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Steve Ultrino
State Representative
Celebrating Our 52nd Year
Chris 2024
Gary Christenson
Mayor
es, while also combating climate
change and bringing cleaner
electricity to our community,”
said Mayor Christensen. “We’re
thrilled to start implementing
this valuable program.”
Approval from DPU came after
nearly a year of advocacy from
the Mayor, Councillor McDonald
and Malden legislators to highlight
the urgency of Malden’s energy
and climate needs and get
the plan approved. Malden’s advocacy
has also contributed to
systemwide improvements at
DPU that will make it easier for
all communities to increase their
renewable energy supply and
create or amend their aggregation
plans.
“I am thrilled that the residents
of Malden will finally be able to
reap the benefits of municipal
aggregation. From the clear cost
savings to the positive environmental
impact, Malden Community
Electricity is a great example
of why the state needs to make it
easier for communities to participate
in these programs that pair
climate resiliency with affordability,”
said Senator Lewis.
“This is a huge win for Malden
for consumer protection and climate
action,” said Councillor McDonald,
who sponsored the Malden
Community Electricity order.
“I’ve heard so much support for
this program across our neighborhoods,
so I was very excited to
hear about our approval – thank
you to everyone who has helped
get us to this point. We’ll be joining
over a hundred other communities
in the state to negotiKate
Lipper-Garabedian
State Representative
ate bulk electrical rates on good
terms for our residents and add
more convenient renewable energy
options. Malden Community
Electricity will be a cornerstone
of our equitable climate action
strategy as we move towards
greater electrification in our environmental
justice community.”
Now that Malden’s program is
approved, the City will begin the
process of soliciting bids for an
electricity supplier and identifying
a program launch date. Once
the City has selected a supplier, it
will conduct a community-wide
education and outreach program.
At that time, the City will
be able to share the start date,
prices, term length and renewable
energy content of all the program
options.
The City’s default offering will
seek to provide cleaner electricity
with more renewable energy
while also providing stable and
competitive prices compared to
National Grid. Malden Community
Electricity will also offer two
other options: one with 100% renewable
energy, for those seeking
the maximum climate impact,
and one with just the minimum
renewable energy required
by the Commonwealth, for those
seeking to minimize cost. Municipal
aggregation programs like
Malden Community Electricity almost
always result in lower electrical
rates compared to National
Grid’s default rates; in part they
use the collective purchasing
power of the whole community
DPU | SEE PAGE 8
Utilities (DPU). Malden Community
Electricity will be an electricity
aggregation program that will
provide new, City-vetted options
for electricity supply and increase
renewable energy throughout
the entire community.
“This moment is a major step
forward in helping Malden protect
our residents and businesses
from volatile electricity pricPaul
Donato
State Representative
Carey McDonald
Councillor-at-Large
Jason Lewis
State Senator
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Page 5
Job Program geared towards people DOG | FROM PAGE 1
50 and older continues at the Malden
Public Library
T
he Malden Public Library continues
to off er an online job
support program for people 50
years old and older. The 50+ Job
Seekers Program is a free service,
and people 50 years or older
are welcome to join any or all of
the sessions, which are held on
Zoom. Anyone interested who
doesn’t have a computer or isn’t
familiar with Zoom is welcome
to come to the library and borrow
a Chromebook during the
sessions. Library staff will make
sure anyone interested in participating
can do so.
The morning sessions are
from 9:30-11:30 a.m. and meet
on the fi rst and third Wednesdays.
Here are the session dates
and topics:
February 21 – LinkedIn (Part
#2)
March 6 – Resumes (Part #1)
March 20 – Resumes (Part #2)
April 3 – Cover Letters & Using
AI in the Job Search
April 17 – Networking
May 1 – Interview Strategies
May 15 – Interview Practice
50+ Job seekers
June 5 – Thinking Outside
the Box
June 12 – Marketing Plan
The Library is excited to continue
offering this program
and encourages anyone interested
to attend. Call the Malden
Public Library with questions
at 781-324-0218; ask for
Marita.
She also had a massive, 13 lb. tumor
on her belly.
A good Samaritan brought
her to Malden police, and local
kennel owner Bill Bowdridge
immediately took over care of
“Big Momma.” “It was the fi rst
dog I’ve ever witnessed that
cried real tears and the more
we wiped the more the tears
came. It would break anybody’s
heart,” he said in an online
report.
Bowdridge, who owns Big
Daddy Doggie Daycare, is fostering
Big Momma and will try
to adopt her. “She’s not the same
dog. Being with us now, she lays
on her back with all four legs in
the air,” he said.
As for now, Malden Police and
Officer Alkins are looking for
who left her in that park. “We
feel the culprit of this planned
this out, and we do not believe it
was a Malden resident,” said Offi
cer Alkins, who, unfortunately
has had to deal with several
other animals abandoned in this
city in the past year.
A GoFundMe account was
started as the generosity continued
for Big Momma and extensive
surgery was done. The tumor
is benign, and the two-yearold
mastiff is in good health otherwise
now, according to Malden
Police.
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THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, February 9, 2024
~ Malden Musings ~
Farewell, Big A’s Nick Kombouras
By Peter Levine
N
ick Kombouras has left the
building. The Big A is no longer
led into daily battle by the
great, “Nick the Greek.” Long
live the Big A and Nick the
Greek! Congrats to (former) Big
A owner Nick Kombouras on his
well-deserved and hard-earned
retirement! Nick was the face
of the Big A for all these years!
The Big A making the Malden
community happy for the past
45 years with fabulous submarine
sandwiches and quick, effi -
cient service (think the old SNL
skit “Cheeseburger, Cheeseburger”).
We’re gonna miss your
world-famous chicken parm
and steak bombs, but from what
I’ve heard, those acclaimed delicacies
ain’t going anywhere!
Just you are (we’ll miss you, Nick,
but as long as the chicken parm
stays, well, it’s all good – insert
smiley face).
I personally remember the
day you took over ownership
way back when. The food was
good from Day 1 and the service
quick (if not always with a
smile). But he did have a most
diffi cult time in those early years
trying to establish himself in the
neighborhood and persuade
the Connah Gang to stop messing
with his customers (and to
move away from his front door).
Well, Nick outlasted each and
every generation of Connah rat
that came along, going the distance,
fi nally calling it quits on
his own terms. A beloved fi gure
in Edgeworth history, the Big A
(and Nick) became Edgeworth
institutions. We’ll miss you, big
guy, but as long as there is a Big
A, you’ll be remembered (and
we’ll be happy).
Here is a Big A tale from yesteryear
from local raconteur, Pearl
Street icon and Mary’s baby
brother; James “Jimmy Moe”
Molinari: “I’ll start with how I
became overnight friends with
Nick...from bitter enemies to
besties, lol
“Nick would yell at us to get
away from the corner. It was
mid-winter and we assumed
he was calling the cops to kick
us off the corner. So, one of us
would hold open the door and a
few of us would whip snowballs
inside the Big A at Nick! We got a
really big kick out of that (yeah,
I know, but we were young and
foolish – not necessarily in that
order). That night we rolled up
a snowball at least 7 feet in diameter,
wedged it into the Big A
Lawrence A. Simeone Jr.
Attorney-at-Law
~ Since 1989 ~
* Corporate Litigation
* Criminal/Civil
* MCAD
* Zoning/Land Court
* Wetlands Litigation
* Workmen’s Compensation
* Landlord/Tenant Litigation
* Real Estate Law
* Construction Litigation
* Tax Lein
* Personal Injury
* Bankruptcy
* Wrongful Death
* Zoning/Permitting Litigation
300 Broadway, Suite 1, Revere * 781-286-1560
lsimeonejr@simeonelaw.net
door which completely covered
the entrance. LOL! We were 13,
maybe, so please forgive. Nick
did not appreciate this.
“Next day my mom is going
to bingo at Girl’s Catholic and
says to me, ‘walk me to bingo,
we’ll get sandwiches at the Big
A fi rst.’ This had never happened.
I’ve walked ma to bingo millions
of times but never has she said,
‘let’s eat at the sub shop.’
“So, I’m now inside the Big A
and I’m banned but I can’t tell
ma that I’m not allowed inside
the premises (see, to ma, I was
her little angel). Nick comes over
to the table (I’m looking at him
like, don’t you dare!) then this
happened:
“Nick: ‘Hi, I’m Nick the owner,
this is your son, Jimmy?’
“Ma: ‘Yes.’
“Nick: ‘Oh, he’s a good kid.’
“Ma glowing says, ‘thank you.’
“Thank God he went that
route because anything else
would have resulted in an intergenerational
feud. After that nobody
bothered Nick, I made sure
of it. Laugh out loud.”
It is said in “Malden Musings”...
• Congratulations to Steve
Winslow for being named Council
President for 2024. Anybody
who name checks Rick Barry &
Willie Mays as role models growing
up is okay in my book.
• Congratulations to one of
Malden’s best friends, Bob Rotondi,
for being the very fi rst inductee
into Malden’s Baseball
Legacy Hall of Fame. The induction
will happen on March 7 at
the Moose and is sure to be a
SRO aff air.
• So much to catch up on...congratulations
to former Charles
Street boy Danny O’Boyle (Class
of 1977) on his induction into
the Malden High School Sports
Hall of Fame. I watched Danny
and his four brothers (Brian,
Johnny, Paul and Frankie), nick~
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Nick Kombouras and Malden Mayor Gary Christenson
named (by me) “The Five Fighting
O’Boyle Brothers,” grow up
a few doors down from me in
Edgeworth. Danny and his siblings
were all outstanding athletes
back in the day and could
be spotted throughout the
neighborhood at all hours of the
day (and night) playing sports or
getting into mischief. Fine boys
from a great family.
• Also, congrats to the 2012
MHS Girls’ Softball Team on their
induction. The team photo taken
that night at Anthony’s is
priceless!
• Condolences to the Truesdale
family on the passing of
the patriarch of the family, Fred.
Born in Somerville, Fred worked
for the City of Malden in the
Parking Department for the
past 16 years and was a 35-year
member of the Teamsters Union
Local 25, where he worked for
U.S. Foods as a receiver. Fred was
a good guy – a family man who,
for the past six years, I was privileged
to call friend.
• Fred’s son Eric is a proud
member of the Malden Fire Department.
•
Happy 72nd birthday to Bull’s
little brother William (Billy) “Tecka”
O’Leary. Ya, he knows he
doesn’t look 72; he says it was
all the clean living he’s done
over the years. Next Buds on
me, Tecka!
• Still shaking my head (myself
and many other Maldonians)
about how good Freck’s
tribute to the late Ernie Ardolino
was. He threw the perfect spiral
with his closing remark: “So,
whenever you recall Ernie A. Ardolino
Sr. – Mr. A, Coach Ardolino,
just plain Ernie – think good
thoughts, think happy thoughts,
and remember that beaming,
genuine smile he always wore.
That is exactly how he would
want it.” Beautiful, Steve.
• Not sure how on earth this
escaped my line of vision...congratulations
to Tommy, Rob and
Joey Dennehy’s mom Celia on
her 100th trip around the sun!
Last July it looked like everybody
in Malden (except me!)
showed up at Celia’s home (the
same home she has resided in
for the past 80 years) on Malden
Street to wish her a happy
birthday! Better late than never
– happy birthday, Celia, and
many more! Tommy! You better
let me know when Celia celebrates
101!
• I took lunch at Cornucopia
Foods in beautiful downtown
Malden Square last week. Neil
Sullivan aka “Handsome Neil”
(as his close friends call him) was
behind the curtain preparing all
kinds of goodies for the hungry,
unwashed masses that enter the
front door (which once was the
front door of Louie Klane’s Shoe
Store). One of those famous Neil
MUSINGS| SEE PAGE 19
׉	 7cassandra://0XOnyA9XIdD7HZEMQjqKSUOdLS1zcp_yaBGWRfoAxaM(X`̰ eA3=׉ETHE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, February 9, 2024
Page 7
Kingpin of ‘Tiny Rascals’ gets 40 years in prison
for drug trafficking and gun charges
Feds: One of the most violent street gangs in the U.S. had a number of Malden and Everett residents; Armani
‘Shotz’ ‘Gustavo’ Minier-Tejada, of Salem, is 18th defendant to be sentenced in 3-year federal investigation
By Noah Simon-Contreras
O
ne night in July 2020, shortly
the COVID-19 pandemic
had exploded worldwide like
a nuclear missile, some uninformed
punks in Cambridge
– possibly with a death wish
– must have thought it would
be clever to livestream a message
to the world that two of
the most dangerous members
of the Tiny Rascals Gangsters
(TRG) street gang were also informants
to law enforcement.
Within less than an hour, Armani
Minier-Tejada, then just 20
years old, and Jaiir Coleman, 20,
of Malden, arrived outside a Harvard
Street, Cambridge, housing
project, where they discovered
where the livestream had originated.
The pair then unleashed
hell into an estimated crowd of
about 30 people, firing off 3040
rounds each from guns that
had been converted to automatic
weapons. Essentially, their
firearms had become handheld
machine guns, enabled by “selector
switches.”
Miraculously, inexplicably,
what the shooters had intended
to be a bloody massacre never
materialized. No one was killed
or even injured, aside from a
few bumps and bruises incurred
while scrambling in a mad dash
to safety.
That was just one of a series of
at least seven violent shootings
in which Minier-Tejada, a/k/a
“Shotz” and “Gustavo,” and Coleman,
a/k/a/ “JC” and “Chino,” participated
in over a span of two
and a half years from 2019 to
2021 as active members of what
the FBI and federal Drug Enforcement
Administration (DEA)
call one of the largest and most
violent criminal street gangs in
the country.
Minier-Tejada was sentenced
on Monday to 40 years in federal
prison and five years of supervised
release for leading a largescale
drug trafficking conspiracy
across the North Shore and
into Maine. The TRG leader was
convicted of participating in
six shootings as well as acquiring
over 40 firearms and multiple
“selector switches” for himself
and fellow gang members.
The defendant was also held accountable
for his role in a seventh
shooting that resulted in
a murder.
In June 2023, Minier-Tejada
was convicted by a federal jury
of one count of conspiracy to
manufacture, distribute and to
possess with intent to distribtwo
firearms – including a machine
gun – and together fired
at least 30 rounds into a large
crowd of people gathered in the
parking lot.
