׉?4ׁB!בCט ( (u׉׉	 7cassandra://sqBGtxGIWchnO3bBsboEjEvuv4OV-FfRh0lAoEz5oWU v`)׉	 7cassandra://AwkPni2C51V13ueNI5z6PUh4_DF_OBppVoMcLhsFP6c͞'`J׉	 7cassandra://N_zShw_PmDrH3Z3oPsoWKudUmGOCMUK7IRKzSJdbF1w/r`̰ ׉	 7cassandra://GcfadsfY4OYsrQU0w0XbZxduwQCFjmVtG8WLhGBfjJI  #J͠doЮr+`ZנdoЮr+`Z ,̿9ׁHhttp://www.advocatenews.netׁׁЈנdoЮr+`Z ~O39ׁHhttp://www.advocatenews.netׁׁЈ׈EdoЬr+`Z׉EMa
alddealld
Vol. 32, No. 18
den
n
-FREEYour
Local News in Seven Languages: www.advocatenews.net
AADD
Gary
Christenson
Mayor
By Steve Freker
M
alden Public Schools officials
on Monday night unveiled
a proposed FY24 budget
that would allow the School Department
the opportunity to
address a number of pressing
needs in the 2023-24 academic
year. Malden Public Schools
is poised to take that step largely
due to a proposed increase of
approximately $12 million from
CATO
AT
617-387-2200
www.advocatenews.net
Malden School Committee: no cuts,
only needed additions to staff in
classrooms, schools in district
budget proposal for FY24
Mayor’s proposed $91.3M city allocation
for schools is about a $9M singleyear
increase; believed to be largest
single-year hike in city history
Published Every Friday
Dr. Ligia
Noriega-Murphy
Supt. of Schools
last year’s school budget, due
to a recommended $91.38 million
allocation from the offi ce of
Mayor Gary Christenson. This is
believed to be one of the largest
single-year increases in municipal
history, up $9.2 million from
last year’s fi nal municipal allocation
of $82.1 million.
Malden Assistant Superintendent
for Business and Finance
BUDGET | SEE PAGE 8
DIVERSITY AWARD: Gary Yu is
shown receiving the Excellence
in Diversity and Inclusion
Award from Executive Director
Mei Hung during Saturday’s
18th Annual Chinese Culture
Connection Gala and Awards
Ceremony at Ming’s Seafood
Restaurant. He also received a
Certifi cate of Recognition from
the U.S. Senate and a Citation
from Mayor Gary Christenson,
shown at right. See pages
16-17 for photo highlights.
(Advocate photo by Tara Vocino)
“Cancel plans to install artificial turf” –
environmental justice coalition urges Malden elected
officials, citing health hazards of PFAS and heat,
cost, exclusion of stakeholders and city code
WE'VE GOT ALL
Advocate Staff Report
O
n April 28, a coalition of regional
environmental justice
and conservation organizations
echoed local concerns, urging
the City of Malden to “cancel its
plans to install artifi cial turf” at
Roosevelt Park and to instead
“establish a revised design to
install natural grass and properly
incorporate neighbor’s input”
in a letter addressed to Malden’s
Mayor and City Councillors.
In solidarity with the Friends
of Roosevelt Park, Alternatives
for Community and Environment
(ACE) and six other environmental
organizations voiced
concerns about health hazards
of PFAS chemicals and unsafe
heat, along with cost, the injustice
of the exclusion of key stakeholders
and the contradiction
of the city’s own code on prohibiting
impervious surfaces in
open space.
Citing well known health effects
of PFAS – “forever chemicals
linked to reproductive
issues, increased cancer risk,
weakened immune systems
and high risk of obesity,” known
to “hinder child development
and growth,” found in the plastic
of artifi cial turf carpet – ACE’s
letter pointed out that the plan
“would be especially concerning
because of the park’s use
by young sports leagues and
proximity to the Salemwood Elementary
School.”
Another health concern is
adding heat: “Cities like Malden
should be taking steps to meet
the demands of a warming climate,
but the installation of an
artifi cial turf fi eld at Roosevelt
Park would contribute to the
urban heat island eff ect,” added
the letter. This eff ect increases
“heat related illness and mortalTURF|
SEE PAGE 12
YOUR NEEDS COVERED!
C TE
E
Friday, May 5, 2023
18th Annual Chinese Culture
Connection Gala and Awards
6:00 AM - 10:30 PM
STORE HOURS:
Come to
Robinson News Convenience
1556 Eastern Ave, Malden • (781) 324-0492
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THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, May 5, 2023
Ward 7 Councillor Chris Simonelli Applauds Suffolk
Manor Tenant Association's New Members
W
8 Norwood St.
Everett
(617) 387-9810
Kitchen Hours:
Monday - Saturday
4:00 PM - 8:00 PM
Closed Sundays (Except 5/14)
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Open at 1:00 PM
ard 7 City Councillor Chris
Simonelli recently congratulated
the newly-installed
Tenant’s Association members
at Suffolk Manor senior residence.
Councillor Simonelli said
that he was pleased to see Suffolk
Manor remain under the
Tenant’s Association which will
allow the implementation for
more programs and activities.
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Councillor Simonelli shown
with a resident of Suffolk
Manor.
Ward 7 Councillor Chris Simonelli presented flowers to Linda
Bruce following her retirement serving as director of Suffolk
Manor for 35 years.
The residents of Suffolk Manor are shown enjoying their lunch.
Mayor Gary Christenson and Councillor Simonelli
׉	 7cassandra://A3aMpZfCKJnk76ovib2SSAx6_CBMx5R-52J_Ocw1xAQ/`̰ doЬr+`Z׉E=THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, May 5, 2023
Malden Musings
Page 3
"Liam Horkan Update "
By Peter F Levine
L
et's give a big round of applause
to Malden's very own
Liam Horkan. Young Liam is having
a outstanding freshman season
playing lacrosse for Connecticut
College. He's the 3rd leading
scorer for the Camel’s with 22
goals and 4 assists while shooting
44%. His shots on goal percentage
is an outstanding 78%.
They played Wesleyan College on
Wednesday (April 26) and with a
win will earn the right to play #1
in the country, Tufts in Medford,
on the following Saturday in the
fi rst round of the playoff s. Marty,
Liam’s dad, started Malden Youth
Lacrosse with former Cemetery
Director, Highland Cafe bartender,
and renowned raconteur Jimmy
Cahill 22 years ago. Liam's
brother Sean, who plays Lacrosse
at Belmont Hill, is currently #10
in the country and undefeated.
Good products of Malden Youth
Lacrosse. On a side note, Jayden
Jean, Malden Firefighter Greg
Jean’s son, is the off ensive coordinator
of Bentley Lacrosse who
just beat the #2 in the country,
Adelphi. Congratulations guys!
Best of luck! On another side note;
Jimmy who?! I kid.
It is said in Malden
Musings...
• Such a pleasure meeting
longtime Maldonian Kathleen
Nylin. Kathy won me over
with just a short 10-minute visit
- and not only because she loves
my column! Her charm, her class,
her wonderful personality hit
me like a tsunami! Very happy to
meet you, Kathy.
• Helen Nordquist update...since
her 2019 induction
into the Golden Tornado Club
Hall of Fame, Nordie at age 91,
has moved into assisted living donating
all her Malden memorabilia
to the Malden Historical Society.So,
the focus of the Society's
annual meeting on May 2 will be
a presentation by Linda Glover
on Nordie's life story which started
in the Malden school system.
Nine of her school letters will be
There will be a "La Mora" contest
featuring Sal "The Goldfi sh Swallower"
Barres. I have no idea what
that means!
MUSINGS| SEE PAGE 15
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Liam Horkan
on display, along with other local
items. Here's hoping there is
a full house of Maldonians in attendance
to honor this trailblazing
woman.
• Here's one of those times
I'd simply like to write something
nice about a special person. Just
in case he doesn't realize how
much he is loved. Extra special
Malden Musings shout out to a giant
of a Maldonian, Johnny Marsinelli.
A man I have looked up to
(and feared at times) my whole
life. A person I now call, friend.
When his number got called
Marse went off to war (Nam), just
like that. Arriving back home to
become a very important person
in the community. Despite everything
he went through during
that hellish "confl ict" he thrived
back home as mentor to generations
of youngsters, married well,
and became a dedicated and loving
father to his son John. I'd like
to emphasize, most importantly,
he came home to become one of
THE best fathers, embracing fatherhood
like the heavyweight
champ he is. Hey, don't get me
wrong, he ain't no Ward Cleaver,
but he is darn good nonetheless
(insert great big smiley face)!
Thanks, John, for all that you have
contributed, all that you have accomplished,
and all that you continue
to accomplish.
• Best of luck in retirement,
Malden Fire Chief Bill Sullivan.
Bill is a Malden lifer, his family
going way back in Malden fi refi
ghting history. The Chief joined
the M.F.D. in 1987 moving up the
ranks to become lieutenant, captain,
deputy chief, and eventually
(2020) fi re chief. That is quite a
story, 36 years serving the city he
grew up in and the city he loves.
Mazel Tov, my friend. I'll see you
around the neighborhood!
• Nancy Sweet was a
"Friend of Malden." Together with
her husband Eddie they owned
the sports card, candy, and collectibles
shop in Melrose called
'Sweet's Stuff .' Many Maldonians
spent many hours chatting up
Nancy and Ed as they dispensed
words of wisdom along with penny
candy to generations of neighborhood
children. Nancy was a
wonderful and compassionate
woman. She will be missed. May
your memory be a blessing.
• Where else but Anthony's
on Canal St; the Paesani Club
Annual Polenta Party, May 18th.
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THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, May 5, 2023
Malden House delegation votes to pass FY24 Budget
Bill prioritizes addressing housing instability, food insecurity, shortages in
early education, and workforce development to support families
O
n April 26, 2023, the Massachusetts
House of Representatives
unanimously passed
H.3900, the Fiscal Year 2024
(FY24) budget. Funded at $56.2
billion, H.3900 addresses the critical
needs of families and residents
across the Commonwealth
while dedicating funding to
make our communities and state
more affordable, livable and equitable.
While taking into consideration
the ending of COVID-era
federal funding – and rising inflation
nationwide – this spending
bill represents a continued commitment
to the people of Massachusetts
and aims to put the state
in a more competitive position in
a post-pandemic world.
“This year’s $56.2 billion budget
prioritizes creating a more livable
Commonwealth by addressing
critical issues including food
insecurity, housing instability,
as well as increasing educational
supports and access to workforce
development opportunities,”
said State Representative
Steve Ultrino (D–Malden). “I am
excited to see Malden community
organizations receiving funding
to continue their critical programs
and services for our residents
in need. Once again, I am
proud to have worked with my
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Paul Donato
State Representative
colleagues in the House, especially
with Representatives Paul
Donato and Kate Lipper-Garabedian
to successfully advocate for
investments in the Malden community.
Lastly, thank you Speaker
Ron Mariano and Chair Aaron
Michlewitz for the leadership and
hard work throughout this year’s
budget process.”
“Malden has secured funding
for an array of important services
in the 2023 budget. This important
funding will help to improve
housing, infrastructure, and public
safety services,” said State Representative
Paul Donato (D–Medford).
“As always, it was great to
work with Representative Lipper-Garabedian
and Representative
Ultrino, focusing on the most
critical needs of the community
to build an ever-improved Malden.”
“With
the Malden delegation, I
am proud to have secured funding
for the City of Malden including
in the areas of housing security,
public safety, and infrastructure,”
said State Representative
Kate Lipper-Garabedian (D–
Melrose). “Additionally, among
the many critical and responsive
statewide investments in the
House’s budget bill, I am thrilled
to see ongoing historic funding in
early education and childcare, a
Kate Lipper-Garabedian
State Representative
top priority for which I advocated.
And I’m glad to join the House in
supporting universal free school
meals, which would make Massachusetts
the sixth state to make
the program permanent.”
The Malden House delegation
has worked with leadership and
other legislators to ensure the bill
will provide financial support and
much-needed resources to the
Malden community. Representatives
Ultrino, Donato and Lipper-Garabedian
have successfully
advocated for and secured
$475,000 in local earmarks in the
FY24 budget, which include the
following:
• $150,000 for Portal To Hope to
develop programs combatting
domestic violence and providing
supportive services to survivors
and victims of domestic violence
• $100,000 for Housing Families
Inc. to assist in their general
operations
• $75,000 for a new multi-utility
vehicle for Malden’s Department
of Public Works
• $75,000 for Malden’s Pedestrian
Safety Pilot Projects
• $75,000 for Action for Boston
Community Development’s Mobile
Homeless Outreach Team
While state revenue collections
remain strong, the House
legislators have supported this
budget’s approach of integrating
new revenues from the Fair
Share Amendment and the recent
tax relief package. Furthermore,
the budget passed uses
$1 billion in anticipated Fair Share
revenue, funding that this budget
splits evenly between education
and transportation initiatives.
Revenue from this change
will supplement existing funding
for education and transportation
investments, and will be directed
to a new Education and Transportation
Fund, then distributed to
a series of Education and Transportation-centered
programs,
including:
• $161 million (M) for permanent
Universal School Meals,
making Massachusetts the sixth
state nationwide to provide free
Steve Ultrino
State Representative
school meals to all public-school
students
• $40M for C3 Childcare Stabilization
Grants, bringing the total
investments for C3 Grants to
$490M
• $20M for MassReconnect,
which will provide free community
college certificates and degrees
to Massachusetts residents
aged 25 or above who have yet
to earn a college-level credential
• $250M for MBTA Capital Investments
•
$65M for MBTA Workforce and
Safety Reserve to address ongoing
safety concerns identified by
the Federal Transit Administration’s
inspections
Other key highlights included
in the FY24 budget were:
• $181M allocated to the Residential
Assistance for Families in
Transition (RAFT) program, which
is a $31M increase from FY23
• $15M for the Early College
program to help expand access
to higher education pathways
for high school students, representing
a $5M increase from FY23
• $17.5M for Head Start grants,
which provides comprehensive
social, educational, physical, and
emotional services for Malden
families and youngsters
• Elimination of asset limits for
Medicare Savings Program eligibility
•
A two-year pilot program extending
eligibility for ConnectorCare
to applicants at or below
500% of the Federal Poverty
Limit
• No Cost Calls, which requires
the Department of Corrections
and House of Corrections to provide
free phone calls to individuals
committed to those facilities
Following a review of the Governor’s
budget proposal and a series
of public hearings, on April
12, 2023, the FY24 budget proposal
(H.3900) was introduced by
Speaker Ronald Mariano and the
House of Representatives’ Committee
on Ways & Means. The
House passed the budget, 1560,
and it now goes to the Senate
for consideration.
׉	 7cassandra://_P8jYLudWsM2NqhnYbJG4DZfFlPvUf1KpUJjZ-gvbQw+>`̰ doЬr+`Z׉E$THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, May 5, 2023
Page 5
Local high schoolers visit Cambridge Health
Alliance to learn about careers in health care
C
ambridge Health Alliance
(CHA), a community health
system serving Cambridge,
Somerville and Boston’s metro-north
communities, recently
hosted an exciting event for local
students interested in healthcare
careers. As part of CHA’s
April Vacation Career Exploration
Program, a group of high
school students from Everett,
Revere and Winthrop met a variety
of healthcare professionals
at CHA’s Revere Care Center and
Cambridge Hospital.
On Saturday, April 22, the students
visited the CHA Cambridge
Hospital Operating Room to
learn more about CHA’s Robotic
and Minimally Invasive Surgery
programs. This included handson
experience in a simulated environment
with CHA’s DaVinci Xi
surgical robot and other laparoscopic
technology. Students met
with surgical professionals, including
representatives from Intuitive
Surgical and Medtronic, to
learn various techniques and discover
career options in the fi eld.
On Wednesday, April 19, and
Friday, April 21, at the CHA Revere
Care Center, the students
learned basic healthcare skills,
such as how to use a stethoscope,
take blood pressure and
listen to lungs, and they also
met with staff from all Revere
departments and roles to learn
about the many healthcare career
opportunities and pathways
within primary care. Students
also received certifi cation
in the nationally recognized evidence-based
training Question,
Persuade, Refer (QPR), which
teaches individuals how to recognize
signs and symptoms of
Need a hall for your special event?
The Schiavo Club, located at
71 Tileston Street, Everett is
available for your Birthdays,
Anniversaries, Sweet 16 parties
and more?
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CHA’s Chief of Surgery, Dr. Siva Vithiananthan, demonstrated
various surgical techniques and discussed robotic and minimally
invasive surgery with local high school students as part of CHA’s
April Vacation Career Exploration Program. (Photo courtesy of CHA)
suicide ideation, how to support
someone and intervene and
what resources are available to
help someone in crisis.
“We’re excited about the
launch of the Career Pathways
Program and look forward to
sharing more great opportunities
for career exploration and
workforce development for
youth from the communities,”
said CHA’s Director of Community
Health Youth Initiatives, Jaime
Lederer. “CHA is committed
to expanding healthcare career
access for residents in the communities
we serve.”
This educational program,
which received support from
the Cummings Foundation, also
included workforce development
skill building, with opportunities
for mentorship and increased
awareness of employment
and volunteer opportunities
in health and medicine, including
community and public
health.
(857) 249-7882 for details.
WE CAN HELP PAY YOUR
HEATING BILLS!
You may qualify for ABCD’s Fuel Assistance
Program and be eligible for as much as $2,200
towards your heating costs (oil, gas, or electric).
Maximum benefit is $2,200
Household of 1 = $42,411
Household of 2 = $55,461
Household of 3 = $68,511
Household of 4 = $81,561
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Residents of Boston, Brookline, and Newton:
178 Tremont Street, Boston, MA — 617.357.6012
Residents of Malden, Medford, Everett,
Melrose, Stoneham, Winchester and Woburn:
18 Dartmouth Street, Malden, MA — 781.322.6284
As part of Cambridge Health Alliance’s April Vacation Career
Exploration Program, local high school students met with Dr.