At sentencing, Minier-TejaCHARGES|
SEE PAGE 16
RON’S OIL
Call
For
PRICE
Pictured from left to right:
Tiny Rascals Gangsters
leaders Jaiir “Chino” Coleman
and Armani “Shotz” “Gustavo”
Minier-Tejada fire off rounds
at an unknown location with
converted machine pistols.
(Courtesy/U.S. Dept. of Justice/Boston office)
ute 400 grams or more of fentanyl,
500 grams or more of a
mixture and substance containing
methamphetamine, cocaine
and other controlled substances;
one count of conspiracy to
use and carry a firearm during
and in relation to, and possess
a firearm in furtherance of, a
drug trafficking crime; and one
count of use and carrying, brandishing
and discharge of a firearm
during and in relation to,
and possession of a firearm in
furtherance of, a drug trafficking
crime.
Minier-Tejada was a member
and leader of a street gang
known as the Tiny Rascal Gangsters,
one of the largest and
most violent criminal street
gangs in the country, which operates
on a decentralized structure
via local groups or “sets.”
TRG is involved in street-level
distribution of powdered cocaine,
fentanyl and methamphetamine,
and members are
known for their involvement in
gun violence.
In a release from the U.S. Department
of Justice, it related,
“Minier-Tejada and his co-conspirators,
including members
of the Lynn set of TRG, participated
in a long-running conspiracy
to manufacture, distribute
and possess large quantities
of fentanyl, methamphetamine
and cocaine in Boston,
the North Shore and the Bangor,
Maine area.
“Minier-Tejada served as the
supplier for multiple large-scale
drug dealers in Maine and, in
total, he and his co-conspirators
were responsible for trafficking
more than 10 kilograms
MALDEN CONVICTS: In an
undated photo, Malden
residents, from top, Phillips
“Phon C” Charles –already
serving a lengthy jail term
– and Jaiir “JC” “Chino”
Coleman show off plenty
of “Benjamins” in a car.
Coleman was scheduled
to be sentenced in federal
court in Boston yesterday
(February 8) for his role in the
three-year drugs and guns
operation by his gang. (Courtesy/
U.S. Dept. of Justice/Boston office)
each of fentanyl, methamphetamine
and cocaine from Massachusetts
into Maine.
“Minier-Tejada and his co-conspirators
produced numerous
videos and images in which
they were depicted brandishing
and holding firearms, including
multiple machine guns
– that is, pistols equipped with
‘selector switches’ rendering
them capable of fully automatic
fire. Additionally, the drug conspiracy
of which Minier-Tejada
was a leader acquired over 40
firearms and multiple ‘selector
switches’ for use by TRG members
during the drug trafficking
conspiracy. ‘Selector switches’
are aftermarket parts that convert
a semi-automatic firearm
into a machine gun, capable of
fully automatic fire.”
At sentencing, according to
the DOJ release, the government
established that in 2019
and 2020 Minier-Tejada and
co-conspirators, including TRG
gang members Marcus Carlisle,
a/k/a “Reckless,” and Jaiir Coleman,
a/k/a “JC,” committed six
shootings in Boston and surrounding
communities in furtherance
of the drug conspiracy.
At trial, the government introduced
evidence concerning one
of the shootings, taking place in
Cambridge in July 2020, which
was in response to a video being
livestreamed from a parking
lot accusing Minier-Tejada
and Coleman of cooperating
with law enforcement. Minier-Tejada
and Coleman travelled
to the streaming location with
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THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, February 9, 2024
In “The Burning Fiery Furnace,” Enigma Chamber Opera
finds a profound exploration of faith and power
Upcoming performance has Malden ties
E
nigma Chamber Opera’s new
production of Benjamin Britten’s
1966 opera “The Burning
Fiery Furnace” brings to Boston
one of the most compelling, yet
least performed pieces in Britten’s
three-part “church parable”
series. Directed by Bostonand
Scotland-based Artistic Director
Kirsten Z. Cairns, this intimate
and emotional opera will
be performed live at Boston’s
Cathedral Church of Saint Paul
(138 Tremont St. in Boston) for
two performances on February
16 and 17 at 7 p.m. The performances
will be available for online
streaming from February 23
to March 1.
“The Burning Fiery Furnace,”
with a libretto by William Plomer,
is based on an Old Testament
story from the Book of Daniel, in
which three Israelites (Ananias,
Misael and Azarias) are exiled
to Babylon, upheld as intellectuals
by ruler Nebuchadnezzar
and undermined by an ideological
astrologer who warns that
anyone not worshiping a Golden
Idol faces punishment in the
hellish device of the title. The Israelites
refuse to change their
religious beliefs and are condemned
into the furnace. They
survive unscathed, are hailed as
prophets and change the fates
of both Nebuchadnezzar and
the astrologer.
This is the third of Britten’s
three chamber operas that
Cairns has directed. Cairns says
“The Burning Fiery Furnace”
looks at identity, politics and
power struggles, and the need
for personal integrity in a divided,
sometimes poisonous world.
“‘Curlew River’ taught us that in
tough times, we can find comfort
in others,” she says. “‘The
Prodigal Son’ showed us how to
be of comfort to those around
us. In this production we learn
that only by being true to ourselves
can we survive the fiery
furnace of this world.”
The cast for Enigma’s “The
Burning Fiery Furnace” includes
Malden-born tenor Matthew
DiBattista as Nebuchadnezzar,
Aaron Engebreth as the Astrologer
(and the Abbot), David
McFerrin as Ananias, Jesse
Darden as Misael, Daniel Fridley
as Azarias, Paul Soper as the Herald,
and Nathan Halbur, Fausto
Miro and Luke Scott as chorus
members. Students from St.
Paul’s Choir School also perform.
An eight-piece orchestra is led
by conductor/organist Edward
Elwyn Jones. The production
team is Stage Director Kirsten
Z. Cairns, set and projection designer
Peter A. Torpey, lighting
designer Paul Marr and Malden-based
Costume Designer
Rebecca Shannon Butler.
Britten and “Furnace”
Benjamin Britten (1913-1976)
Law Offices of
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tension between religious devotion
and political authority, creating
powerful music and drama
experiences. The opera unfolds
with intricate vocal and instrumental
textures, employing
a chamber ensemble to convey
intensity and emotional depth.
Britten’s signature use of dissonance
and innovative orchestration
contributes to the opMalden-based
Costume
Designer Rebecca Shannon
Butler
was a renowned English composer,
conductor and pianist –
widely regarded as one of the
leading figures in 20th century
classical music. In “The Burning
Fiery Furnace,” as in all of his
“church parables,” Britten’s composition
skillfully captures the
AID | FROM PAGE 1
officials are dealing with in upcoming
deliberations for FY25.
Two of the communities compared
to Malden in a chart presented
by Spadafora were Everett
and Revere, which have similar student
numbers in their populations
and similar demographics. Everett,
which has just 300 more students
than Malden’s 6,570, was preliminarily
allocated $111,682,212 –
nearly twice as much as Malden –
while Revere’s preliminary Chapter
70 aid is $98,418,11 – 50 percent
more than Malden’s $68.2M,
while having approximately the
same number of students.
Spadafora, who also announced
she will be serving as
chairperson of the School ComDPU
| FROM PAGE 4
instead of one household. However,
because utility supply prices
change seasonally and future
prices are unknown, the City cannot
guarantee savings through
the program.
When the program launches,
electricity customers that have
not already selected their own
electricity supplier will be eligible
for automatic enrollment in Malden
Community Electricity’s default
offering. Thirty days before
the program launches, those customers
will receive a notice in the
mail explaining the options. Electricity
customers that have selected
their own electricity supplier
will not be eligible for automatic
enrollment but will be able to
era’s accessible, modern sound.
“The Burning Fiery Furnace” is
a thought-provoking and musically
rich part of Britten’s repertoire.
WHAT:
“The Burning Fiery Furnace.”
WHEN:
Fri./Sat., Feb 16 and 17,
2024, at 7 p.m.
WHERE: Boston’s Cathedral
Church of Saint Paul, 138 Tremont
St. in Boston.
TICKETS: $20-33 – online
streaming tickets are $15 – both
are available at enigmachamberopera.org
mittee’s
Budget Committee, said
that the members will be getting
to work on the formulation of the
FY25 Malden Public Schools budget
with meetings scheduled beginning
this month. Spadafora
told those at the meeting “we will
be working toward a level-funded
budget for [the next school year]
and it will be very challenging
with these [Chapter 70] numbers.”
The School Committee Vice
Chairperson urged all to “contact
the members of the state delegation
and tell them we need
their help.”
“We are working on a formula
that was devised in the 1990s.
We really need to have it re-examined
and brought up-to-date,”
Mayor Christenson said, reiterating
Spadafora’s plea.
join the program at any time if
they wish. Prior to launch the
City’s mailers and public presentations
will explain how to participate,
or how to opt-out and
prevent participation. Once participating,
customers will be able
to leave the program or switch
their program option at any time,
without penalty.
The City took its first step towards
launching the program in
May 2022, when the City Council
authorized electricity aggregation.
The City then hired a consultant
and drafted its Aggregation
Plan, which was submitted to the
DPU in December 2022.
More information about the
program can be found on the
program website, MaldenCommunityElectricity.com.
׉	 7cassandra://-ldVBmLX62pS8tFZMEgbdJ2ed5Sl0jM3pS_HhPZXzfQ*`̰ eA3=׉ETHE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, February 9, 2024
Page 9
INAUGURAL | FROM PAGE 1
of Fame dinner and induction
ceremony on Thursday, March
7 at the Malden Moose Hall at
562 Broadway, Malden. There
will be a social reception from
6:00-6:45 p.m., a photo session
with inductees and their families
from 6:45-7:00, with an Italian-themed
buff et dinner at 7:00
p.m. sharp.
The Malden Baseball LEGACY
Hall of Fame’s mission is simple:
“To honor those whose lives and
meaningful contributions have
directly and positively impacted
Baseball in the city of Malden
through the years.” In the letter
to the inductees from the MBL
Hall of Fame, it explains: “Baseball
has been an integral part
of the history of the city of Malden
and indeed, it is a part of
the very fabric of this community.
The institutions that have
been formed, then grown and
thrived surrounding the sport of
Baseball in our city have helped
thousands of individuals and
families in the city of Malden
create so many wonderful and
lasting relationships, friendships
and memories.
“Certainly, your contributions
through the years to Baseball in
the city of Malden deserve speto
the present day, where he still
serves as manager of the Malden
BRL Knights.
He has been called “Mr. Baseball”
in Malden by Advocate
columnist Peter Levine and “All
Things Baseball in Malden” by
Malden’s #1 baseball fan, Mayor
Gary Christenson.
“It should be a great night for
cial recognition and acknowledgement
among those whose
contributions have been exemplary
and particularly noteworthy.”
This
year’s inductees to be
honored on March 7 are the following:
—Bob
Rotondi, Legacy Inductee
—Shawn
Brickman, former
longtime Malden High Varsity
Baseball Head Coach, Northeastern
University Division 1
Baseball record-holder, Malden
High School, Malden Babe Ruth
League (BRL) and Malden Little
League standout
—Joe Caraco Sr., former longtime
Malden BRL Manager,
Board Member and Offi cer
—Kenny Mazonson, present
50-year-plus Malden Little
League and Malden Youth Baseball
Manager, League Officer
and Board Member, former MalThe
most recent winners of the Malden Babe Ruth League
Championship are the Pilots in 2024. They are shown with
Mayor Gary Christenson. (Courtesy Photo)
den BRL coach and former Malden
Senior BRL Manager
—Deano Summers, present
Malden BRL Field Director
(nearly 20 years), present Malden
BRL Manager (Flames, nearly
30 years), former Malden Senior
BRL Manager (Marlins), former
Malden High School Assistant
Baseball Coach
—Sal Turilli (posthumously),
former longtime Malden BRL
(Stars) and Malden Little League
(Tornadoes) manager, coached
many, many future high school
stars in Malden
—Pearl and Perry Verge Sr.,
one of the early “First Lady of
Malden Babe Ruth” contributors
and her husband, who was a former
longtime Malden BRL Manager
and League Offi cer; Pearl
Verge also a former Malden BRL
Offi cer and Fundraising Assistant
to League Treasurer
The Legacy Inductee for 2024
is the individual whose contribution
to the sport of baseball
in Malden has been both very
impactful and long-lasting. The
baseball legacy of Bob Rotondi
extends back to the 1950s,
when he began his coaching
career as manager of the Little
League Rifl es. He then continued
in the managerial ranks
with the Malden BRL for 13-15
year olds in 1960 and continued
everyone and we are expecting
a great turnout,” said Malden
Baseball LEGACY Hall of
Fame representative and one of
the founders Bob McVicar, who
has long been active in Malden
Baseball on many levels, particularly
in fundraising for Malden
Babe Ruth, Malden High
School Baseball and Malden
Youth Baseball.
****
Tickets for the First Annual
Malden Baseball LEGACY Hall
of Fame are $35.00 per person
and $280.00 for a table of
eight. All tickets must be purchased
in advance, with none
sold at the door. Payment may
be made through credit card,
Venmo or Cash App. Arrangements
can be made for check
payment through reservations
as well.
Please email steve.freker@
gmail.com for ticket information
and any other questions.
׉	 7cassandra://kwPKy25izRqrua--ZmEMpNpf7HPnDrLY76R4OP-YBTc+`̰ eA3=eA3=
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THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, February 9, 2024
Sen. Lewis supports passage of gun violence prevention legislation
O
n February 1, 2024, Senator
Jason Lewis joined his colleagues
in the Massachusetts
Senate to pass, with bipartisan
support, An Act to sensibly address
fi rearm violence through
eff ective reform – known as the
SAFER Act – to increase fi rearm
safety in the state and reduce
gun violence without infringing
on the constitutional rights
of gun owners. The SAFER Act
was drafted after hearing extensive
public testimony and following
months of discussions
with stakeholders and advocates
with diverse perspectives
on the issue. The bill has been
endorsed by gun violence prevention
advocates, district attorneys
and police chiefs, including
the Massachusetts Chiefs of Police
Association.
“Massachusetts is already a
national leader in combating
gun violence, but there is always
more we can and must
do to make our communities
as safe as possible for all of our
residents,” said Senator Lewis.
“This legislation was carefully
crafted to focus on policies
that will further reduce gun
violence, including suicides,
while respecting the rights of
lawful gun owners in the Commonwealth.”
On
October 18, 2023, the Massachusetts
Senate passed its version
of the SAFER Act (120-38).
Now a Conference Committee
will be appointed to reconcile
the diff erences between the bill
versions passed by the Senate
and the House.
The bill includes the following
provisions:
• Ghost guns: Updates the
state’s laws to bring Massachusetts
in line with national standards
and to ensure accountability
and oversight for those
who possess un-serialized and
untraceable fi rearms.
• Assault weapons: Codifies
the state’s existing prohibition
on assault weapons and copies
or duplicates of those weapons.
• Glock switches and trigger
activators: Makes it illegal to
possess devices that convert
semiautomatic fi rearms into fully
automatic machine guns.
• Inspections of gun dealers:
Ensures that gun dealers are
inspected annually and allows
the Massachusetts State Police
to conduct those inspections
if the local police department
does not or cannot do so.
• Data collection: Creates a
more robust data reporting and
analysis mechanism for guns
used in crimes, suicides and attempted
suicides to ensure that
the Commonwealth can better
target training and enforcement
eff orts.
• Gun industry accountability
in advertising: Prohibits the marketing
of unlawful fi rearm sales
to minors and allows industry
actors to be held civilly liable if
such marketing practices lead
to an individual being harmed.
• Firing at a dwelling: Creates
a criminal charge for intentionally
fi ring a gun at a dwelling or
other building in use.
• Do-not-sell list: Creates a volSenator
Jason Lewis joined his colleagues in the Massachusetts
Senate to pass the SAFER Act to increase fi rearm safety in the
state. (Photo courtesy of Senator Lewis’s offi ce)
• Red flag law and Extreme
Risk Protection Orders (ERPO).
Allows health care professionals
to petition courts to remove
fi rearms and licenses from patients
who pose a risk to themselves
or others. The bill also allows
preemptive orders to prevent
a dangerous individual
from obtaining a license to carry
a fi rearm.
• Harassment prevention orders:
Protects survivors of harassment
by requiring courts
to compel the surrender of fi rearms
by individuals who are
subject to harassment protection
orders who pose an immediate
threat.
• Sensitive places: Prohibits the
carrying of fi rearms in government
administrative buildings,
with exceptions for law enforcement
offi cers and municipalities
that choose to opt out.
• Mental health and gun licensing:
Ensures that fi rearm licensing
authorities have access
to certain information about an
applicant’s history of involuntary
mental health hospitalizations
due to posing a serious
harm – with appropriate safeguards
to guarantee privacy and
due process.
MHSAA | FROM PAGE 10
1939, Military Service); Hollis E.
Durgin (MHS 1940), Community
Service).
****
Inducted in Hall of Fame Class
of 2016: John McCarthy (MHS
1964, Business); Diane (Katz)
Portnoy, MHS 1963, Education);
Marc Phaneuf (MHS 1982, Arts);
Brigadier General Theresa (Ciccolo)
Prince (MHS 1978, Military
Service); Virginia Diane (Shahbas)
Yardumian (MHS 1946, Education
& Community Service);
Governor John Volpe (MHS
1926, Government).
****
Inducted in Hall of Fame Class
of 2018: Diana (DellaPiana) Cataldo
(MHS 1958, Business); John
Boris (MHS 1964, Community
Service); Noreen Grice (MHS
untary do-not-sell fi rearm database
to allow individuals who
worry they might be a threat to
themselves or others to voluntarily
exclude themselves from
having the ability to purchase
fi rearms.
• Community violence prevention:
Creates a commission to
analyze the allocation of state
violence prevention funding
and recommend changes to reduce
gun violence in disproportionately
impacted communities;
develops a pilot program to
promote gun safety awareness
and fi rearms licensing education;
and establishes a task force
to make recommendations for
maximizing federal funding for
gun violence prevention in the
most equitable way.
• Emerging fi rearm technology:
Establishes a commission to
study emerging fi rearm technology,
with a particular focus
on products and features that
could increase safety.
1981, Science); Nicholas “Dick”
Robinson (MHS 1956, Media);
Edmund A. Trabucco (MHS 1934,
Government); Ann Carol Grossman
(MHS 1965, Arts); Joanne
(Assetta) Iovino, Posthumously
(MHS 1965, Education & Community
Service); John Haynes
Holmes (MHS 1968, Community
Service).
****
Inducted in Hall of Fame Class
of 2022: Nancy Finklestein, Posthumously
(MHS 1960, Education);
Norman Greenbaum (MHS
1960, Arts); Michael Goldman
(MHS 1967, Government); Ron
Cox (MHS 1966, Media); Richard
C. Howard (Class of 1970,
Government); Sandra Vellerman
(Class of 1977, Science); Phillip
E. Hyde (MHS 1982, Technology);
Albert R. Spadafora (Class
of 1964, Business).
Like us on Facebook advocate newspaper
Facebook.com/ Advocate.news.ma
׉	 7cassandra://NQZ26u9bSoogCz8guE4oWBOfWzyk5vOIsQhywkDis3g(`̰ eA3=׉ETHE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, February 9, 2024
Page 11
~ Excellence in the MPS ~
Linden K-8 community participates in
‘Walk and Roll Day’ hosted by MassDOT
‘Safe Routes To School’ program
Students and family members
joined educators and
staff from the Linden STEAM
Academy K-8 school to take
part in the state Department
of Transportation (MassDOT)
Safe Routes To School program
this week. Mayor Gary Christenson,
Councillors Steve Winslow
(Ward 6, City Council President)
and Ari Tayor (Ward 5) and
School Committee Member
Sharyn Rose-Zeiberg (Ward 8)
joined the Linden Community
to participate in the Winter
Walk and Roll to School. Students,
teachers and families
met at Hawkridge Delta Park
on Beach Street or Steve’s Corner
Store on Salem Street in an
eff ort to raise awareness of getting
to school safely.
The program works to increase
safe walking and biking
among elementary, middle
and high school students
by using a collaborative, community-focused
approach.
School leaders encouraged
students to wear bright colors
in the evening or early morning,
to cross at crosswalks, to
be aware of surroundings and
to always look both ways before
crossing.
An added bonus was that
the students assisted the Mayor
in picking up trash along the
route.
Mayor and School Committee
Chairperson Gary Christenson declares
Feb. 5-9 National School Counseling
Week in Malden
In coordination with Malden
Public Schools’ Director of School
Counseling, Testing & Academic
Support, Erin Craven, Mayor
Gary Christenson offi cially proclaimed
February 5-9 National
School Counseling Week in Malden.
Sponsored by the American
School Counselor Association, National
School Counseling Week
highlights the tremendous impact
school counselors can have
in helping students be successful
in school and plan for their future.
School counseling plays a pivotal
role in fostering the development
and well-being of students,
transcending the traditional
role of academic guidance.
As educational institutions
navigate the complex terrain of
modern challenges, the importance
of school counseling has
become increasingly evident.
Beyond assisting students in academic
planning and course selection,
counselors serve as advocates
for mental health, providing
invaluable support to
students grappling with emotional
distress, anxiety or personal
struggles. School counseling
also plays a pivotal role in
facilitating post-secondary transitions
and career exploration.
More than 25 school counselors
were in attendance along
with Superintendent Dr. Ligia
Noriega-Murphy and School
Committee Vice Chairperson Jennifer
Spadafora (Ward 3) as the
Mayor offi cially thanked them for
their important work in the district
and issued a Proclamation
on behalf of the City of Malden.
‘OLD MACDONALD HAD A FARM’: At the Forestdale School,
Ms. Casgrain and Ms. Rock’s Kindergarten class put on a great
performance of “Old MacDonald Had a Farm” for the rest of
the Kindergarten students while learning about farm animals
and farm life. The students really got into the performance and
thinking about the animals on the farm! Also shown (in the
center with stuff ed animal) is Assistant Superintendent Pam
MacDonald. (Courtesy/Falcon Flyer/Forestdale School)
LINDEN WALK AND ROLL: Malden students with (from left,
back row) School Committee Member Sharyn Rose-Zeiberg,
Councillor Ari Taylor, Mayor Gary Christenson and City Council
President Steve Winslow. (Courtesy/City of Malden)
NATIONAL SCHOOL COUNSELING WEEK: Malden School
Counselors with Mayor Gary Christenson (center), Director of
School Counseling, Testing & Academic Support Erin Craven
(left of Mayor, holding proclamation), School Committee
Member Jennifer Spadafora (left of Erin Craven, and
Superintendent Dr. Ligia Noriega-Murphy (far right). (Courtesy/
City of Malden)
Charlie Conefrey - Malden High School
Year: 2023
This award is presented to an individual who embodies the virtues of an outstanding, model
athletic administrator. An individual who was recognized by their colleagues for his continued
support and guidance of others in the profession. In addition, this individual is someone who
encourages new individuals into the profession as an Athletic Director, as well as fosters
others to continue to grow in their roles as an Athletic Administrator. Someone who fully
supports the Athletic Administration professional and all that it encompasses; through his
work at the league, district and state levels. We are pleased to present the 2023 Richard E.
Lewis Award to Charlie Conefrey in recognition of his guidance and support as an Athletic
Administrator. The Massachusetts Secondary Schools Athletic Directors Association
commends Charlie Conefrey for his outstanding contributions and invaluable service to
interscholastic high school athletics.
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THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, February 9, 2024
Chinese Culture Connection draws nearly 1,000 to 15th
Annual Malden Lunar New Year Celebration at MHS
By Tara Vocino
M
ore than 900 people attended
Saturday’s 15th
Annual Malden Lunar New Year
Celebration – hosted by the Chinese
Culture Connection (CCC) –
at Malden High School. Performers
highlighted Malden’s growing
Asian American diversity.
Raffle winners Weiling Shen and Ethan Li won Beats Flex
Bluetooth headphones; they are pictured with event organizer
Mei Hung and JiaHui Zheng.
Performers gathered for a group photo. (Courtesy photo, Anna Tse)
“Song of the Fishermen” was performed by the
Carnations Art Troupe, instructed by Amy Huang.
“Dai Girls in the Rain” was performed by Xiaoyun
Cong, Grace Glynn, Yin Jiang, Zhimin Li and Jimin
Ren, of CJT Dream Dance, instructed by Mia Tsai.
The Chinese Culture Connection Art Troupe,
instructed by Anny Huang, performed “Maiden’s
Love.”
The Boston Shuffle Team performed a dance
medley.
The Chinese Traditional Music Club at Berklee
College of Music performed “Waves of the Sea.”
“Elegance Down Memory Lane” was performed by
the Evergreen Dance Group, instructed by Lin-Yu
Loh.
Children waited for oranges from the Lions Dance
performance.
Shown from left to right: JiaHui Zheng (MC), Mayor Gary Christenson, (CCC
Board President Yulan Lin, event organizer/CCC Executive Director Mei
Hung and USPS Malden Branch Manager Bill Collins beside the United
States Post Office Lunar New Year Stamp.
(Advocate photos by Tara Vocino)
Like us on Facebook advocate newspaper
Facebook.com/ Advocate.news.ma
The Starry Night Band performed “Infiltrated
Sunday.” Band members are Lydia Deng, Maria
Deng, Lucas Li and Caillou Wong.
Ruoqiu Tao, of the Kunqu Opera,
performed “The Peony Pavilion.”
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Page 13
Walk and Roll to School
with Mayor & Friends
Special to Th e Advocate
M
ayor Gary Christenson, City
Council President Steve
Winslow, Ward 5 Councillor Ari
Tayor and Ward 8 School Committee
Member Sharyn RoseZeiberg
joined the Linden Community
to participate in the Winter
Walk and Roll to School as
part of the Massachusetts Department
of Transportation
Safe Routes to School Program
this week. Students, teachers
and families met at Hawkridge
Delta Park on Beach Street or
Steve’s Corner Store on Salem
Street in an eff ort to raise awareness
of getting to school safely.
The program works to increase
safe walking and biking among
elementary, middle and high
school students by using a collaborative,
community-focused
approach. School leaders encouraged
students to wear
bright colors in the evening or
early morning, to cross at crosswalks,
to be aware of surroundings
and to always look both
ways before crossing.
An added bonus was that the
students assisted the Mayor in
picking up trash along the route!
Upcoming Malden Reads film
screening at Malden Public Library
Malden students with (from left, back row) Ward 8 School
Committee Member Sharyn Rose-Zeiberg, Ward 5 Councillor
Ari Taylor, Mayor Gary Christenson and City Council President
Steve Winslow (Courtesy of the City of Malden)
Film Screening
Students assist Mayor Christenson in picking up trash. (Courtesy
of the City of Malden)
Malden Delegation Announces
$193,022 Green Communities Grant
B
OSTON – State Senator Jason
Lewis, State Representatives
Paul Donato, Steven
Ultrino, and Kate Lipper-Garabedian
and the City of Malden
are excited to announce
a $193,022 Green Communities
grant from the Massachusetts
Department of Energy Resources
to support Malden’s
clean energy goals.
The City of Malden will use
this state grant to fund energy
conservation measures, including
an air source heat pump,
pipe insulation, a domestic HW
heat pump, and pool solar thermal
heating in municipal facilities
including the Malden Senior
Center, the Beebe School,
and Malden High School.
“I’m thrilled that Malden is receiving
this Green Communities
state grant to help the City
achieve its own energy effi ciency
targets, while also supporting
our larger statewide climate action
goals,” said State Senator Jason
Lewis. “I look forward to seeing
the progress that Malden
continues to make as we work
together to promote cleaner
and more effi cient energy usage
in the community.”
“In a great leap towards sustainable
progress, Malden
proudly received a Green Communities
Grant from the Massachusetts
Department of Energy
Resources,” said State Representative
Paul Donato. “This grant
will allow us to move closer to
our clean energy goals. It also
further emphasizes our commitment
to a greener future, promoting
environmental stewardship
for years to come.”
“As an Environmental Justice
Community, Malden has taken
great steps to further our clean
energy goals,” said State Representative
Steve Ultrino. “I am
proud of the work done by the
City to invest in energy effi ciency
and implement projects that
will continue to make our community
cleaner, healthier, and
safer for future generations.
Congratulations again on receiving
this grant and the Delegation
looks forward to supporting
other energy effi ciency
initiatives in our community.”