Caroline Royer, a family medicine physician at the CHA Revere
Care Center, who discussed career opportunities in the field
and demonstrated basic healthcare skills, such as how to use a
stethoscope, take blood pressure and listen to lungs. (Photo courtesy of CHA)
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THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, May 5, 2023
An intergenerational cooking class at the Senior Center
By Karen Colón Hayes
O
r seniors asked for more intergenerational
activities at
the senior center, so I listened
and acted! Together, we came
up with the idea of a cooking activity
because we all have shared
stories of family and culture
which often centered around
the kitchen.
Culture and food infl uence
each other. In my family, food
was a way of retaining and retelling
our cultural identity
and traditions through storytelling
with both young and
older family members. I want
to create that interconnection
in Malden and we began at
the Malden Senior Center with
an intergenerational cooking
class. It was exactly how we
hoped it would be! The young
people were eager to learn
and the older generation was
eager to teach. We learned so
much about each other. Our
traditional foods were similar
and we learned diff erent techniques
on how to fold an empanada
from folks who fold
dumplings. Our youth learned
the correct way to hull strawberries
so there wasn’t any
waste. As one senior put it,
“because strawberries are expensive
and it’s a shame not
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Malden Public Library Spring Book
Sale this weekend
T
he Friends of the Malden
Public Library are holding
a fundraising Book Sale this
weekend. There will be books,
CDs and DVDs available for
purchase. Sneak peek for members
only: Friday evening, 6
p.m.–9 p.m. Open to the general
public: Saturday, 10 a.m.
–2 p.m. The Friends have partnered
with the New England
Coff ee Company for the event
and on Saturday are hosting
“Coff ee and a Book, the perfect
blend!” NECC is providing
a Coff ee Truck, which will be
parked at the library, and patrons
are asked for a donation
for the coff ee they order. All
Friends of MPL Book Sale fl yer
proceeds will go to the Friends
of the Malden Public Library to
fund programs and purchases.
to use the entire fruit.” At one
point, we couldn’t fi nd a sharp
knife so we learned a trick
from a senior how to sharpen
the knife on the side of a ceramic
mug!
There was an excitement in
the room and I was told later
that seniors felt useful and not
‘talked at’ but respected as elders
who have a lot to teach.
The benefi ts of programs like
these are twofold. For children
it includes making them more
comfortable with older adults
and removes stigma, as well
as a fear of aging for children.
For older adults, studies have
shown that spending time
with young children they report
less depression and more
joy in life.
So, I will be scheduling another
event in June which will
be listed in the Senior Center
Monitor Calendar. I will also be
hosting offi ce hours. The time
and location will be listed in the
monitor as well- I want to hear
from you!
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Page 7
Mayor to hold Storytime
at Malden Public Library
M
~ Political Announcement ~
Keith Bernard announces candidacy
for re-election to School Committee Ward 7
ayor Gary Christenson will be holding Storytime at the Malden
Public Library on Thursday, May 11, at 10:30 a.m. The Mayor
will read aloud from some fun new picture books and be available
to answer any questions that children might have about what a
mayor does. This program is recommended for ages three to fi veplus.
Preschool groups are welcome – just call the Children’s Room
in advance.
Dear Malden voters,
In 2021 I ran for offi ce because
our community members asked
and I answered. In the last two
years I’ve worked hard making
our schools fairer for everyone.
I fought to make sure our staff
were paid what they deserved
and I led the vote to approve
the new teacher and educational
professional contract. I collaborated
with our state delegation
for funding and ensuring no student
is hungry during the school
day while they’re trying to learn.
Our work is not done. I will
continue fi ghting for our students
to have access to the education
they need and deserve,
ensure our teachers have the
tools they need to be eff ective
and that every dollar spent is
used responsibly because every
young person should have
the opportunity to succeed to
the best of their abilities.
I’ve talked with parents and
Mayor Gary Christenson reads during Storytime.
caregivers, heard the concerns
and advocated for families to
get the support they need. I am
committed to this community,
my neighbors and our schools
– together we can lead the way
to a strong and bright future. I
am asking for your support in
re-electing me this fall.
Vote for Keith Bernard, by
Tuesday, November 7, 2023 for
re-election to Ward 7 School
Committee.
For more information, please
contact Keith Bernard at 617605-4341
or email at Bernard4Malden@gmail.com.
To
make a contribution, please go
to https://secure.actblue.com/
donate/campaign-to-electkeith-bernard-1
and for more
information go to https://Bernard4Malden.com
Keith
Bernard
School Committee
Member Ward 7
Mackey & Brown
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Phone: (617) 387-4900 Fax: (617) 381-1755
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John Mackey, Esq. * Katherine M. Brown, Esq.
Patricia Ridge, Esq.
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THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, May 5, 2023
~ Letter to the Editor ~
Prayer from the forest
A
ttached is a “prayer from the
forest” I wrote, which I read
during public comment at the
Northeast Regional Technical
School (NEMT, aka the Voke, in
Wakefield) school committee
meeting on April 13th.
To the Metro Tech Vocational
School Building Committee
From the Forest, a Prayer
I gave your ancestors wood to
Gerry
D’Ambrosio
Attorney-at-Law
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cook and keep warm
Slender shoots for arrows
Fruits to eat
Plants for medicine
I give you pine scent to savor
Beauty to see
Birdsong to hear
Cool refreshment from summer’s
heat
Butterfl ies to delight
Respite from cares
Oxygen to breathe
I ask you to let the animals
who call me home, live
To let my roots grow deeper
into soil and rock
To let my pools and streams
nourish life
To let my paths absorb the rain
To let my treetops greet the
morning sun
For the love of this world
And for the love of my small
part of it — my trees, my earth,
my creatures
I ask you to look into your
hearts
I ask you to let me live
Jane Robie
Malden, MA
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| FROM PAGE 1
Toni Mertz made a presentation
on the preliminary School
Department budget at Monday
night’s School Committee meeting
that was well received by the
members present.
Assistant Supt. Mertz on Tuesday
explained that the Malden
Public Schools proposal that her
department and central administration
had formulated for the
city’s allocation totaled $88.6
million. With the $91.38 million
proposed allocation by Mayor
Christenson, that would leave
$2,272,287 in additional funding
– above the School Department’s
initial request – where
some pressing needs could be
addressed, she said.
“This would not have happened
without the eff orts of our
state delegation for the state
funding portion and the Mayor’s
Offi ce in providing the recommended
allocation,” Assistant
Supt. Mertz said.
She detailed the initial plans for
the expenditure of the additional
$2.27 million in funding that is expected
to be available to the Malden
Public Schools. These would
all be additions to what is already
proposed the be funded:
—Building monitors: all
schools.
—School culture officers: all
schools.
—Adjustment counselors: in
some schools where needed.
—Spanish teachers: Linden
and Ferryway Schools.
—Wilson Reading: Forestdale
School.
—Registered Behavioral Technician
(RBT): Ferryway School.
—Assistant Principal: Forestdale.
(There has been only one
for several years.)
—Administrative Assistant: Forestdale
School.
—STEM Teacher: Forestdale
School.
—Math Teacher: High School.
—Health Teacher: High School.
—English Learner Coach: District.
“These
are all staffi ng additions
to the classrooms,” Superintendent
Dr. Ligia Noriega-Murphy
said at the meeting. “We need
‘boots on the ground’ to support
our existing staff and students
and that is what we would be doing
here.”
The new staffing would encompass
the entire school district,
Ward 5 School Committee
member Adam Weldai noted.
Weldai, before the budget presentation,
spoke on work already
underway to address needs at
the Early Learning Center (ELC).
Meetings have been held with
staff and ELC Principal Tamara
Lawrence, he said, and plans are
in place that would increase staff -
ing in the form of seven new RBT
personnel, the addition of a new
classroom, the return of a fulltime
Program Manager, the addition
of a building monitor and
other additions.
“We needed to make that investment
and we are committed
to it,” Weldai said, adding that additional
meetings specifi cally to
address the ELC and its staffi ng
are planned.
“I still believe we are not getting
our fair share of Chapter 70
aid,” Assistant Supt. Mertz said of
the direct state aid received for
education. “When you compare
us to other similar communities,
they are getting far more Chapter
70 funding. For instance, Chelsea
has about 100 more students
than Malden, and receives about
$50 million more in Chapter 70
than we do.”
She encouraged all to continue
to advocate to change the formula
and try to get more Chapter
70 funding for Malden. “The staff -
ing we could provide and what
we could do with that $50 million
would be such a benefi t to
our schools.”
Ward 5 School Committee
member Adam Weldai echoed
her comments. “Now is the time
we can be lulled into a sense
of complacency with our funding
sources seemingly providing
what we need, but the numbers
are going to change as the
city’s required contribution percentage
increases along with the
Chapter 70 funding,” Weldai said.