“I applaud the City of Mallease
join us for the Malden
Reads film screening and
discussion of “Crip Camp: A Disability
Revolution.” This 2020
fi lm will be shown on Wednesday,
February 28, from 6:008:30
p.m. at the Malden Public
Library. This fi lm screening is
one of Malden Reads’ 2024 season
of events for the book “Being
Heumann” by the “Mother of
the Disability Rights Movement,”
Judith Heumann. “Crip Camp” is
“Rated R for some language including
sexual references” – 107
minutes, 100% on Rotten Tomatoes.
Light refreshments will be
served.
The fi lm will be followed by
a discussion with our special
guest, Salima Slimane, who is
currently an Arabic and French
lecturer at Boston University.
She holds an Ed.M. in Special
Education from BU’s Wheelock
School of Education & Human
P
den for its successful application
for a Green Communities
state grant which will aid it in
achieving its climate action
goals,” said State Representative
Kate Lipper-Garabedian.
“I joined the legislature in appropriating
state funding for
this important program, and
it is gratifying to see a municipality
in my District receive an
award to support local projects
focused on clean energy and
climate-conscious infrastructure.
I look forward to continuing
to work with the State delegation
and the City to address
our climate crisis.”
“I am happy to say the City of
Malden continues to move in
the right direction with respect
to our energy goals,” said Malden
Mayor Gary Christenson.
“Becoming a Green community
has certainly been benefi
cial to helping us achieve our
energy targets. I look forward
to continuing the momentum
we have built and am grateful
to our partners at the State for
helping to make this a reality
for our residents and our City.”
Development. Salima is very
passionate about special education
and promoting inclusive
practices. She is on the board
of Massachusetts Advocates for
Children, a private, nonprofi t organization
dedicated to removing
barriers to educational and
life opportunities for children
and youth.
You can pick up a copy of “Being
Heumann” at the Malden
Public Library. The e-book and
e-audiobook is also available on
the Libby app with your Malden,
Boston or Chelsea Public Library
card here: https://bpl.overdrive.
com/search?query=Being%20
Heumann
This event is cosponsored
by Malden Reads and the Malden
Public Library. For more details
about Malden Reads fi lm
screening events, please contact
the Malden Public Library
at 781-324-0218.
Mayor and City Council announce vacancies
on the Police Community Advisory Council
M
ayor Gary Christenson and
the City Council are reaching
out to Malden residents to
fi ll fi ve positions on the newly
formed Police Community Advisory
Council (PCAC). Pursuant
to City of Malden Code, 2.16.160,
the PCAC consists of seven members
in total with fi ve appointed
by the Mayor and City Council
and two youth members appointed
by the Superintendent
of Schools. Employees of the
Malden Police Department are
not eligible, nor may there be
a police offi cer in an applicant’s
household. Membership of the
PCAC shall be representative of
the demographics of Malden in
terms of race, gender, age, immigration
status and other relevant
factors or identities.
The PCAC’s mission is to promote
public awareness and
broad community engagement
on the City’s police services, activities,
programs and general
public safety issues. The goal is
to facilitate open dialogue and
transparency, aiding the Malden
Police Department (MPD) in their
public safety mission while enhancing
police-community relations.
The members of PCAC
will solicit feedback from civilian
community members, review
data provided by the MPD and
make recommendations in the
areas of safety, equity, accessibility,
fairness, inclusion, transparency
and/or public trust of the City’s
policing and public safety services.
Once convened the members
of the PCAC will determine
when and how often to meet.
To apply, please complete the
online Boards and Commissions
Application in full at www.cityofmalden.org/BCApplication.
Please
email kmanninghall@
cityofmalden.org for more information.
The deadline for accepting
applications is Wednesday,
March 6.
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THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, February 9, 2024
Everett/Revere/Malden cooperative boys’ hockey
team united in determination for strong finish
By Dom Nicastro
T
he Everett cooperative boys’
hockey team, which features
players from Everett, Revere,
Malden and Mystic Valley high
schools, is heading toward the
home stretch. The team is 5-11-1
after 17 games. While there likely
won’t be any postseason appearance
for the Tide, the team
wants to finish strong in its final
three games.
We caught up with two of its
captains – senior forward and
Malden’s Lukas Deguire of Mystic
Valley and Revere senior forward
Ollie Svendsen – in the
meantime for a Q&A on leadership
and the team’s progress
lately.
Advocate: Three out of the last
four games have been competitive.
What is the team doing
well lately?
Deguire: I feel that our team
has done a great job in these last
four games at coming together
and understanding that it would
be a great memory to each of
the 11 seniors on our team if we
were able to finish off the season
on a strong note. There is definitely
a deeper sense of passion
at this point in the season as the
games quickly wind down, and
we’re just giving all we have on
and off the ice to be a competitive
team.
Svendsen: The key to the
Shown from left to right, senior captain Jake Simpson of
Malden, senior captain Ollie Svendsen of Revere, Malden's
Lukas Deguire of Mystic Valley and Head Coach Craig Richards.
team’s late success has been
the amount of “grit” we have
put in day in and day out. We
have been in some high-scoring
games, and we seem to never
give up. We really work on getting
pucks deep in the corner
and beating those defensemen
to the puck and gain control.
Just getting the puck to the net
has been huge for us especially
when we crash for rebounds
and deflections.
Advocate: What are some
things you guys feel like you can
improve?
Deguire: Obviously, there is
always room for improvement
with any team, and we could
definitely work on perfecting
our systems, as these are what
will win us decisive games. The
effort has been there as of recently,
but if we can master our
positioning in each zone and
further our chemistry together,
we will be a definitively better
team.
Svendsen: A huge improvement
for us would be our
first-period play. We always
seem to come out flat, making
us go down on the scoreboard
early. After that buzzer rings to
end the first, there is almost always
a switch that turns on, and
we start battling our way back.
Advocate: How do you go
about forming team chemistry
when you have four different
schools and it’s hard to see each
other outside the rink?
Deguire: There is no doubt
that team chemistry is hard to
come by when combining four
schools, but our coaching staff
has done an incredible job at
ensuring that we can have time
to bond and create memories.
This is done through our weekly
team dinners, assigned locker
room seating, and on-ice
chats that allow us to express
ourselves. All of these ideas
help us form better relationships
and give us an identity as
a team, rather than four separate
schools.
Svendsen: In my personal
experience, I have been playing
with Everett/Revere Youth
Hockey my whole life. When I
was about 12, our youth program
joined forces with Malden’s
youth hockey program so
it was nice to meet some future
teammates since Revere and
Malden were combined for var~
Malden Neighborhood Basketball League ~
Week 6
2024 Malden Neighborhood Basketball League
Team W L
Lakers
Bullets
Kings
7
6
2
1
Games behind Streak
W - 2
W - 4
1
1
5
5
0
.5
Sixers 5 3 2 L - 1
Celtics
4.5
5
Pistons 1 7 6 L - 3
Wednesday, Jan. 31, at Linden
Game 1 – Celtics 44, Lakers 43
In our very rare first game of the year outside the Ferryway
School, the Good Old Linden School showcased
two great games this night. The Emerald figured out
the mystery of the undefeated purple people by stunning
them by 1 point at the buzzer. S. Warton did all he
could, scoring 93% of the Lakers’ total and ending with
a game-high 30. On the other side, D. Jacques (13) & C.
Malave (11) had that eye of the tiger on their side, thanks
to a very energetic Coach in Yvens “Magic” Riviere facing
off against his years ago former Coach Beany Amos.
Game 2 – Sixers 61, Pistons 50, OT
The Sixers & Pistons went to Overtime and it seemed
too much for the Pistons’ engines to maintain friction.
L - 1
L - 4
The Sixers ran away in quarter 5 with the Victory. C. Joseph
led the way with his season-high & game-high
score of 26; teammate A. Martino added 11 and the
defense did the rest by holding their opponent to just
4 points in the OT. The Pistons’ N. Sullivan had a good
game ending with a team-high 17 as J. Bly (11) and M.
Cook (10) did their part in this tough loss.
Saturday, Feb. 3, at Ferryway
Game 1 – Sixers 35, Celtics 30
The Green came out flat in this opening contest. C.
Mathely had a steady game ending with a game-high
of 18, but the rest of the team couldn’t generate the offense
it needed to help. The Crimson didn’t do a whole
lot better offensively, but thanks to a set of 10 from J.
Geronimo & C. Joseph as well as two big 3’s from A. Martino
they were able to score the victory.
Game 2 – Lakers 37, Kings 31, OT
Speaking of offensive woes, even with an extra frame
into overtime only Z. Pierre was able to eclipse the double-digit
mark in scoring for the Kings with 10. The Lakers
also had problems getting players involved on the
offensive end, but S. Warton (14) stayed somewhat Hot,
as he has been all year, and ended with the game-high.
Saturday, Feb. 4, at Ferryway
Game 1 – Bullets 63, Sixers 35
The Boys in Blue are on a hot streak – winners of four
straight – and dominated this game from the tap, especially
in the second quarter with a 21-6 margin, which
had them on cruise control the rest of the way; being
led by L. Guertin (17), L. Wright (15) & C. Mijar (12). The
Sixers’ C. Joseph had himself a decent weekend & ended
with team-high (14). The rest of the squad was on
cruise control in a different way, it seemed, offensively?
Game 2 – Lakers 58, Pistons 47
The Lakers stay on top with this Win. Thanks to a monster
game from S. Warton, who had five 3’s and ended
with a weekend high of 36. He also led his team in scoring
every quarter. The Pistons squad did pretty well for
themselves on the offense; they just needed some early
defensive help, as they did lock it down in the fourth,
but just a lil too late. Top scorers for them were R. Wallace
& N. Sullivan with 14 each, and J. Dorismond added 11.
Next week’s games:
Sat., Feb. 17
Bullets Kings
Celtics Lakers
Wed., Feb. 21 at Linden
Pistons Kings
Bullets Celtics
Sun., Feb. 18
Celtics Bullets
Sixers Pistons
sity high school hockey. I knew
all the Everett players from playing
youth hockey and was excited
to get the chance to play
against my friends. Instead, we
once again joined forces and I
was ecstatic to play with all my
friends growing up.
Advocate: As a senior, how
have you tried to work with the
underclassmen to help them
get better?
Deguire: As a senior, there is a
distinct role of maturity and setting
an example for the younger
players on the team. Throughout
the season, I have made
sure to maintain a positive attitude
on and off the ice that reflects
onto the underclassmen.
Whether it is taking the lead in
a drill or giving maximum effort
on a skate at the end of practice,
I have tried to set the bar for the
younger guys to follow this season
and for the rest of their high
school careers.
Svendsen: I have seen a lot
of improvement from the newcomers
this season. I try to lead
by example in practice. Furthermore,
games can be nerve-racking,
and when an underclassman
makes a mistake, they tend
to get really down on themselves.
I try to explain that they
won’t make the next play if
they are still so focused on the
last one and that they have to
let it go.
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Page 15
Meet the 2024 Malden, Revere and Everett
High School Wrestling Co-Op Team
Greater Boston League Team, shown from left to right: Front row: Thomas Cau, Maria Luiza Medeiros, Kevin Prada Araujo, Nora Hounain, Kenny Wong, Katelyn
Vo, Eduardo Landaverde Lemus, Chris Seccareccio, Hayden Butler, Matt Chan, Audrey Nguyen and Declan Chaisson; back row: Co-Head Coach Kevin Isaza,
James Montello, Peter Noel, Obert Jean Louis, Stanley Davitoria, Angel Chinchilla, Radley Lekuku, Kevin Argueta, Jason Wang, Carlos Jimenez, Hakim Malik,
Gaetano Foster, David Prada Araujo, Sean Cochran, Jason Vasquez Tevez, Elijah Miranda, Mark Sylvain and Co-Head Coach Nick Erban.
By Tara Vocino
T
he Malden High Golden Tornadoes,
Revere High Patriots
and Everett High Crimson
Tide Wrestling Co-Op team
were honored during their Senior
Night against the Saugus-Peabody
High School Sachems/Tanners
at Malden High
School last Wednesday. Their
banquet is Tuesday, March 12
at Anthony’s of Malden at 6
p.m.
Shown from left to right: Co-Head Coach Kevin Isaza, CoCaptains
Maria Luiza Medeiros, David Prada Araujo and Kevin
Argueta and Co-Head Coach Nick Erban.
Wrestlers hailing from Malden, shown from left to right: Front row: Kenny Wong, Kevin Prada
Araujo, Nora Hounain, Katelyn Vo, Eduardo Landaverde Lemus, Thomas Cau, Matt Chan,
and Audrey Nguyen; back row: Co-Head Coach Kevin Isaza (MHS), Obert Jean Louis, Stanley
Davitoria, Jason Wang, David Prada Araujo, Sean Cochran, Declan Chaisson and Co-Head
Coach Nick Erban (EHS).
Wrestlers hailing from Revere, shown from left to right: CoHead
Coach Kevin Isaza (MHS); Carlos Jimenez (Sr., 190 lbs.);
Radley Lekuku (Soph. 144 lbs.); Hakim Malik (Sr., 175 lbs.) and
Co-Head Coach Nick Erban (EHS).
(Advocate photos by Tara Vocino)
Wrestlers hailing from Everett, shown from
left to right: Co-Head Coach Kevin Isaza (MHS);
Maria Luisa Madeiros (Sr., 113 lbs.); Kevin
Argueta (Jr., HVY); Angel Chinchilla (Soph., 157
lbs.); Gaetano Foster (Soph., HVY); Mark Silvain
(Jr., HVY); Jason Vasquez Tevez (Soph., 138 lbs.)
and Co-Head Coach Nick Erban.
Shown from left to right: Co-Head Coach Kevin
Isaza, GBL team players James Montello,
Peter Noel, Hayden Butler, Elijah Miranda
and Chris Seccareccio and Co-Head Coach
Nick Erban.
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THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, February 9, 2024
Mystic Valley Boys Swimming Team cruises
to 17th straight CAC Championship
By Emily Brennan
T
he Mystic Valley Regional
Charter School’s Boys Varsity
Swimming Team wrapped
up a phenomenal regular season
last Thursday at the Commonwealth
Athletic Conference
(CAC) Championship meet
held at Lynn Tech. The team,
which had already gone undefeated
in League meets, beating
all eight CAC teams in the
dual meet season, capped it off
by winning the League Championship
– scoring more than
double the second-place team,
Shawsheen Tech.
The team got off to a great
start in the 200 Yard Medley Relay
when Senior Captain Jason
Yan led off in the backstroke in a
blistering pace, giving the team
a three second lead over Shawsheen,
in the first of four legs.