“Please, everyone – not just Malden
residents – contact your state
legislators and ask them to work
to adjust and change the formula
for determining Chapter 70 aid.”
Mayor Christenson, who is
chairperson of the School Committee,
also spoke on this issue,
noting that the community is
grateful for the state delegation’s
“diligence in pursuing funding
for Malden’s schools,” particularly
through the full funding of the
Mass. Student Opportunity Act
(SOA) as well as more Chapter 70
funding for this year.
Malden State Senator Jason
Lewis (D-5th Middlesex) is in his
second term as chair of the Legislature’s
Joint Committee on Education
and authored the SOA.
Malden State Representative Steven
Ultrino also serves on that
committee, as vice chair.
Mayor Christenson also noted
the eff orts of Malden Chief Strategy
Offi cer Ron Hogan in researching
and recommending actions
regarding the Chapter 70 funding
issue.
****
Next up in the budget process
is another Malden School Committee
budget subcommittee
meeting at 6:00 p.m. on Monday,
May 8. Information on how
to tune in will be on the School
Department (www.maldenps.
org) and City of Malden (www.
cityofmalden.org) websites. A formal
public hearing on the school
budget proposal is also upcoming
with information appearing
on the same two websites.
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Page 9
Mystic Valley Elder Services chosen
to pilot Hospital-to-Home Program
M
ystic Valley Elder Services
(MVES) is honored to be
one of nine nonprofit organizations
awarded funds to
through the state’s new Hospital
to Home Partnership Program.
This new pilot initiative
supports partnerships between
hospitals and Aging Services
Access Points (ASAPs). By
strengthening communication
and coordination with community
providers, MVES and
its partners will promote institutional
diversion and increase
discharge rates from hospital
to home.
The Hospital to Home initiative
was launched by the Massachusetts
Executive Offi ce of
Health and Human Services
(EOHHS) using three million in
federal dollars made available
through the American Rescue
Plan Act (ARPA). MVES will participate
in two of the pilot programs
that received $300,000
for two years.
“As hospitals continue to face
strain due to workforce shortages,
it is critical that we fi nd new
ways to better serve patients
in their homes and communities,”
said EOHHS Secretary Kate
Walsh. “Through these partnerships,
hospitals and local ASAPs
will collaborate to better meet
individual patient needs in
home and community-based
settings, improving health outcomes
and alleviating pressure
on hospital resources and staff .”
MVES will serve as the lead
entity for the Hospital to Home
Pilot in partnership with AgeSpan
and Tufts MelroseWakefield
Hospital/Lowell General
Hospital. MVES will also serve
as a partner on the Hospital
to Home Pilot led by Somerville-Cambridge
Elder Services,
which includes the Cambridge
and Everett hospitals of Cambridge
Health Alliance (CHA).
Funding through both pilots
will enable MVES to hire two
dedicated hospital-to-home
liaisons who will be embedded
at Tufts MelroseWakefield
and CHA Everett hospitals.
Working in close communication
and partnership with
hospital discharge planning
staff will enable MVES hospital-to-home
liaisons to understand
the immediate needs
of patients and draw upon a
deep range of knowledge to
ensure safe, secure and quick
transitions home. MVES hospital-to-home
liaison staff will also
remain in regular contact with
the patient post-discharge to
support transition and address
any additional needs.
“Together, we will make a
positive impact on the ability
of older adults to seamlessly
transition from inpatient hospital
stays to safe discharges
back home,” said MVES Assistant
Nurse Manager Lisa Jimenez.
“Our staff are well trained to respond
quickly to a wide variety
of urgent community needs
such as: coordinating and monitoring
the provision of highly
skilled personal and home care
assistance to be available upon
patient discharge; arranging for
next-day delivery of culturally
appropriate Meals on Wheels;
restocking the person’s home
with essential food items and
toiletries; scheduling transportation
to follow-up doctor appointments
and more.”
“MVES has a long history of
working collaboratively with
Tufts MelroseWakefield and
CHA Everett hospitals to connect
patients transitioning
home with community-based
services and supports they
need to remain in the community,”
explained MVES CEO Lisa
Gurgone. “We are excited about
the opportunity to work with
our hospital and ASAP partners
to reduce the rates of transitions
to nursing facilities in our
service area. We are grateful to
the Commonwealth for funding
this important innovation
and empowering us to make a
meaningful increase in hospital-to-home
transitions.”
About Mystic Valley Elder
Services: Since 1975, MVES has
partnered with individuals and
caregivers across the Mystic Valley
region to ensure that adults
age 60 and older and people
with disabilities have the support
they need to live independently
and with dignity.
Located in Malden, Mass., the
nonprofi t agency provides information,
care and resources
to residents of Chelsea, Everett,
Malden, Medford, Melrose,
North Reading, Reading,
Revere, Stoneham, Wakefield
and Winthrop. Services are either
free or are off ered at a sliding
fee scale, and they are funded
in part by the Massachusetts
Executive Offi ce of Elder Aff airs.
Through direct services, care
coordination and a network of
business partners, the MVES
team helps individuals access
the supports they need to
age in place throughout the
community. Services include
information and referral, options
counseling, case management,
home care, elder
protective services, health insurance
benefi ts counseling,
caregiver supports, transportation,
Meals on Wheels and
more. For more information,
please call 781-324-7705 or
visit www.mves.org.
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THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, May 5, 2023
GREATER BOSTON LEAGUE ROUNDUP:
Malden’s McMahon dominates with 13 Ks
in baseball shutout win, 5-0, over Everett
Revere still unbeaten atop GBL Boys Volleyball standings; Malden also
perfect (5-0); Tornado boys and girls tennis teams lead GBL race
By Jason Mazzilli
M
alden High senior righthander
Brandon McMahon
has drawn many accolades
in his high school career. He has
twice been a league All-Star and
also twice recognized as a Mass.
Baseball Coaches Association
State All-Star. With all that and a
pile of outstanding performances
under his belt, still, Wednesday
was some of his best work.
For sure.
The lanky veteran was dominating
and at the same time economical
in a complete-game,
5-0 victory over visiting Everett
at Pine Banks Park in Malden
on Wednesday. In these days
of mandated pitch count rules,
McMahon hurled a bona fi de
gem, going the distance for a
complete-game shutout, featuring
13 strikeouts and 4 scattered
hits. The most impressive
statistic might have been the actual
pitch count itself, as McMahon
went the whole way on just
87 pitches.
Malden could have scored
more runs early, stranding 10
baserunners on the day, but
was able to scratch across the
necessary scores due to the hitting
and baserunning eff orts of
sophomores Aidan Brett and Bo
Stead (RBI double) and juniors
Jake Simpson, Ryan Coggswell
and Ezechiel Noelsaint – all three
of them co-captains along with
McMahon. Freshman Billy Gavin
also scored a run for Malden.
“I felt really good all day and
I knew I had to go the whole
game today. I know a lot of players
on the other team [Everett],
and that was a big motivator
for me today,” McMahon said
afterward.
With three double-digit strikeChad
Robertson leads the
Greater Boston League Boys
Lacrosse scoring with over 30
goals. (Courtesy Photo)
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Equal Housing
Opportunity
MEDFORD NORWOOD DORCHESTER EVERETT PLYMOUTH
out games under his belt, McMahon
leads the Greater Boston
League (GBL) in several categories,
including pitching wins
(3-1 overall), innings pitched (23)
and strikeouts (42), as Malden’s
season hits the midpoint.
With the win Malden improved
to 7-4 overall and 4-2 in
the GBL, good for second place
behind league-unbeaten Lynn
Classical (6-0 GBL, 7-1 overall).
Everett’s pitcher Lara kept the
Crimson Tide in the game by
Brandon McMahon struck
out 13 to lead Malden to a
5-0 shutout win over Everett
baseball. (Advocate Photo)
getting out of a couple of bases-loaded
jams with no runs and
pitching into the fi fth inning. Gilbert,
Lara and Saia all had hits
for Everett.
****
Malden took a 10-4 win
over Somerville in 9th
Annual Serino Tournament
Malden scored seven runs in
the fi rst inning and never looked
back in a 10-4 non-league win
on Friday in the Consolation
game of the 9th Annual Christie
Serino Baseball Classic, which
Malden High Baseball celebrated another win, 5-0, over Everett,
led by the pitching of Brandon McMahon (center, front row).
(Courtesy/Malden HS Athletics)
׉	 7cassandra://NghnToxhVhTScyBv_O_MFrbZP2_ywQi0_xcLt1qkBdI-`̰ doЬr+`Z׉E^THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, May 5, 2023
Page 11
Greater Boston League Standings
BOYS
VOLLEYBALL
School
Revere
Malden
Medford
Chelsea
Somerville
Everett
BOYS
BASEBALL
School
BOYS LACROSSE
School
LEA Overall
9-0 10-2
7-0 7-3
4-3 5-3
4-4 5-4
3-4
3-5
Lynn Classical 2-6
Lynn English 0-8
2-6 2-7
2-7
0-8
Lynn Classical 8-0
Malden
Lynn English 5-3
Revere
Somerville
Everett
Medford
Chelsea
GIRLS
SOFTBALL
School
Everett
Malden
Revere
Chelsea
5-4
LEA Overall
9-1
5-3 8-4
6-4
6-4 6-6
5-8
4-5 5-5
2-6 4-7
0-10 1-12
Lynn Classical 6-2
Medford
Lynn English 3-5
Somerville
2-4
LEA Overall
9-1 12-1
6-3
6-2 7-4
4-4 5-4
3-6
2-6
2-6 3-8
0-8 1-9
was held at Rotondi Field and
Maplewood Park on April 21.
Freshman Ryan McMahon and
sophomore Aidan Brett combined
on a three-hitter for Malden
on the mound, with McMahon
pitching the first four innings
and Brett the final three
innings. Brett was especially impressive,
striking out eight of 11
batters he faced.
East Boston won the tournament
for the second year in a
row with a 1-0 win over Greater
Lawrence Tech.
GIRLS LACROSSE
School
Somerville
Revere
Malden
Medford
Everett
BOYS TENNIS
School
Malden
Medford
LEA Overall
3-0
4-1
1-0 2-2
1-2 1-3
0-1 0-4
0-3 0-5
Lynn Classical 2-1
Somerville
1-1
Lynn English 1-2
Everett
Revere
GIRLS TENNIS
Team
Malden
Somerville
Medford
Revere
Everett
The Tornado baseball team
ran into a late innings’ buzzsaw
in a 15-7 loss to Lynn English
at home on Tuesday, following
an impressive, four-hit performance
over five innings pitched
by Jake Simpson, who left with
Malden leading, 6-3, at the time.
Greater Lawrence defeated
Malden in the semifinals of the
tournament, 6-4.
****
Revere Boys Volleyball
sweeps up two more
wins to lead GBL at 7-0
The Revere High Patriots Boys
Volleyball team swept a pair of
three-game sets, 3-0 – over Everett
on April 19 and Somerville
on April 24 – to roll out to a perfect
7-0 in the Greater Boston
League, 7-1 overall.
The long-awaited showdown
FRIENDS ON ICE, TOO: Malden
High junior shortstop and cocaptain
Jake Simpson (left)
checked in with Everett High
senior David Saia (right) after a
recent game. Simpson and Saia,
opponents in baseball, were
co-captains and teammates
on the Malden-Everett-RevereMystic
Valley co-op Varsity
Hockey Team – based in Everett
– for the past three seasons.
(Advocate Photo)
between Revere and Malden,
which appears to be the one that
will decide the league title, is on
May 10 and May 12. Malden will
travel to the Revere Patriots on
May 10 and then complete the
away and home slate 48 hours
later when it hosts Revere at Malden
High on Friday, May 12. Both
matches are at 5:00 p.m.
****
Tornado Chad Robertson
leads GBL in Boys Lacrosse
scoring with over 30 goals
Malden High junior Chad Robertson,
who scored 10 goals in
one game earlier this season to
tie a school record, continues his
LEA Overall
5-0 5-0
2-0 2-1
3-2
1-2
1-2
1-3 1-4
0-3 0-4
LEA Overall
7-0 7-1
5-3
5-1
Lynn Classical 1-3
Lynn English 1-4
2-2 2-3
2-3 2-4
1-4
1-4
1-4 1-5
assault on the 2023 Greater Boston
League scoring title. Robertson
has tallied over 30 goals
in eight games to lead his team
and the GBL so far this season.
****
Both Malden Boys and
Girls Tennis Teams are
unbeaten in the GBL
Malden High boys’ tennis, led
by unbeaten #1 Singles and
co-captain Navenn Nevalpuri,
leads the Greater Boston League
with a perfect 4-0 league record.
Malden High girls’ tennis is also
undefeated in GBL play, with a
5-0 mark.
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Located adjacent to Kohls Plaza Route 1 South
in Saugus at the intersection of Walnut St.
We are on MBTA Bus Route 429
781-231-1111
We are a Skating Rink with
Bowling Alleys, Arcade and
two TV’s where the ball
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PUBLIC SKATING SCHEDULE
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Tuesday
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Price includes Roller Skates
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Private Parties
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$10.00
Price includes Roller Skates
Adult Night 18+ Only
Wednesday
Thursday
Friday Everyone must pay admission after 6 p.m.
Private Parties
Private Parties
4-11 p.m.
Saturday
12-11 p.m.
$9.00
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Everyone must pay admission after 6 p.m.
Sorry No Checks - ATM on site
Roller skate rentals included in all prices
Inline Skate Rentals $3.00 additional
BIRTHDAY & PRIVATE PARTIES AVAILABLE
www.roller-world.com
Medford
Lynn
Somerville
Malden
Revere
LEA Overall
5-0 7-1
3-2
3-4
4-3
3-6
2-3 2-6
0-4 1-6
Like us on Facebook advocate newspaper
Facebook.com/Advocate.news.ma
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THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, May 5, 2023
Call Malden High lacrosse
star Chad Robertson ‘MR. 100’!
Junior attackman hits 100-goal mark for career; leads league is scoring for second year
By Steve Freker
M
ilestones are many in the
high school sports world,
and Malden High’s Chad Robertson
just hit a big one in a recent
win over Revere. On Thursday,
Malden’s Robertson, a third-year
varsity lacrosse player and a Tornado
junior, tallied 6 of 7 goals
for Malden in a comeback, 7-4
Greater Boston League victory
over Revere. With his second
goal of the afternoon at Pine
Banks Park in Malden, Robertson
hit the magical number of
100 for his career.
Robertson has now tallied
104 goals for his career and is
now in sight of the school’s AllTime
Scoring record. That mark
is now held by former Golden
Tornados standout Zach
Rufo, who fi nished a four-year
All-Star career with 110 goals.
Leading the Greater Boston
League with over 30 goals, or
about 4-5 goals per game, Robertson
is expected to shatter
that mark soon.
J&
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“It’s a bigtime personal milestone
to score 100 goals in high
school lacrosse and we are all
very happy and proud for Chad,”
said Malden High Head Coach
Jon Copithorne. “He is one of our
leaders and works very hard at
his game.”
HERE’S THE ‘100 BALL’: Chad
Robertson’s dad, Tom, the
former director of Malden
Youth Lacrosse, displayed the
"Magic 100 Goal Ball" after his
son put it in the net.
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MR. 100: Chad Robertson registered his 100th career goal for
Malden High in a 7-4 win over Revere. (Advocate Photos)
Celebrating 65 Years in Business! S
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Designing and Constructing Ideas that are “Grounds for Success”
Landscaping
“Congratulations to Chad on
a major accomplishment,” said
Malden Public Schools Director
of Athletics Charlie Conefrey.
“He is a great student and tremendous
athlete and deserves
a lot of credit for such an impressive
achievement.”
׉	 7cassandra://AjIj1t6yTv0r5fHV0j-2lVIWDTD-Rit_43vXuslZX200`̰ doЬr+`Z׉ETTHE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, May 5, 2023
Page 13
It is said in Malden
hat the Malden Public Schools is seeking a new Ferryway K-8 School Principal and any qualified
applicant may contact the Human Resources Department at MPS by calling 781-397-6100 – or
search on Schoolspring.com to apply.
T
****
That the Salemwood K-8 School hosted a delicious International Food Night last week, with lots
of students and parents taking part.
****
That Ward 7 School Committee member Keith Bernard has announced he is seeking reelection
in this fall’s municipal election.
****
That longtime Ward 5 School Committee member Adam Weldai is not seeking reelection this fall.
****
That Weldai is also a newlywed, having “tied the knot” on his wedding day in Rockport on April 1
with his bride, Victoria.
****
That Malden’s special education transportation provider, North Reading Transportation (NRT), was
recently acquired by national transportation conglomerate Beacon Mobility.
****
That Malden Little League officially opened its 2023 season with a Minor Division game at Forestdale
Park on Tuesday night.
MBTA Alerts of Adjacent Orange Line Projects
T
he MBTA would like riders to
be aware of adjacent projects
on the Orange Line. While
the OLT team does not directly
oversee these projects, we coordinate
closely with the teams
leading them.
• Speed Restrictions: The MBTA
has launched a live, online Speed
Restriction Dashboard found
at https://www.mbta.com/performance-metrics/speed-restrictions
that provides riders
with up-to-date information
on speed restrictions across the
MBTA system. The dashboard
reports on location, speed limit,
when a restriction was put
in place and the reason for the
restriction on the Red, Orange,
TURF| FROM PAGE 1
ity.” Since the plastic surface can
heat to unsafe temperatures of
140-170 F in the sun, and anything
above 120 F could burn
skin, “artificial turf would create
a hazard for anyone wanting
to use the park on a warm,
sunny day – a hazard that could
be avoided.”
Other concerns include costs,
Blue, Mattapan or Green Lines.