The team never looked back,
with Yan followed by sophomores
Christian Antonucci in
breaststroke, Thomas Sodeyama-Cardosa
in butterfly and
Jaden Anthony in the anchor leg
swimming freestyle. Their time
of 1:45.72 was six seconds better
than second-place Shawsheen.
The team would win all but
one of the eight individual
events over the course of the
two day meet. Jayden Anthony
would lead the way as the only
boys meet participant to win
two individual events, with wins
in the 100 yard freestyle and 500
freestyle. In the 100 freestyle
he hit the wall at 51.31, touching
out his opponent from the
coop team of Lowell/Innovation
Academy/Nashoba by fourtenths
of a second – one of the
closest races of the day.
Following the Medley relay,
Kevin Sodeyama-Cardosa won
the 200 yard freestyle, and immediately
following, brother
Thomas Sodeyama-Cardosa
splashed to victory in the 200
CHARGES | FROM PAGE 7
da was also held responsible
for a seventh shooting that
took place in Lynn – during the
course of the drug conspiracy –
on July 4, 2020, that was committed
by fellow TRG members.
This seventh shooting resulted
in the death of one victim and
injuries to four others.
Minier-Tejeda is the 18th federal
defendant to be sentenced
CHAMPIONS: Shown from left to right: Back row: Aris Catic, Jason Yan, Lucas Santos, Kevin
Capa and Christian Antonucci; middle row: Lucas Freitas, Adrian Chang, Jaden Anthony, George
George and Brady Capa; front row: Thomas Sodeyama-Cardoso, Ryan Catic, Brandon Wamala,
and Dylan Phan.
yard individual medley, where
the swimmer swims two lengths
of each stroke: butterfly, backstroke,
breaststroke and freestyle.
Thomas, hitting the wall
at 2:05.14, touched just ahead
of teammate Jason Yan, who recorded
a time of 2:06.5.
In what was the closest and
maybe most exciting race of the
day, sophomore Lucas Freitas
was in a photo finish – recording
a time of 24.11 seconds, finishing
in second place by four
one-hundredths of a second to
Shawsheen sprinter Harrison
Kinsella, who touched at 24.07.
Freitas, despite the heartbreak
loss, was not to be denied, winning
the next event, the 100
200 Medley Relay
200 Yard Freestyle
200 Individual Medley
50 Yard Freestyle
100 Yard Butterfly
100 Yard Freestyle
500 Yard Freestyle
200 Yard Free Relay
100 Yard Backstroke
100 Yard Breaststroke
Top Four Teams
Team Score
Mystic Valley (MV)
K. Sodeyama-Cardosa
T. Sodeyama-Cardosa
Shawsheen
Lucas Freitas MV
Jaden Anthony MV
Jaden Anthony MV
Mystic Valley
Jason Yan MV
Christian Antonucci MV
400 Yard Freestyle Relay Mystic Valley
Mystic Valley (MV)
610
2nd Place
Shawsheen
yard butterfly, reversing roles
and just touching out teammate
Lucas Santos by two-tenths of a
second for the Gold.
Shortly after, Mystic Valley
with the team of sophomores
Freitas, Kevin Sodeyama-Cardosa,
Santos and freshman
Brady Capa finished first in the
200 Freestyle Relay with a time
Commonwealth Athletic Conference Boys Swim Championship Top Three 2023
1st Place
Lucas Santos MV
Jason Yan MV
Lucas Freitas MV
Lucas Santos MV
Lowell/Innovation/Nshba
K. Sodeyama-Cardosa
Blue Hills
Dylan Phan MV
T. Sodeyama-Cardosa
Shawsheen
Shawsheen Tech
253.5
3rd Place
Blue Hills
Henry Cao MV
Christian Antonucci MV
Blue Hills
Minuteman
Shawsheen
Dylan Phan MV
Lowell/Innovation/Nshba
George George MV
Aris Catic MV
Blue Hills
Blue Hills
233
of 1:39.47. Although the time is
nearly a full 10 seconds off the
League Record set by Mystic
Valley eight years ago, it is perhaps
the best time ever recorded
by such a young group at
the school.
Finishing out the individual
events, Captain Yan won the 100
yard backstroke and sophomore
Christian Antonucci swam to
victory in the 100 breaststroke.
In the final event of the meet,
the 400 yard freestyle relay,
Jaden Anthony, Christian Antonucci,
Jason Yan and Thomas
Sodeyama-Cardosa finished
first in 3:26.69 – one of the best
times ever at the CAC Championship
for the event. With an average
split of 51.7 seconds per
hundred and three of the four
being sophomores, the future
is very bright.
Mystic Valley is right back in
action on Saturday, February 3,
for a last chance meet in Malden
at 7 p.m. The Eagles then
travel to WPI on Sunday, February
11, for the MIAA Sectional
Tournament.
For the latest on Mystic Valley
Athletics, follow the Eagles via
social media on Twitter, Facebook
and Instagram.
Winning Time
1:45.72
1:56.23
2:05.14
24.07
1:00.57
51.31
5:09.92
1:39.47
57.83
1:05.43
3:26.69
Greater Lowell
192.5
in this case. Over the past three
years, the investigation has resulted
in the arrest, conviction
and imprisonment of multiple
drug traffickers and violent offenders
in the Greater Boston
area, including Vincent Caruso,
a/k/a “Fatz,” who was sentenced
to 250 months in federal prison;
his mother Laurie Caruso and
coconspirator Ernest Johnson,
a/k/a “Yo Pesci,” who were sentenced
to 108 and 78 months
in federal prison, respectively.
Malden-based drug trafficker
and participant in a shooting
of a vehicle that contained
a young child, Phillips Charles,
a/k/a “Phon C,” was sentenced
to 78 months in federal prison;
TRG leader David Oth, a/k/a
“Baby Bouncer,” was sentenced
to 180 months in federal prison;
and Ahsan Arty, a/k/a “Hass,”
a member of a violent drug and
gun conspiracy, was sentenced
to 120 months in federal prison.
Coleman, also of Malden,
pleaded guilty to his role in the
conspiracy in February 2022 and
was scheduled to be sentenced
in federal court in Boston yesterday
(February 8).
Valuable assistance in the investigation
was provided by
Chelsea, Everett, Lynn, Malden,
Salem, Mass., and Somerville Police,
as well as the United States
Attorney’s Office for the District
of Maine; Maine State Police;
Maine Drug Enforcement
Agency; Essex, Middlesex and
Suffolk County District Attorney’s
Offices; Essex and Hancock
(Maine) County Sheriff’s Department;
and Portland (Maine) and
Westbrook (Maine) Police Departments.
Assistant U.S. Attorneys
Philip A. Mallard and Kaitlin
R. O’Donnell of the Organized
Crime & Gang Unit prosecuted
the case.
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Page 17
Malden man, 33, gets 10 years in jail for selling
crystal meth to undercover agent
A
33-year-old Malden man
was sentenced to 10 years
in prison for distributing methamphetamine
to an undercover
law enforcement officer; David
Desousa was sentenced by
U.S. District Court Judge Richard
G. Stearns to 10 years in prison
to be followed by five years
of supervised release. In September
2022, Desousa pleaded
guilty to one count of distributing
50 grams or more of methamphetamine,
one count of distributing
five grams or more of
methamphetamine, one count
SWIM | FROM PAGE 1
Jess Bisson, Malden High coed
swim has won – remarkably –
nearly 90 percent if its regular
season meets. The Golden Tornadoes
swim team have been
Greater Boston League (and for
two years, Northeastern Conference
South) champions a whopping
19 times in 25 seasons.
The latest stretch of excellence
has come with Coach Bisson
at the helm. With an 88-79
win over Revere on the road at
the Garfield School in Revere
on January 18, Malden High
clinched its 4th straight GBL
title and 6th straight league
championship overall. Finishing
with another unbeaten league
mark (5-0), Malden used a few
first-place finishes, a wheelbarrow-full
of seconds and thirds
and a dominating sweep of the
three relays run officially that
day to seal another championship.
“It
certainly was not a given
or something we thought we
could do easily,” Coach Bisson
said of this year’s title shot. “We
knew we would have to focus
of distributing a mixture or substance
containing methamphetamine
and three counts of
possessing 50 grams or more of
methamphetamine with intent
to distribute.
In February 2020, an investigation
began into Desousa’s methamphetamine
distribution activities.
On three separate occasions
– in February, March and
July 2020 – Desousa met with
and sold various quantities of
methamphetamine to an undercover
agent. Desousa was arrested
on Aug. 6, 2020, in Medford
while he was travelling to
deliver two ounces of methamphetamine
to the undercover
agent.
More than 55 grams of 99%
pure methamphetamine and
10.814 grams of cocaine base
were seized from Desousa’s
vehicle. During a subsequent
search of Desousa’s residence,
more than 75 grams of methamphetamine,
a loaded Remington
.380 caliber pistol and $5,000 in
cash were seized. An additional
83 grams of 99% pure methamphetamine
and $90,000 in cash
were also seized from Desousa’s
storage unit.
Acting U.S. Attorney Joshua
S. Levy; the Special Agent
in Charge of the Drug Enforcement
Administration’s New England
Field Division, Brian D.
Boyle; the Inspector in Charge
of the U.S. Postal Inspection Service’s
Boston Division, Ketty Larco-Ward;
Arlington Police Chief
Juliann Flaherty; Medford Police
Chief Jack Buckley; and Malden
Police Chief Glenn Cronin made
the announcement. Assistant
U.S. Attorneys Philip C. Cheng
and James E. Arnold of the Narcotics
& Money Laundering Unit
prosecuted the case.
This effort was part of an Organized
Crime Drug Enforcement
Task Forces (OCDETF) operation.
OCDETF identifies, disrupts
and dismantles the highest
level criminal organizations
that threaten the United States
using a prosecutor-led, intelligence-driven,
multi-agency approach.
Additional information
about the OCDETF Program can
be found at https://www.justice.
gov/OCDETF.
1. (M) Sophie Tran, 1:06.18; 2.
(R) Matthew Terrell, 1:10.02; 3.
(M) James Zhou, 1:14.26; 4.(R)
Joslyn Nguyen, 1:14.2; 5. (R)
Feng, 1:22.32.
100 Freestyle
1. (M) Xu, 57.36; 2. (R) Hill,
1:04.20; 3. Lipa, 1:06.10; 4. Santos,
1:09.12; 5. Gordon Zeng,
1:11.87.
100 Breaststroke
1. (R) Rua, 1:24.50; 2. (M) Stanley
Yip, 1:29.50; 3. (R) Nathaniel
Hill, 1:28.03; 4. (M) Kevin Lin,
1:32.29.
100 Backstroke
1. (R) Cano, 1:03.04; 2. (M) SoMALDEN
SWIM TEAM: The Golden Tornadoes won their 4th consecutive Greater Boston League
Championship with a meet victory in its last one of the season on the road versus Revere, 8879.
(Advocate Photo)
lay events is what truly carried
the team to the meet win. In
the 200-yard medley relay, the
foursome of Joslyn Nguyen, Hailey
Tran, Sophie Tran and Tiffany
Pham rolled to a first-place time
of 2:04.93. Second-place was Ian
Ian Ho, Stanley Yip, James Zhou
and Joao Victor Santos (2:13.66).
200 Yard Freestyle later in the afternoon
to put the meet out of
reach. First place went to Joao
Victor Santos, James Zhou, Stanley
Yip and Xiaode “David” Xu at
1:58.62. Revere got second place
by time, but was disqualified by
an error. Malden took third with
Pham, Larissa Retanero Granja,
Gorden Zeng and Danielle Harrington
(2:08.65) and fifth with
Jasmin Diaz Gomez, Sabrina Daforsega,
Dasia Valentine and Sofia
Euorog (2:42.18). Revere was
second at 1:56.14 with Matthew
Terrell, Wilson Feng, Harrison
Rua and Nathaniel Hill.
Here’s how the other events
finished:
200 Individual Freestyle
1. (Revere) Juan Cano, 2:00.41;
DAVID XU WINS: Malden High’s Xiaode “David” Xu swam
to a win in the 100 Freestyle with a time of 57.36 seconds.
(Advocate Photo)
and put in the work.”
“We also knew we would have
to rely on some new people to
be able to compete for the [GBL]
title,” Coach Bisson said, “and
that’s exactly what we did.”
Malden’s strength in the reRevere’s
Jannet Sehli, Harrison
Rua, Vilson Lipa and Leah Zuniga
were third at 2:26.43. Malden’s
Sophia Huynh, Christina
Mui, Yingyan Xia and Weigi Du
were fourth (2:48.23).
Malden also went 1-3-5 in the
2. (Malden) David Xu, 2:06.65; 3.
(Revere) Terrell, 2:23.12; 4. (Malden)
Joslyn Nguyen, 2:33.16; 5.
(Malden) Danielle Harrington
(2:38.33).
200 Individual Medley
1. (R) Alem Casir, 2:23.23; 2.
(M) Hailey Tran, 2:24.50; 3. (M)
Pham, 2:58.97; 4. (M) Yingyan
Xia, 3:10.29; 5. (R) Leah Zuniga,
3:52.9.
50 Freestyle
1. (M) Santos, 27.43; 2. (R) Wilson
Feng, 28.06; 3. (M) Stanley
Yip, 28.25; 4. (R) Rua, 28.36; 5.
(M) Weigi Du, 38.72; 6. (R) Jannett
Sehli, 33.31.
100 Butterfly
phie Tran, 1:09.08; 3. (R) Lipa,
1:16.27; 4. (M) Ian Ian Ho, 1:20.85;
5. (M) Yinjie Wang (1:23.98).
500 Freestyle
1. (R) Alem Cesic, 6:15.85; 2.
(M) Danielle Harrington, 7:10.80;
3.(R) Jannett Sehli, 7:21.28; 4. (M)
Ian Ian Ho, 7:34.51; 5. (M) James
Zhou, 7:40.22; 6. (R) Leah Zuniga,
8:21.56.