Riders are encouraged to use
the updated MBTA Trip Planner
tool (https://www.mbta.com/
trip-planner), the Alternative Service
page (https://www.mbta.
com/projects/alternative-service-options-during-speed-reMBTA
| SEE PAGE 18
exclusion of key stakeholders
from the planning of the park,
and Malden’s own code against
installing impervious surfaces
in public open spaces. The
long-term costs of artificial turf
do not include the disposal and
replacement of the shock pad
and carpet every eight to 10
years. The Park’s adjacent neighbors
and Salemwood Elementary
School community members
were not invited to help develop
the plan but will have to bear the
greatest burden of health and
environmental consequences.
Finally, “According to the city’s
Open Space Plan, Roosevelt Park
is permanently protected Open
Space, and the City’s Code requires
that “All Open Space shall
be pervious.” Both the Synthetic
Turf Council and the EPA define
artificial turf as impervious, because
“the rainwater it collects
is most often redirected into
the rain sewer system instead
of being allowed to percolate
into the soil.”
Regional environmental justice
and conservation organizations
who signed on to the letter
in solidarity with the Friends
of Roosevelt Park are ACE, the
Conservation Law Foundation,
Beyond Plastics Greater Boston,
the Friends of the Malden River,
the Mystic River Watershed Association,
Safe Healthy Playing
Fields Massachusetts, and Wicked
Cool Mystic. These organizations
fight for clean air, land and
water, along with equity, justice,
health and well-being, in
communities in Massachusetts
and New England. They asked
Malden officials to halt “current
plans for the park and reevaluate
with meaningful input from
the surrounding community.”
Like us on Facebook
advocate newspaper
Facebook.com/Advocate.news.ma
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THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, May 5, 2023
~ Letter to the Editor ~
Open letter to the Malden City
Council Finance Committee
Dear Malden City Council Finance
Committee,
The Friends of Roosevelt Park
are requesting the fi nance committee
to delay a decision or not
to approve an additional $2.5M
for the Roosevelt Park Project.
The funding for contamination
removal should only be approved
if it is tied to the installation
of natural grass.
The finance committee can
make the fi rst decision or stake
in the ground for tipping the
scales of environmental and social
justice back to a more balanced
representation of equity.
Please keep in mind all other
park renovations across the
City will be natural living grass
and there was extensive community
outreach for planning
and design. Anything less than
a plan for natural grass for Roosevelt
Park is an injustice for this
neighborhood and this school
community.
Timeline of Cost Increases for
this project:
5-1-2018 $2.4M C P A
Pre Application-Project Cost
Projection
9-4-2018 $2.6M C P A
Application
9-25-2020 $3.6M Proj -
ect Increases (Additional $1.2M
Section 108 Loan CBDG HUD)
4-25-2023 $6.1M Proj -
ect Increases (Additional $2.5M
requested by Mayor Christenson)
Members
of the Friends of
Roosevelt Park have taken the
time to research, compare and
question the line item costs associated
with this project. The
latest increase of $2.5M should
be further investigated by the
fi nance committee before approving.
What
is the true cost analysis
of grass vs artifi cial turf - installation,
maintenance and cost replacement
every 8-10 years for
artifi cial turf?
We implore you to ask these
questions as well:
1. Why has nearly 700K already
been spent on this project
before any groundwork has
actually taken place? Please review
the line item costs and paid
invoices.
2. How much will the proposed
artifi cial turf cost today?
The Adelaide Breed Bayrd Foundation
approved $660K to cover
the cost of artifi cial turf back in
2018/2019. What are they willing
to contribute now? Has their
Board of Directors approved an
increase in price?
3. Why hasn’t the City of Malden
sought out Brownfi eld Grant
Funds as mentioned by Councillor
Winslow in the Board of
Health meeting? Councillor
Winslow stated that the City
could secure these funds to clean
up the lead contamination?
4. Why hasn’t the City of Malden
applied for PARC grant
funding for this project?
5. Why hasn’t the City of Malden
used ARPA funding to clean
up the contamination?
6. Why did the City of Malden
use a Section 108 CDBG loan
when other funds were readily
available? (PARC grant, ARPA,
Brownfi eld grants)
7. Has the City secured funding
from Rep. Katherine Clark’s
offi ce as mentioned previously?
Have Rep. Clark and Senator
Markey reviewed the latest
funding plan?
8. Has anyone on the council
reached out to the Board
of Health? No more funding
should be approved before the
Malden Board of Health has had
an opportunity to make a recommendation
as to whether
artifi cial turf will be an undue
health burden for the neighborhood
and the Salemwood
School children playing daily
on this fi eld for recess, before
and after school during their K-8
years at the school. Health concerns
are related to the heat island
eff ect caused by excessive
heat being emitted from the
artifi cial turf. Excessive heat is
detrimental to young children,
older people and those who
are compromised due to various
health issues. Additional
health concerns include exposure
to PFAS, off gassing, microplastics,
sports related injury
and skin abrasions due to
contact with play on plastic turf.
Artifi cial turf is an unregulated
product. There are many associated
health concerns as mentioned
above.
9. There are several bills before
the legislature directly related
to the installation, recycling
and safety of artifi cial turf, PFAS
products and climate change
mitigation. How will future legislation
aff ect compliance with
new legislation as well as costs
of removing and disposing of
artifi cial turf? Will products containing
PFAS be more costly to
dispose of? Will products made
of plastic which are not being
properly recycled be more costly
to replace and remove?
10. What is a true cost analysis
of natural grass versus artifi cial
turf? Artifi cial turf has a useful
life of 8-10 years, at which time it
must be removed and replaced
for an estimated current cost
of $650k-750k ($750k+ in 2020
costs according to Steve O’Neil
at a previous fi nance committee
meeting). If a natural grass
fi eld maintenance plan were to
cost 25k per year, it would still
be less costly than artifi cial turf.
($25k x 10yrs = $250k vs $750k
to replace a new artifi cial turf
fi eld) Wouldn’t it make more fi scal
sense for the City of Malden
to invest in a professional grass
maintenance program to maintain
all of Malden’s grass parks
which we are investing millions
of dollars to improve?
11. What is the utilization
plan/schedule? (Malden Youth
Soccer, high schools, Malden
Recreation, private rentals)
Approving an additional
$2.5M to continue this project
without doing a thorough investigation
of spending, comparisons
and cost projections is not
prudent or responsible.
Thank you for your
consideration.
Friends of Roosevelt
Park Malden
- LEGAL NOTICE -
COMMONWEALTH OF MASSACHUSETTS
THE TRIAL COURT
PROBATE AND FAMILY COURT
Middlesex Division
Docket No. MI23P2150EA
Estate of: FRANK A. VALERI
Date of Death: FEBRUARY 14, 2023
INFORMAL PROBATE
PUBLICATION NOTICE
To all persons interested in the above captioned estate, by
Petition of Petitioner Paul A. Valeri of Malden, MA Petitioner
Peter F. Valeri of Wakefield, MA
Paul A. Valeri of Malden, MA Peter F. Valeri of Wakefield, MA
has been informally appointed as the Personal Representative of
the estate to serve without surety on the bond.
The estate is being administered under informal procedure by
the Personal Representative under the Massachusetts Uniform
Probate Code without supervision by the Court. Inventory and
accounts are not required to be filed with the Court, but interested
parties are entitled to notice regarding the administration from
the Personal Representative and can petition the Court in any
matter relating to the estate, including distribution of assets and
expenses of administration. Interested parties are entitled to
petition the Court to institute formal proceedings and to obtain
orders terminating or restricting the powers of Personal
Representatives appointed under informal procedure. A copy of
the Petition and Will, if any, can be obtained from the Petitioner.
May 5, 2023
׉	 7cassandra://YtSySFhnEfGtUY5QJ7tY-2-fzl8qGs3t5fdvdxlgEkY'`̰ doЬr+`Z׉EOffice of State Senator
Jason Lewis Summer 2023
Intern Posting
S
tate Senator Jason Lewis
is seeking candidates for a
summer internship with his offi
ce. Senator Lewis proudly represents
the people of the Fifth
Middlesex District of Massachusetts,
which includes the cities
and towns of Malden, Melrose,
Reading, Stoneham, Wakefi eld,
and Winchester. Senator Lewis
is a member of Senate President
Karen Spilka’s leadership
team, and serves as the Senate
Chair of the Joint Committee on
Education and the Chair of the
Senate Ethics Committee. He
also co-founded and co-chairs
the legislature’s Zero Waste Caucus
and Middlesex Fells Caucus.
He has been a leader in shaping
public policy on a range of issues
important to his district, region,
and the state, including education,
healthcare, and economic
opportunity for all.
Interns will support the Senator’s
staff in a variety of ways,
but we are specifi cally looking
for interns with interest in one
or more of the following:
• implementing the Senator’s
communications strategy,
• supporting local projects and
our work with organizations in
the district, or
• assisting with constituent
services.
Tasks may include:
• attending project briefi ngs,
• researching information and
statistics,
• creating pamphlets and
charts,
• drafting social media posts,
and
• event planning.