GORDON and JOAO: Malden team members, sophomore
Gordon Zeng (left) and senior Joao Victor Santos talk it over
before an event. (Advocate Photo)
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THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, February 9, 2024
Healey-Driscoll Administration announce
$5M for fire departments
Malden included in the more than 300 communities awarded funds for safety equipment
CITY OF MALDEN
Forest Dale Cemetery
150 Forest Street
Malden, MA 02148
Telephone: 781-397-7191 / Fax: 781-388-0849
Christopher Rosa., Superintendent of Cemeteries / Tree Warden
LEGAL NOTICE
CITY OF MALDEN
PUBLIC TREE HEARING
In accordance with the provisions of Massachusetts General Law, Chapter 87,
Section 3, notice is herewith given that a public hearing will be held at 6:00 P.M. on
Wednesday, the 21st day of February 2024 at Malden City Hall Conference Room
108, 215 Pleasant Street, Malden, Massachusetts for the purpose of determining if the
thirty-two (32) public shade trees shall be removed or remain per the Tree Warden of the
City of Malden. The trees are located at or around the address identified below:
Address Street
STREET RECONSTRUCTION (ENGINEERING)
14 AUTUMN STREET
26-28 KENMORE ROAD ON AUTUMN
26-28 KENMORE ROAD ON AUTUMN
18 AUTUMN STREET
24 AUTUMN STREET
25 KENMORE ON AUTUMN
28 AUTUMN STREET
28 ROSEMONT ST ON AUTUMN
42 AUTUMN STREET
48 AUTUMN STREET
27 ROSEMONT ST ON AUTUMN
27 ROSEMONT ST ON AUTUMN
34 WEDGEMERE ST ON AUTUMN
60 AUTUMN STREET
69 AUTUMN STREET
69 AUTUMN STREET
74 AUTUMN STREET
78 AUTUMN STREET
78 AUTUMN STREET
83 AUTUMN STREET
90 AUTUMN STREET
94 AUTUMN STREET
96 AUTUMN STREET
83 LISBON STREET
83 LISBON STREET
81 LISBON STREET
81 LISBON STREET
57 LISBON STREET
40 LISBON STREET
29 LISBON STREET
7 LISBON STREET
7 LISBON STREET
DBH (IN) Common Name
6
7
11
3
11
7
7
3
12
5
5
6
3
6
7
12
8
9
4
5
5
14
11
15
18
20
19
12
18
25
21
31
CALLERY PEAR
CALLERY PEAR
NORWAY MAPLE
CALLERY PEAR
CRIMSON K. MAPLE
CALLERY PEAR
CALLERY PEAR
CALLERY PEAR
CALLERY PEAR
CALLERY PEAR
CALLERY PEAR
CALLERY PEAR
CALLERY PEAR
CALLERY PEAR
CALLERY PEAR
CALLERY PEAR
CALLERY PEAR
CRIMSON K. MAPLE
CRABAPPLE
CALLERY PEAR
CALLERY PEAR
PIN OAK
NORWAY MAPLE
LITTLELEAF LINDEN
LITTLELEAF LINDEN
LITTLELEAF LINDEN
LITTLELEAF LINDEN
LITTLELEAF LINDEN
LITTLELEAF LINDEN
LITTLELEAF LINDEN
LITTLELEAF LINDEN
LITTLELEAF LINDEN
OBJECTIONS TO THE REMOVAL OF ANY TREE(S) MUST BE RECEIVED
IN WRITING BY THE TREE WARDEN AT THE ABOVE LISTED ADDRESS
PRIOR TO OR AT THE TREE HEARING. LETTERS CAN BE MAILED OR
EMAILED TO THE ABOVE ADDRESS.
R
ecently the Healey-Driscoll
Administration announced
$5 million in awards to 321 Massachusetts
fire departments
through the state’s Firefi ghter
Safety Equipment Grant program.
The City of Malden will receive
$35,000.
“Every single day, firefighters
across Massachusetts put
themselves in harm’s way to
protect their communities,” said
Governor Maura Healey. “They
deserve our thanks and our
support. The Firefighter Safety
Equipment Grant program
is just one way we can express
our appreciation for that selfl ess
dedication.”
“From structure fi res and water
rescues to hazardous materials
and building collapses,
fi refi ghters never know what
life-threatening risks the next
call will bring,” said Lt. Governor
Kim Driscoll. “These grants
will support the purchase of
fundamental tools and specialty
equipment to help them
do a dangerous job more safely.”
Fire
departments across Massachusetts
were invited to apply
to the Firefi ghter Safety Equipment
Grant program, which provides
reimbursement on purchases
of 135 different types
of eligible equipment. Eligible
items include hoses and nozzles,
turnout gear, ballistic protective
equipment, gear washers and
dryers, thermal imaging cameras,
hand tools and extrication
equipment, communications
resources, hazardous gas meters,
and more. In many cases,
the purchase of this equipment
will help departments attain
compliance with Occupational
Safety & Health Administration
or National Fire Protection Association
safety standards. This
is the fourth year that funding
has been awarded through the
program.
“For the second year in a row,
many fi re departments are using
this program to provide
their personnel with ballistic
vests and helmets so they can
make life-saving rescues in active
shooter situations,” said Secretary
of Public Safety and Security
Terrence Reidy. “As we confront
this growing threat and
other emerging hazards, we are
proud of the way Massachusetts
fi re departments have risen to
every challenge.”
“While smoke and fl ames are
the most obvious threats to
fi refi ghters’ safety, occupational
cancer is the leading cause
of death in the fi re service,” said
Deputy Secretary Susan Terrey.
“We now know that wearing the
right type of protective gear and
cleaning it properly can reduce
that risk. This program will give
many fi refi ghters access to tools
that will help protect them from
the number one threat to their
health and well-being.”
“The Firefi ghter Safety Equipment
Grants are an investment
in the health and safety of Massachusetts
firefighters,” said
State Fire Marshal Jon Davine.
“The fl exibility of the program
is especially valuable because
it allows each department to
make purchases based on their
specifi c needs and resources. It
has become a vital part of the
way the Massachusetts fi re service
prepares for the constantly
evolving threats in the world
around us.”
“Firefighters who have the
proper protective gear and
contemporary rescue tools are
much better able to protect
themselves and the residents
they serve,” said Hyannis Fire
Chief Peter Burke, President of
the Fire Chiefs’ Association of
Massachusetts. “These grant
awards will have immeasurable
impacts on public safety in Massachusetts
for years to come.”
Christopher Rosa
City of Malden Tree Warden
February 09, 16, 2024
For Advertising with Results,
call The Advocate Newspapers
at 617-387-2200 or Info@advocatenews.net
׉	 7cassandra://3GOhVhs-pj4iZMVVNECiLQKJ_oNb38ahNU2dRx28fs8"`̰ eA3=׉E%THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, February 9, 2024
Page 19
Friends of the Malden River
Meeting moved to Everett
I
n order to attend the Everett
City Council meeting, the
Friends of the Malden River’s
February meeting has been
moved to Everett City Hall (484
Broadway, Everett) on February
12 at 6:30 in the Keverian
Room adjacent to the City Council
Chambers. Please sign up to
submit public comment in the
back of the City Council Chambers
at 6:30. The City Council
welcomes public comment on
the need for National Grid to
install an attractive, user-friendly
and easily accessible path
along the Malden River shorelines
connecting the Northern
Strand Community Trail to Everett’s
River Green Park. National
Grid’s community liaison will
be in attendance to listen and to
relay the comments.
The Conservation Law Foundation
along with the Malden
River municipalities, Mystic River
Watershed Association and
state legislators are in negotiations
with the Massachusetts
Department of Environmental
Protection and National Grid
attorneys. The Friends’ goal is to
demonstrate public opinion on
the importance of this critical
piece of the Malden River Walk
that would not only circle the
Malden River but also connect
the Malden River to the Mystic
River Greenway, a future 25-mile
circuit connecting communities
and parks. National Grid hired
and paid Shadley Associates to
design and create an estimate
for the River Walk.
ROTH IRA ACCOUNTS
T
he Taxpayer Relief Act of
1997 created the ROTH IRA
MUSINGS | FROM PAGE 6
Sullivan hot dogs with some
home fries and I said to myself,
fuhgeddaboudit!! Darn good
choice, Pistol! Thank you, Neil,
your place is a treasure in case
you didn’t realize it. And you are
too, friend.
As Peter Falk’s iconic TV character
Columbo would say, “Just
one more thing, sir” – growing
up in Edgeworth by Jimmy
Walker:
“Just some quick random
Edgeworth thoughts and memories.
“Chestnut
fights, fruit trees
and vegetable gardens in most
backyards (sometimes good for
the taking if you could outrun
the dogs) but most folks would
give them to you if you asked.
Stickball at Emerson or Immaculate,
street hockey everywhere
(that damn orange ball), pick up
baseball at Devir, tackle football
without pads, Peter Levine
riding his bike all over Edgeworth
with his long hair and
Celtics tank top. Delivering papers
to Bobby Barry house right
after a snowstorm, knowing I
was going to get pelted good
with snowballs, but I had a job
to do, lol.
“Going to visit my grandmother
Connie in the kitchen at
Forgione’s (after getting pelted
by snowballs) for a hot meatball
and a piece of bread while my
aunt Rose tells my grandmother
she’s giving away the profits for
the day, lol.
“Growing up next door to
Mike’s Cafe and learning what
excessive alcohol consumption
is all about at 7 years old from
my bedroom window at 2 am.
“Working at Skip’s Auto on the
corner of Highland and Medford
with Paul Trulli and Art Rogers,
they taught this 14-year-old a lot
about cars and life....and hockey.
“Growing up in Edgeworth
with some of the best people
that I still call friends today. A
privilege to know most of you
folks. Thank you for a great childhood
and many awesome memories.”
Postscript:
In the photo, at City
Hall on Pleasant Street, happily
pictured side by side are recently
retired Big A owner Nick “Steak
Bomb” Kombouras and Mayor
Gary “The Bomb” Christenson
right after Mayor Gary handed
Nick a sheet of paper thanking
him for his many years making
Malden a happy place. Good to
see the two pictured together
smiling. I recall back in the day
driving by the Big A, in the front
window spying a sign hanging
prominently supporting the
mayor’s opponent that year and
saying to myself, Nick, Nick, Nick,
you’re backing the wrong mayoral
candidate this race (Gary
won – again – btw). Insert great
big smiley face.
—Peter is lifelong Malden
and a regular contributor to
the Malden Advocate. He can
be reached at PeteL39@aol.
com for comments, compliments
or criticisms.
effective January 1, 1998. Although
ROTH IRA’S are not tax
deductible, if certain requirements
are met, the earnings
can be withdrawn tax free. Furthermore,
the so-called “minimum
distribution rules” that
apply to Traditional IRA’S do
not apply to ROTH IRA’S. Traditional
IRA’S require withdrawals
no later than April 1
following the Calendar Year in
which the owner reaches age
73. Earnings in a ROTH IRA can
accumulate tax-free during the
owner’s lifetime.
An individual can contribute
the lesser of his or her earned
income for the year or $6,500
to either a ROTH IRA or a Traditional
IRA. The Taxpayer, however,
must meet certain adjusted
gross income (AGI) limitations.
In
addition, the owner
may still participate in an employer-sponsored
retirement
plan. If you are age 50 or older,
you can contribute an additional
$1,000 to a Roth IRA or
Traditional IRA.
For single Taxpayers, eligibility
phases out with AGI between
$138,000 and $153,000
and for married, filing joint Taxpayers,
eligibility phases out
with AGI between $218,000
and $228,000.
For a married, filing joint Taxpayer,
if the couple’s AGI is less
than $218,000, and the working
spouse has at least $6,500
in earned income, then each
spouse can contribute $6,500
to a ROTH IRA. This is so even
if the non-working spouse
has no earned income. The
non-working spouse in effect
“borrows” the earned income
of the other spouse.
If you are an active participant
in a qualified retirement
plan, and a single taxpayer,
your contribution to a Roth
IRA is phased out with AGI between
$73,000 and $83,000. If
you are married filing a joint
tax return, the contribution is
phased out with AGI between
$116,000 and $136,000. For a
spouse who is not an active
participant in a qualified retirement
plan, the Roth IRA contribution
is phased out with
AGI between $218,000 and
$228,000.
Why contribute to a ROTH
IRA? The benefits of “tax-free”
earnings are simply too good
to ignore. You may, however,
still decide to contribute to a
Traditional IRA if you (i) expect
to retire relatively soon; (ii) you
expect that your tax bracket
will significantly drop during
retirement; (iii) you will need
the funds soon; (iv) and you
plan on investing the savings
in tax dollars generated from
the Traditional IRA contribution
itself.
If you were to be laid off,
switch jobs or retire, tremendous
flexibility is gained when
viewing basic ROTH IRA planning.
When you terminate
your employment, your 401(k)
balance, for example, can be
rolled over first into a Traditional
IRA “roll-over” account.
This would constitute a taxfree
“roll-over.” From there, you
could convert the Traditional
IRA to a ROTH IRA. This would
constitute a taxable conversion.
You have the flexibility
of determining in which calendar
years to perform the conversion,
based upon whether
or not you had been working
in a particular calendar year,
whether or not your other income
is unusually low in a particular
year, or whether or not
you had sufficient mortgage
interest or real estate tax deductions
to help offset the
“conversion” income.
One problem with Traditional
IRA’S is that the “deferred income”
is ultimately taxed to the
beneficiaries. Under the Secure
Act, non-spousal beneficiaries
have 10 years to withdraw
the account balance as
opposed to over his or her
life expectancy. This is a game
changer. With ROTH IRA’S, the
income when received is received
“tax free.” Furthermore,
tax-free growth can continue
after your death unlike with a
Traditional IRA. Spousal beneficiaries
can establish their
own Spousal Roth IRA account
and continue with tax deferral.
There would be no required
minimum distributions during
the surviving spouse’s lifetime,
unlike with a Traditional IRA account.
Children
old enough to earn
income should be encouraged
to earn at least $6,500
per year in order to contribute
to a ROTH IRA. This will result
in a tremendous benefit based
upon many years of contributions.
The investment accumulates
income tax free.
One often overlooked benefit
of a ROTH IRA is found in the
Medicaid Planning area. An individual
who foresees the possibility
of being admitted into
a nursing home, expecting to
apply for MassHealth benefits,
could withdraw the account
balance and place into an irrevocable
trust in order to commence
the five-year look back
period. None of the withdrawal
would be taxable so there
is a much greater incentive to
take action to protect the assets
in the Roth IRA. This is not
the case with a Traditional IRA
account. The entire withdrawal
would be taxable. Once the
required five-year look back
period is satisfied, that individual
may be eligible for MassHealth
benefits as a result of
having transferred the countable
ROTH IRA assets from his
or her name..
ROTH IRA’S offer significant
planning opportunities. If you
are eligible to make a contribution,
it is almost always a good
idea to do so. A ROTH IRA contribution
must been made by
April 17, 2024 for Calendar
Year 2023.
Joseph D. Cataldo is an estate planning/elder law attorney,
Certified Public Accountant, Certified Financial Planner, AICPA Personal
Financial Specialist and holds a master’s degree in taxation.
REAL ESTATE TRANSACTIONS
BUYER1
THALI, AMOGH
BUYER2
SELLER1
DEJESUS, MARCIO
SELLER2
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.
ADDRESS
13 PRESTON ST
CITY
MALDEN
DATE
01.22.24
PRICE
755000\
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THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, February 9, 2024
avvya yavvy eniiooravvy S iorn or
v y
Dear Owen,
Yes, traditional Medicare does indeed cover some weight-loss treatments
like counseling and certain types of surgery for overweight benefi
ciaries, but unfortunately it doesn’t cover weight-loss programs or
medications. Here’s what you should know.
Who’s Eligible
For benefi ciaries to receive available Medicare-covered weight-loss
treatments your body mass index (BMI), which is an estimate of your
body fat based on your height and weight, must be 30 or higher.
A BMI of 30 or above is considered obese and increases your risk for
many health conditions, such as some cancers, coronary heart disease,
type 2 diabetes, stroke and sleep apnea. To fi nd out your BMI, the National
Institutes of Health has a free calculator that you can access online
at nhlbi.nih.gov/health/educational/lose_wt/BMI/bmicalc.htm.
What’s Covered
If you fi nd that your BMI is 30 or higher, Medicare Part B will cover up
to 12 months of weight-loss counseling conducted by a medical professional
in a primary care setting (like a doctor’s offi ce).
Most counseling sessions entail an initial obesity screening, a dietary
assessment and behavioral therapy designed to help you lose weight
by focusing on diet and exercise.
Medicare also covers certain types of bariatric and metabolic surgery
for morbidly obese benefi ciaries who have a BMI of 35 or above
and have at least one underlying obesity-related health condition, such
as diabetes or heart disease. You must also show that you’ve tried to
lose weight in the past through dieting or exercise and have been unsuccessful.
These
procedures make changes to your digestive system to help
you lose weight and improve the health of your metabolism.
Some common bariatric surgical procedures covered include Rouxen-Y
gastric bypass surgery, which reduces the stomach to a small
pouch that makes you feel full even following small meals. And laparoscopic
adjustable gastric banding, which inserts an infl atable band
that creates a gastric pouch encircling the top of the stomach.
What’s Not Covered
Unfortunately, original Medicare does not cover weight-loss programs
such as fi tness or gym memberships, meal delivery services,
or popular weight-loss programs such as Jenny Craig, Noom and WW
(formerly Weight Watchers).
Medicare also does not cover any weight-loss drugs, but it does cover
FDA approved diabetes drugs that have unintentionally become very
popular for weight loss.
Medicare Part D plans cover Ozempic and Mounjaro for diabetes
only, not for weight loss! So, your doctor will need to prescribe these
medications for diabetes in order to get them covered.
Medicare also does not cover Wegovy or Zepbound because they’re
approved only for weight loss.
The reason behind the weight-loss drug omission is the Medicare
Modernization Act, which specifi cally excluded them back when the
law was written 20 years ago. They also excluded drugs used for cosmetic
purposes, fertility, hair growth and erectile dysfunction.
Without insurance, weight-loss medications are expensive, often
costing $1,000 to $1,300 a month. To help curb costs, try websites like
GoodRX.com or SingleCare.com to fi nd the best retail prices in your
area. Or, if your income is limited, try patient assistance programs
through Eli Lilly (LillyCares.com) which makes Mounjaro and Zepbound,
or Novo Nordisk (NovoCare.com) the maker of Ozempic and Wegovy.
Medicare Advantage
If you happen to be enrolled in a private Medicare Advantage plan,
you may have coverage for gym memberships and some weight loss
and healthy food delivery programs. These are considered expanded
supplemental benefi ts and have gradually been added to some plans
to provide coverage for nutrition, health and wellness. Contact your
plan to see what it provides.
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 “The Savvy Senior” book.
io
iori
by Jim Miller
Does Medicare Cover
Weight-Loss Treatments?
Dear Savvy Senior,
Does Medicare cover any weight-loss treatments for overweight
retirees? I just turned 65 and need to lose about 100 pounds and
would like to know if Medicare can help.
Overweight Owen
Like us on Facebook advocate newspaper
Facebook.com/Advocate.news.ma
LEGAL NOTICE
INVITATION TO BID
CONTRACT 2024-W-1
2024 WATERWORKS IMPROVEMENTS PROGRAM
MALDEN, MASSACHUSETTS
THE CITY OF MALDEN invites sealed bids for Contract 2024-W-1 of its 2024 Waterworks
Improvements Program. Bids will be received at the office of the Malden Engineering Department,
215 Pleasant Street, 3rd Floor, Room 340, Malden, MA 02148, until 1:30 PM local time on
Thursday, February 29, 2024 and at that place and time will be opened and read aloud.
In general, the work of this contract shall consist of replacing water mains in 6 streets, Bowers
Street, Dennis Road, Revere Street, Rudolf Street, Wilbur Street, and Wiley Street totaling approximately
3,033 linear feet. The work includes installing, maintaining and removing temporary bypass
systems; removing existing and constructing new water mains, replacing existing service connections,
hydrants and associated valves and fittings; constructing temporary and permanent roadway and
sidewalk trench patches; and related appurtenant and incidental work.
Contract Documents will become available Thursday, February 15, 2024 and may be obtained
at the office of the Malden Engineering Department, 215 Pleasant Street, 3rd Floor, Room 340,
Malden, MA 02148, Monday through Thursday, 9:00 AM to 4:00 PM. City offices are closed
on Fridays.
A deposit in the form of a check payable to the “City of Malden, Massachusetts” in the amount
of $50.00 will be required for each set of the Contract Documents. A refund of the deposit will
be made for Contract Documents returned in good condition within 4 weeks after bids are received.
Bidder’s requesting Contract Documents by mail shall include an additional non-refundable
check payable to “Hayner/Swanson, Inc.” in the amount of $40.00 per set to cover handling
and mailing costs.
The bids shall be prepared and submitted in accordance with the Instructions to Bidders.
Bids must be accompanied by a bid security, satisfactory to the City, in the amount of five
percent (5%) of the total bid. The bid security shall be in the form of a bid bond issued by a
company licensed to do business in the Commonwealth; or a certified, treasurer’s or cashier’s
check, issued by a responsible bank or trust company, payable to the “City of Malden,
Massachusetts”. Cash deposits will not be accepted. A Performance Bond and a Labor and
Materials Payment Bond in the amount of one hundred percent (100%) of the bid will be
required of the successful bidder.
The cost of all bonds and insurances required by this Invitation to Bid and the associated Contract
Documents are the responsibility of the Bidder; such costs will not be reimbursed separately
by City and shall be included in your bid.
Contracts for work under this Proposal will obligate the Contractor and Subcontractors to
comply with applicable Federal, State and local provisions regarding prevailing wage rates,
insurances, labor, equal employment opportunity, anti-discrimination and affirmative action.
All bids are subject to the provisions of M.G.L. Chapter 30, Section 39M. Wages are subject
to minimum wage rates determined by the Massachusetts Department of Labor and Industries
pursuant to M.G.L. Chapter 149, Sec. 26 to 27H. The schedule of wage rates applicable to this
contract is included in the Contract Documents. In addition, the prevailing wage schedule will
be updated annually for all applicable projects lasting longer than one (1) year. You will be required
to pay the rates set out in any updated prevailing wage schedule. Increases in prevailing wage
schedules will not be the basis for change order requests. The successful bidder will be required
to provide a Certificate of Insurance demonstrating current coverage of the types and amounts
set forth in the Contract Documents.
Bids may be held by the City of Malden for a period not to exceed sixty (60) calendar days
from the date of the opening of bids for the purpose of reviewing the bids and investigating the
qualifications of bidders, prior to awarding the Contract.
The City of Malden reserves the right to waive any informalities or to reject any or all bids
received if deemed to be in their best interest.
CITY OF MALDEN BY
Yem Lip, P.E. City Engineer
Malden Engineering Department
February 9, 2024
LEGAL NOTICE
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Page 21
OBITUARIES
Lisa M. Greeley
Of Malden.
Formerly of
Somerville, on
February 2nd.
Beloved daughter
of Barbara
(Bettencourt) Greeley of Malden
and the late Frank Greeley.
Wife of Richard Howard of Malden.
Mother of Brendan Howard
and his wife Mary of Scituate,
Kyle Howard of New York
City and Andrew Howard of Melrose.
Sister of Jill Sheehan and
her husband Patrick of Millis and
the late Mark and Gary Greeley.
Lisa was raised in Somerville,
graduating from Somerville
High School. She received
her Bachelor’s Degree from
Dartmouth College and her
Master’s Degree from Simmons
University. Since 1982, she has
worked as a commercial loan offi
cer for several area fi nancial institutions.
Lisa had a very competitive
nature. She was an avid
golfer and tennis player. She also
had a talent for interior design
and decorating.
Relatives & friends are invited
to attend her funeral from
the Breslin Funeral Home, 610
Pleasant St., Malden on Saturday
February 10th at 9 AM followed
by her Funeral Mass celebrated
at Immaculate Conception
Church, 600 Pleasant St., Malden
at 10 AM. Interment is private.
Visiting hours will be held
at the funeral home on Friday
February 9th from 4-7 PM.
Stephen Johnson Sr.
Of Malden
passed away
surrounded by
his loving family
February 3rd,
2024. The son
of the late Charles and Frances
(Coughlin) Johnson, Steve was
born and raised in Somerville,
MA. He graduated from Somerville
High School in 1970. Steve
married Patricia (Noonan) in
April of 1972 and the two settled
down. They raised their
four children Stephen Jr., Scott,
Amanda, and Nicole. During his
free time, he loved to fi sh, enjoyed
weekly breakfast with his
“cardiac buddies”, the news or
a game from his favorite spot
on the couch, sing to his favorite
oldies, and spending time
with family and friends. Steve
was also a long-time manager
at The Americana Condominiums.
Steve
is survived by his wife
of 51 years, Patricia of Malden,
his children Stephen and his
wife Ann of Tewksbury, Scott
and his wife Susan of Swampscott,
Amanda Abbott of Derry
NH, and Nicole Chabre and her
husband Jeff of Malden. Cherished
Grampy of Stephen, Kristina,
Addison and Caleb Johnson.
Brother of the late Linda and David
Johnson, loved nephew of
Marie Jobert, and dear cousin
to many. He is also survived by
several other family members
and friends.
Services for Steve will be held
at the Weir Funeral Home, 144
Salem Street in Malden on Friday
February 9th from 5-9pm.
In lieu of fl owers, please support
Steve’s love for animals by
making a donation to the Melrose
Humane Society or a favorite
animal shelter.
Advertise in
theADVOCATE
Call now! 617-387-2200
advertise on the web atwww.advocatenews.net
Clean-Outs!
We take and dispose
from cellars, attics,
garages, yards, etc.
Call Robert at:
781-844-0472
1. What city in the early 1900’s had a “Black Wall Street”?
2. How many NFL stadiums have artifi cial grass: 10, 15 or
30?
3. On Feb. 10, 1976, what U.S. president said, “I urge my
fellow citizens to join me in tribute to Black History
Month and the message of courage and perseverance
it brings to all of us”?
4. What two teams have won six Super Bowls?
5. Why was the ghost town of Reefer City near Mojave,
Calif., called that?
6. From Feb. 11-17 is International Flirting Week; what
Italian was a legendary fl irt?
7. What Founding Father was once an indentured servant
and is said to have sold chocolate at a printshop?
8. Which is the world’s oldest tree variety: bristlecone pine,
giant sequoia or African baobab?
9. What tree’s name means “food of the gods”?
10. On Feb. 12, 1809, what U.S. president who issued the
Emancipation Proclamation was born?
11. The nursery rhyme “Pease Porridge Hot” includes the
title of what 1959 crime comedy fi lm?
12. What U.S. state produces the most cheese: Idaho, Vermont
or Wisconsin?
13. Who wrote the story “A Retried Reformation” with a
main character named Jimmy Valentine?
14. What type of comedy has a name that comes from a
wooden device used by clowns to make noise?
15. What team has been in 11 Super Bowls?
16. Esther Howland, who is known as the “Mother of the
American Valentine” and “New England’s fi rst career
woman,” was born in what Massachusetts city?
17. In what sport would you fi nd a peloton?
18. What company with a 5th Ave. fl agship store makes trophies,
including for the Super Bowl and fi gure skating
and horse racing trophies?
19. In 1868, the fi rst heart-shaped box of chocolates was
created by who: Richard Cadbury, Milton Hershey or
Louis IV?
20. What songwriting duo created the song “My Funny Valentine”
in the 1937 musical “Babes in Arms”?
ANSWERS
1. Tulsa, Okla.
2. 15
3. Gerald Ford
4. New England Patriots and
Pittsburgh Steelers
5. It was founded by a mining
company that used refrigerator
(or “reefer”) boxcars to
house miners.
6. Giacomo Casanova
7. Benjamin Franklin
8. Methuselah, a Great Basin bristlecone
pine in Nevada (4,854
years old)
9. Theobroma cacao (an evergreen
that produces cocoa
beans)
10. Abraham Lincoln
11. “Some Like it Hot”
12. Wisconsin
13. O. Henry
14. Slapstick
15. New England Patriots
16. Worcester
17. Bicycling (the main pack of riders
in a race)
18. Tiff any & Co.
19. Richard Cadbury
20. Richard Rodgers and Lorenz
Hart
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THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, February 9, 2024
AAA Service • Lockouts
We follow Social Distancing Guidelines!
Trespass Towing • Roadside Service
Junk Car Removal
617-387-6877
26 Garvey St., Everett
J.F & Son Contracting
Snow Plowing
No Job too small! Free Estimates!
Commercial & Residential
781-656-2078
- Property management & maintenance
Shoveling & removal
Landscaping, Electrical, Plumbing, Painting, Roofing, Carpentry, Framing,
Decks, Fencing, Masonry, Demolition, Gut-outs, Junk Removal & Dispersal,
Clean Ups: Yards, Garages, Attics & Basements. Truck for Hire, Bobcat Services.