Interns will have the unique
opportunity to engage with
policymaking, politics, and government
from the inside. Although
unpaid, interns will obtain
meaningful experience by
witnessing and participating in
the day-to-day functioning of a
State Senate offi ce with a special
focus on our work with the Education
Committee.
Interns must have strong written
and verbal communication
skills and attention to detail. Candidates
must also be comfortable
with Microsoft Offi ce, Google applications,
and major social media
platforms. Preference will be given
to applicants with a high school
diploma or equivalent. ApplicaINTERN
| SEE PAGE 22
Malden Public Library hosts networking
program for people 50 years and older.
THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, May 5, 2023
MUSINGS | FROM PAGE 3
•
Harry Belafonte's passing
just appeared on my news feed.
Another sad day for this country.
Another real live American/Global
hero has left the building. I was
blessed to have Harry Belafonte
on my turntable for all these
years. Actually since 1976 while
crate diving at a record store on Irving
St in Malden and discovering
1957's 'Belafonte Sings of the Caribbean.'
I loved the cover. I loved
his swagger! Then his voice captivated
me. Then I discovered what
an amazing life he led. Thank you,
Mr. Belafonte, your good deeds
are left for all to admire.
• Facebook can be annoying,
toxic, and wonderful. All
in the same scroll! The wonderful
took place on Tuesday April 25th
as Dave Caiazzo posted pictures
and videos of his book reading at
the library the night before. Dave
is a sweetheart of a man which
belied his intensity and competitiveness
whenever he took the
mound. The picture I liked best
was a group photo. In the picture
was one of Cai's besties John "Trixie"
Trischitta, Cai, Mayor Christenson,
Joe Levine, Jack Harold, and
Bobby McCarthy. Joe (1st base)
and Jack (3rd base) were teammates
together on the Colonels
back in their Babe Ruth League
days. Trixie was a legend for the
Hosmer Chiefs in the Inter City
League. Bobby McCarthy was a
stud hockey player back in his
high school days.A great group of
guys supporting a fi rst-class gentleman
with an amazing baseball
career and life.
• Maldonians are still
grieving the loss of Karen Anderson.
She was such an ingrained
Page 15
member of our community, it's
hard to believe she's no longer
with us. City of Malden Parking
Director and Chief Strategy and
Innovation Officer Ron Hogan
had this to say about Karen: "Karen
was truly one of a kind, and as
dedicated a public servant as you
will ever fi nd. She cared for Malden
and its residents like few others
have, and it was an honor to
call her not only a coworker, but
a friend. Karen, rest in peace my
friend. You'll be missed."
• A young woman walks
by me at Stop & Splurge. I smiled,
but it was not at the young lady.
It is at the Floramo's Restaurant
sweatshirt she had on. A sign of
the (growing older) times?
• Separated at birth? City
of Malden Animal Control Offi -
cer Kevin Alkins as pictured in last
week's Malden Advocate and Telly
Savalas aka Kojak?
• Speaking of Malden
Youth Lacrosse, we would be remiss
if we did not mention MVCS
alumni and the first woman in
MYL history to play D1 lacrosse
(UMass Lowell), Daniela D'Alleva.
As Peter Falk's iconic TV character
'Columbo' would say "Just
one more thing sir" - I am not sure
how this game could possibly have
been played with only one basketball.
But it was. The 'Malden Rec
All-Stars' played the 'Somerville
Rec All-Stars' at the Linden Gym
on April 3rd, 1980. Yeah, 43 years
ago if you can believe that! I kept
score along with Larry "Leezard"
Gilbert. The Malden Men's Recreational
Basketball League was one
of THE best men's hoop leagues in
the Greater Boston area. Joe Gaff ey
was the head of the Rec Dept in
those days (he was no Joe Levine,
but he was very good - insert smi4.75
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ley face). Malden won handily 9888
and, from what I remember, the
game will not go down in hoop
history for the defense played
that night. Rod "Puggy" Forbes
led Malden with 26 points. Puggy
was so good he could score 26
in his sleep. Medford's Tommy Ryser,
who played for Henry's Caterers,
scored 24. Tommy, who married
1973 Malden High School star
athlete, Patty DiPietro of the Edgeworth
DiPietro's, was another guy
that made scoring 20 look easy.
Dennis Cakert had 18 points. Dennis
was a New Jersey transplant
who played D1 ball at St Joe's. Dennis
was a monster on the court. Nobody
tougher, nobody smarter,
nobody handsomer (just ask him).
Mark Burns had 10 points. Anybody
who knows Bunza knows
that he earned each one of those
buckets. Malden Catholics' Steve
Johnson had 16 points. This Melrose
resident was one of the grittiest,
most intelligent players to
hail from Melrose, ever.Cliff Cioffi
had 2 points. The last time Choff
scored only 2 points was most
likely in the 3rd grade. Amazingly
John Stanasek had 4 points. You
read that right, 2 fi eld goals. Stana
was one of the best pure shooters
to ever play hoops in Malden
and his prowess on the gridiron is
stuff of legend. Jay Sweeney and
Joe Bartoszewicz were no shrinking
violets on the court either, yet
they could only manage 4 points
apiece. Again, it is very - VERY hard
to believe that only one ball was
used for this game!
Peter is a long-time Malden resident
and a regular contributor to
the Malden Advocate he can be
reached at PeteL39@aol.com for
comments, compliments, complaints,
or criticisms.
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THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, May 5, 2023
18th Annual Chinese Culture Connection Gala
and Awards Ceremony praises four honorees
By Tara Vocino
T
he Chinese Culture Connection
held their 18th Annual
Gala and Awards Ceremony
at Ming’s Seafood Restaurant
on Saturday night. Four
honorees received awards.
Gary Yu received the Excellence
in Diversity and Inclusion
Award; John Preotle received
the Excellence in Community
Service Award; Vincent
Yee received the Outstanding
Arts and Culture Award; and
Eugene Welch received the Edward
O’Connell Inspirational
Service Award.
Edward O'Connell accepted an award on behalf of Eugene Welch. Pictured from left to right: Edward
O’Connell, Chinese Culture Connection Executive Director Mei Hung, South Cove Community Health
Center COO Eric Tiberi and Mayor Gary Christenson.
John Preotle received the Excellence In Community Service Award.
He is pictured with Mayor Gary Christenson and Chinese Culture
Connection Executive Director Mei Hung.
Mayor Gary Christenson spoke in Chinese to
the attendees.
John Preotle accepted an Excellence in
Community Service Award.
It was a standing-room-only crowd.
American Exterior and
Window Corporation
Emcee Dana Brown is an Advisory Board
member.
Edward O’Connell accepted the Edward F.
O’Connell Inspirational Service Award on behalf
of Eugene Welch.
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Pictured from left to right: Mark Bernstein, Linda Thorsen, Ariane Taylor (candidate for Ward 5 City
Council), Ward 3 City Councillor Amanda Linehan, award recipient Gary Yu, Byung Kim, Yoo-Kyung
Kim and Deborah Ofcharsky.
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Page 17
Councillor-at-Large Carey McDonald and his wife, Sarah (standing,
far right) and guests
Vincent Yee received the Outstanding Arts and Culture Award. He also received a Certificate of
Recognition from the U.S. Senate and a Citation from Mayor Gary Christenson. Pictured from left
to right: Mayor Gary Christenson, award recipient Vincent Yee, Chinese Culture Connection Board
of Directors President Dr. Yu-Lan Lin and Executive Director Mei Hung.
New England Chinese American Alliance members, pictured
from left to right: Sitting: Hong Song, Yun Jie Shang, Shang Wei,
Jack Chen, Shirley Lai and Rongli Liang; standing: Hung Goon,
Xiao Feng, Emma Fang, Qian Ge, Daryl Luk and Diversity Award
recipient Gary Yu.
Author Vincent Yee wrote several books and is
featured on the Kelly Clarkson show this week.
Chinese Culture Connection Board of Directors
President Dr. Yu-Lan Lin said they need
volunteers to continue this work.
Ming Dynasty’s Yang Shen (楊楊, 1488–1559) wrote
this poem as the lyrics to the song “The Immortals
by the River.”
Ward 6 City Councillor Stephen Winslow (seated far right) and
guests. Standing, pictured from left to right: Joshua Chu, Ashley
Buggy, Thomas Jung and Fiona Nakitto. Sitting from left to right:
Angela Nakitto, John and Catherine Lentz, with Stephen and
Helen Winslow.
South Cove Community Health Center members, pictured from
left to right: Standing: COO Eric Tiberi, guests Frances Ma, Thomas
Martin and Jill Martin and board member Peter Eng; Bottom row:
board members Harry Lee and April Tang.
Shown from left to right: Standing: David Liu, outstanding arts and culture award recipient Vincent
Yee, Tiffany Pi and Mimi Han; seated: Cynthia Yee, Camellia Yee and King Chong Yee.
(Advocate photos by Tara Vocino)
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THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, May 5, 2023
MBTA | FROM PAGE 13
Like us on Facebook advocate newspaper
Facebook.com/Advocate.news.ma
MASSHEALTH ELIGIBILITY
OPERATIONS MEMO 23-12
bility purposes.