MDPU 28003 ICCMC 251976
Frank Berardino
MA License 31811
● 24-Hour Service
● Emergency Repairs
BERARDINO
Plumbing & Heating
Gas Fitting ● Drain Service
Residential & Commercial Service
617.699.9383
Senior Citizen Discount
WASTE REMOVAL &
BUILDING MAINTENANCE
• Landscaping, Lawn Care, Mulching
• Yard Waste & Rubbish Removal
• Interior & Exterior Demolition (Old
Decks, Fences, Pools, Sheds, etc.)
• Appliance and Metal Pick-up
• Construction and Estate Cleanouts
• Pick-up Truck Load of Trash
starting at $169
• Carpentry
LICENSED & INSURED
Call for FREE ESTIMATES!
Office: (781) 233-2244
FIRE • SOOT • WATER
Homeowner’s Insurance Loss Specialists
FREE CONSULTATION
1-877-SAL-SOOT
Sal Barresi, Jr. - Your fi rst call
617-212-9050
SPADAFORA
AUTO PARTS
JUNK CARS
WANTED
SAME DAY PICK UP
781-324-1929
Quality Used Tires
Mounted & Installed
Used Auto Parts & Batteries
Family owned & operated since 1946
Advocate
Call now!
617-387-2200
advertise on the web at
www.advocatenews.net
For Advertising with Results, call The Advocate Newspapers
at 617-387-2200 or Info@advocatenews.net
$
$
$
$
Classifieds
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Page 23
Like us on Facebook advocate newspaper
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~ LEGAL NOTICE ~
For Advertising
with
Results,
call The Advocate
Newspapers
at 617-387-2200
or
Info@advocatenews.net
Dated: February 09, 2024
PUBLIC NOTICE
CITY OF MALDEN
LICENSING BOARD
A Public Hearing will be held before the Licensing
Board for the City of Malden at City Hall, 215 Pleasant
Street, Room 108, Malden, MA 02148 on February
27, 2024 at 6:00 p.m. regarding the application of D.N.
Brothers, Inc d/b/a Sun Kong Restaurant, 275 Eastern
Avenue, Malden, MA For a Change of Stock or Ownership
Interest and Officers/Directors/LLC Managers for On
Premises S12 All Alcohol Restaurant License.
All interested parties will be given an opportunity to be
heard.
Lee A. Kinnon, Chairman
Andrew Zeiberg, Member
Paul Lee, Member
Your Hometown News Delivered!
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Clip & Mail Coupon with Credit Card, Check or Money Order to:
Advocate Newspapers Inc.
PO Box 490407, Everett, MA 02149
Get a
Mango Realty has extended our business model to
rentals, property management and short-term rentals
and use the platform such as Airbnb, including our
Rockport office.
Contact Information: For inquiries and to schedule a
viewing, please call Sue Palomba at 781-558-1091 or
email infowithmango@gmail.com.
Join Our Team: Seeking Passionate Real
Estate Agents!
Are you a driven and dedicated real estate
professional looking to advance your career?
We're expanding our team and seeking
talented agents to join us!
Embark on a rewarding journey with us and
unleash your full potential in the real estate
industry. Join our team today!
As a member of our
team, you'll benefit
from:
Comprehensive
training and
support
Cutting-edge
marketing
resources
Access to valuable
networking
opportunities
Lucrative
commission
structures
Discover the ideal fusion of charm, convenience, and
comfort at Revere Apartments for Rent. This exquisite 2bedroom,
2-bathroom residence occupies the coveted first
floor of a 40-unit building, ensuring a serene and private
living experience.
Immerse yourself in the contemporary allure of the updated
kitchen, featuring newer floors that seamlessly complement
the overall aesthetic. Convenience is elevated with in-unit
laundry, completewith awasher, dryer, and refrigerator for
added ease.
Securing this haven requires the standard first, last, and
security deposit, along with a one-month broker fee. The
monthly rent stands at $2,700. To qualify, applicants must
boast a credit score exceeding 680, provide references, and
undergo abackground check.
For inquiries and to seize this opportunity, contact Sue at
617-877-4553. or soldwithsue@gmail.com Availability
begins March 1, and please note that pets and smoking are
not permitted. Immerse yourself in the vibrant
surroundings, including nearby trails and eateries, making
this residence a perfect blend of modern living and local
exploration.
comprehensive
market analysis at
no cost!
Are you considering selling
your property?
Our team offers a FREE marketing
analysis service, providing you with
valuable insights to guide your real
estate decisions. With interest rates
currently
in the 6-7%,
advantageous time for both buyers and
sellers.
Contact us today at 617-877-4553 or via
email at soldwithsue@gmail.com to
schedule your consultation.
Let our expertise help you navigate the
real estate market with confidence.
it's an
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THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, February 9, 2024
Carpenito Real Estate is now
LYNN $1,699,900
4 storefronts, newer facades, all
occupied—great income with minimal
expenses. Near public transportation.
SAUGUS $1,475,000
Incredible colonial a gorgeous
fireplace in an impressive 2-story
great room. No detail was missed!
New Year, New Home!
CJ D’Amore
Your Forever Agent®
(978) 882-1715
CJ is ready and equipped to be
Your Forever Agent® and help you
find the home of your dreams.
SAUGUS $329,900
New 2 bedroom condo with a granite
kitchen, central air, gas heat, new
windows, and off-street parking.
COMMONMOVES.COM
335 CENTRAL STREET, SAUGUS, MA | (781) 233-7300
SAUGUS $299,900
Austin Court offers a 2 bedroom
condo with 4 rooms, fresh paint, and
an inground pool.
©2024 BHH Affiliates, LLC. An independently owned and operated franchisee of BHH Affiliates, LLC. Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices and
the Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices symbol are registered service marks of Columbia Insurance Company, a Berkshire Hathaway affiliate.
Equal Housing Opportunity.
SAUGUS $925,000
Custom colonial in the Woodlands
with fireplace, finished lower level,
central air, and 2-car garage.
SAUGUS $725,000
Rare two-family with 2/3 bedrooms,
hardwood floors, and a charming
patio in a quiet side street location.
FOR SALE
FOR SALE -OPPORTUNITY IS KNOCKING. PREMIERE
LOCATION FOR RETAIL/OFFICE SPACE IN ONE OF
LYNNFIELD'S BUSIEST PLAZAS. THIS BUILDING IS
CURRENTLY OWNED AND USED BY THE KNIGHTS OF
COLUMBUS. THIS WELL MAINTAINED 2-STORY COLONIAL
OFFERS 30+ PARKING SPACES. INSIDE YOU'LL FIND
ALMOST 3600 SF OVER 2 FINISHED LEVELS, AND AN
ADDITIONAL UN-FINISHED FULL BASEMENT. EXISTING
BUILDING IS LOCATED IN RB ZONING. MANY
POSSIBILITIES FOR AN OWNER/USER OR INVESTOR
LOOKING TO CAPITALIZE ON MULTIPLE SEPARATE
SPACES OR TO TEAR-DOWN AND REBUILD. MAIN LEVEL
HAS SMALLER FUNCTION AREA, LARGE HALL AREA,
KITCHEN, 1/2 BATH AND BAR AREA. UPPER LEVEL HAS 2
OFFICES, A CONFERENCE ROOM AND A FULL BATH.
LOCATED ONLY 10 MILES FROM BOSTON WITH QUICK
ACCESS TO ROUTE ONE NORTH & SOUTH.
LYNNFIELD $649,000
CALL KEITH 78-389-0791
COMING SOON
COMING SOON -
RENOVATED 13 YEARS AGO, THIS 3 BED CAPE
OFFERS AN OPEN CONCEPT KITCHEN/ DINING
THAT INCLUDES, SS APPLIANCES, GRANITE,
BREAKFAST BAR, TILE FLOOR WITH A MATCHING
BACKSPLASH. RED OAK HW FLOOR, CROWN
MOLDING, SUN ROOM W/ SKYLIGHT LEADS TO
DECK OVERLOOKING A FENCED LEVEL YARD. THE
LL FAMILY ROOM HAS BERBER CARPET AND
OFFERS AN 400 SQUARE FEET OF HEATED LIVING
SPACE, 1715 SQFT IN TOTAL. SAUGUS
CALL KEITH 781-389-0791 FOR DETAILS
SOLD $50K+
OVER ASKING
SOLD-PRIDE OF OWNERSHIP SHOWS IN THIS ONE OWNER SPLIT LOCATED
IN A BEAUTIFUL AREA WITH NEWER HOMES. THIS PROPERTY HAS
EVERYTHING YOU NEED OFFERING 8 ROOMS, 2.5 BATHS, EAT-IN KITCHEN
WITH GRANITE COUNTERS AND STAINLESS STEEL APPLIANCES, OPEN
CONCEPT DINING/LIVING ROOM WITH FIREPLACE AND VAULTED CEILINGS.
SUNROOM OFF OF KITCHEN WITH LOWER DECK OVERLOOKING PRIVATE
YARD. MAIN BEDROOM HAS HARDWOOD FLOORS AND PRIVATE BATH.
SPACIOUS LOWER LEVEL HAS TILED FAMILY ROOM WITH FIREPLACE,
BEDROOM AND LAUNDRY ROOM WITH HALF BATH. GREAT FOR THE
EXTENDED FAMILY. 2 CAR GARAGE, CENTRAL AIR, PULL DOWN ATTIC STAIRS,
SECURITY SYSTEM, IRRIGATION.
SAUGUS $780,000 CALL KEITH 781-389-0791
FOR LEASE
FOR LEASE -600 SQUARE FOOT OPEN SPACE WITH
KITCHEN AND 1/2 BATH INCLUDED.TENANT PAYS THEIR
OWN GAS AND ELECTRIC UTILITIES. CLOSE TO SAUGUS
CENTER, THIS HIGH TRAFFIC AREA IS AN EXCELLENT
LOCATION FOR A NEW OR EXISTING BUSINESS. PERFECT
FOR OFFICE, AESTHETICIANS, NAIL SALON, YOGA STUDIO,
ETC. INCLUDES ONE PARKING SPOT IN REAR FOR
BUSINESS OWNER. AVAILABLE MARCH 1ST SAUGUS $1,500
CALL KEITH 781-389-0791
RENTAL
1 BEDROOM APARTMENT EAT-IN KITCHEN WITH PLENTY OF CABINETS. FRESHLY PAINTED AND NEW CARPETS.
LAUNDRY HOOK-UPS IN UNIT FOR AN ELECTRIC DRYER. 2 CAR OFF STREET PARKING. NO PETS AND NO
SMOKING. FIREPLACE IN BEDROOM IS DECORATIVE ONLY. GOOD CREDIT AND REFERENCES. 3 MONTHS RENT
REQUIRED TO MOVE IN. AVAILABLE 3/1-SAUGUS $1800 CALL RHONDA 781-706-0842
MOBILE HOMES
COMING SOON
COMING SOON-BRAND NEW CONSTRUCTION
COLONIAL LOCATED ON A
NICE SIDE STREET NOT FAR FROM
ELEMENTARY SCHOOLS AND THE
CENTER OF TOWN. 4 BEDS, 3.5 BATH
WITH HARDWOOD THROUGH-OUT.
BEAUTIFUL KITCHEN AND BATHS.
EXQUISITE DETAIL AND QUALITY BUILD.
GARAGE UNDER.
SAUGUS CALL KEITH 781-389-0791
SPACIOUS 2 BEDROOM IN NEED OF TLC. GREAT FOR HANDYMAN. HEAT AND A/C NOT WORKING.
LARGE ADDITION.2 CAR PARKING. DANVERS $89,900
YOUNG ONE BEDROOM IN GOOD CONDITION IN A DESIRABLE PARK WITH 2 PARKING SPOTS.
SOLD AS IS. SUBJECT TO PROBATE DANVERS $99,900
UPDATED 2 BEDROOM WITH NEWER KITCHEN, BATH, RUBBER ROOF, WINDOWS,
SIDING AND APPLIANCES. FULL SIZE LAUNDRY. DANVERS $99,900
LOOKING TO
BUY OR SELL?
FOR SALE
FOR SALE-FOUR FAMILY INVESTMENT
PROPERTY IN DOWNTOWN SQUARE
AREA CLOSE TO PUBLIC
TRANSPORTATION. EACH UNIT IS
RENTED WITH LONG TERM TENANTS
AND EACH UNIT HAS IT’S OWN
SEPARATE ENTRANCE. TWO NEWER
GAS HEATING SYSTEMS, SEPARATE
ELECTRIC METERS, 2 DRIVEWAYS AND
PARKING FOR UP TO 8 CARS. WILL BE
DELIVERED OCCUPIED. PEABODY
$975,500 CALL RHONDA 781-706-0842
ERIC ROSEN
781-223-0289
CALL HIM
FOR ALL YOUR
REAL ESTATE NEEDS
SPACIOUS UNIT IN VERY DESIRABLE MOBILE ESTATES IN PEABODY. NICE YARD 2 CAR
PARKING PROPANE HEAT, HANDICAP ACCESSIBLE GREAT FOR THE HANDYMAN OR
CONTRACTOR NEEDS WORK SOLD AS IS CONDITION PEABODY $79,900
PRE-CONSTRUCTION. WELCOME TO SHADY OAKS BRAND NEW MANUFACTURED HOME
COMMUNITY. AFFORDABLE YET UPSCALE LIVING , EACH HOME HAS AMPLE SQUARE
FOOTAGE WITH 2 BEDROOMS AND 2 BATHS. ONE WILL HAVE 3 BEDROOMS AND ONE BATH.
OPEN CONCEPT PERFECT FOR ENTERTAINING. HIGH QUALITY FINISHES FROM TOP TIER
APPLIANCES TO ELEGANT FINISHES.. A SERENE WOODED SETTING WHILE BEING CONVENIENT
TO SCHOOLS, SHOPPING, DINING AND MAJOR TRANSPORTATION ROUTES. THIS IS AN
EXCEPTIONAL OPPORTUNITY TO OWN A PIECE OF THIS THRIVING COMMUNITY AT AN
UNBELIEVABLE PRICE. LOW PARK RENT OF 450 A MONTH. INCLUDES TAXES, WATER AND
SEWER, RUBBISH REMOVAL AND SNOW PLOWING. ACT NOW BEFORE PRICE INCREASE.
EXPECTED OCCUPANCY DATE APRIL 2024 DANVERS $249,900
CALL ERIC 781-223-0289
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