Furthermore, in the event
M
assHealth has just released
this operations
memo in order to be consistent
with federal guidelines
when calculating the value of
life estates and corresponding
remainder interests. This
memo supersedes operations
memos 19-12 and 20-16 effective
immediately.
This is an important operations
memo as caseworkers
will now have to utilize the
IRS Section 7520 Interest Rate
Tables in order to value these
interests instead of the Social
Security Administration POMS
(Program Operations Manual
System) tables.
As a result, the value attributed
to a life estate interest
will be much lower utilizing
the 7520 Interest Rate Tables
as compared to the Social
Security Administration
(SSA) tables. If, for example, a
married couple had deeded a
vacation home to a child and
reserved a life estate, and the
vacation home was not being
rented out in order to argue
that it is necessary for self-support
thereby rendering the life
estate interest a non-countable
asset, the SSA table calculation
would result in a significantly
higher valuation placed
upon the life estate interest.
That higher life estate interest
could then result in the married
couple being over the asset
limit for MassHealth eligithe
real estate was to be sold,
a much higher value would
be placed upon the life estate
interest under the SSA table
which would result in a significant
amount of cash going
back in the name of the
life tenant requiring a spend
down on nursing home level
care of that larger pool of
cash. The calculation based
upon the SSA table would result
in less asset protection as
a much smaller amount would
be attributed to the remaindermen
(i.e. the children).
It should be noted that if
rental real estate operates in
a cash flow profit position,
the life estate interest with respect
to that real estate will
not be considered a countable
asset. Upon the death of
the life tenant, the real estate
will escape estate recovery as
MassHealth can only recover
benefits paid from the probate
estate of the recipient of
the benefits.
MassHealth will now use
the IRS tables in order to calculate
the amount of the gifted
remainder interest for purposes
of calculating the ineligibility
period for MassHealth
benefits. Once the five
year look-back period has expired,
it does not matter how
much the remainder interest
was valued at. The Massachusetts
Chapter of the National
Academy of Elder Law Attorneys
has worked hard to persuade
MassHealth to issue this
recent eligibility operations
memo which in fact is consistent
with how it valued life estates
and remainder interests
for many previous years.
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
HERRERA, LANDY
MICHALSKI, ROBERT S
BUYER2
PERLERA, OSCAR
SELLER1
GAETANI, FRANCES S
APEX CAPITAL LLC
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
42-44 RUSSELL ST
69 PIERCE ST
CITY
MALDEN
MALDEN
DATE
04.07.23
04.06.23
PRICE
720000
835000
strictions) and rider guide
(https://cdn.mbta.com/sites/
default/files/2023-03/alternative-service-speed-restricSt.
Anthony’s Church
Flea Market & Bazaar
Saturday, May 13,, 2023
from 8:00 AM - 2:00 PM
Featuring Crafts, Nick-Nacks
& So Much More!
~ Admission Only .50 Cents ~
For info, call Linda: (781) 910-8615
All proceeds benefit St. Anthony’s Church
tions-digital_03-17-23-english.
pdf) for a list of travel options.
We appreciate our riders’ patience
and recommend checking
the MBTA’s Twitter and Alerts
pages for regular updates.
• Haymarket Station Closures for
Government Center Garage Work:
Haymarket Station will be closed
in both directions during the
weekends of May 13-14 and May
20-21 to allow for work on the
Government Center Garage demolition.
An accessible shuttle will
be available upon demand. For
the latest information about service
changes, please visit the Orange
Line Alerts page at https://
www.mbta.com/schedules/Orange/alerts,
sign up for T-Alerts
and follow the MBTA on Twitter.
׉	 7cassandra://ixEmb8DdwSD2RxAuy92RjJa6adt1Wra_wkeZXJGc7wY*`̰ doЬr+`Z׉E%THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, May 5, 2023
Page 19
OBITUARIES
Kathleen A.
(Petraglia) Hebert
A longtime resident
of Medford,
passed away on
Monday, May 1st,
after battling ovarian
cancer. Kathy
was born in Malden
in 1947, the daughter
of Domenic and
Theresa Petraglia. She was born, raised
and educated in Malden, graduating
from Malden High School with the
Class of 1965. She then began working
as a Legal Secretary.
In 1968, she
married her high school sweetheart,
Alan E. Hebert, after he served the US
Army in Vietnam. The two spent time
in Everett before settling down in Medford,
where they raised their family.
They shared nearly 55 years of marriage
together.
Kathleen was a past member of the
PTO in Medford. She enjoyed watching
old movies and Hallmark movies,
taking rides to New Hampshire, cooking,
and spending time with family. She
was a loving and devoted mother, wife,
sister, aunt, friend, and grandmother.
She loved attending her grandchildren's
dance competitions, school
events, baseball and soccer games, and
awards ceremonies to support them
and cheer them on. She was known
to everyone as "Nana."
She is survived by her children, Pamela
M. Kessaris of Stoneham, Alan E.
Hebert Jr of Medford, and Christopher
S. Hebert of Manchester, NH, her sister
Terry Glionna of Malden, her brother
Kenneth Patraglia of Malden, as well
as her grandchildren, Katrina, James,
Lorelai, Ashlyn and Luke.
Funeral from the Weir-MacCuish
Golden Rule Funeral Home, 144 Salem
St, Malden, on Wed, May 10th, at 8:30
followed by a Mass of Christian Burial
in St. Francis of Assisi Church, Medford,
at 10 AM. Interment to follow in St. Patrick's
Cemetery, Stoneham.
Visitation will be held at the funeral
home on Tuesday, May 9th, from
4 – 8 PM.
To send flowers to the family or
plant a tree in memory of Kathleen A.
(Petraglia) Hebert, please visit our fl oral
store.
Barbara E.
(Spencer) Mini
Of Mal den.
Passed away Saturday,
April 29th at
the age of 89. Barbara
was born in Boston
on March 18th
1934 the daughter
of Albert and Caroline
Spencer. Barbara
grew up in Everett graduating from
Everett High School in 1952. She met
her sweetheart William Mini and the
two were married in 1958. The two settled
in Malden to raise their growing
family and where Barbara remained
after William’s passing in 2009. Barbara
stayed home and made sure her
children Bill, Christina, John and Steven
were all taken care of. In her free
time, she enjoyed dancing with her
husband, painting, reading, listening
to music and talk radio and watching
old movies on the TMC channel. She
was also an avid seamstress who enjoyed
cooking and baking and spending
time with family and friends all of
which will miss her dearly.
Barbara is survived by her children
William Mini and his wife Brenda,
John Mini and his wife Kathy, Christina
Berg and her husband Roger and
Steven Mini, her grandchildren Kayla
Mini Menard and her husband Todd,
Erica Cartrett and her husband Will,
Nick Mini and his wife Kreestel, Brittany
Berg, Crystal Weed and her husband
Greg, Brian Mini, Kristen Mini,
great grandchildren Ferron Cartrett,
Freddie Cartrett, Wren Cartrett, Hal Cartrett
and Stella Mini. As well as many
other family and friends. She was predeceased
by her husband William, her
siblings Albert Spencer and Carolyn Rachels,
and her parents Albert and Caroline
Spencer.
Funeral services will be held at the
Weir-MacCuish Golden Rule Funeral
Home, 144 Salem St, Malden on Friday,
May 5th at 10:30 AM, with visitation beginning
at 9:30 AM. Interment to follow
in Forest Dale Cemetery, Malden.
Daniel J. (Dan)
Sheehan Sr.
Of Malden. Passed away on April
30, 2023, at Melrose
Wakefield Hospital,
Melrose, MA. He
was 88 years old.
Dan was one of
three sons of the
late Timothy and
Stella Sheehan.
Originally, from Revere MA, he enlisted
in the US Army in 1955 and served his
country for 4 years as a tank operator.
Dan would later meet and marry his
late wife of 60 years, Elizabeth (Churchill)
Sheehan. After the army, Dan
joined the IBEW Electrical Union and
was a proud union member for over
50 years. Since 1972, Dan spent his
summers at Dan Hole Pond in Ossipee,
NH where he made many life-long
friends.
Dan is survived by his son Daniel
J Sheehan Jr of Portland ME, son Mark
Sheehan of Malden, MA and his daughter
Diane Sheehan of Malden, MA, his
grandchildren Ryan Sheehan of Cambridge,
MA and Erin Sheehan of Newburyport,
MA and his girlfriend, Anne
Ciaburri. The Sheehan family will have
a private funeral and Dan will be put
to rest at the Puritan Lawn Memorial
Park Cemetery.
Jo Ann (Cipriano)
DeSimone
A lifelong resident of Malden, passed
away on April 22, 2023. She was 70
OBITUARIES | SEE PAGE 22
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The MHA reserves the right to reject all submittals
and/or waive any informality in the proposal process.
May 05, 2023
aavvyvy S
avy
avvy S oiorenniioor
nior
by Jim Miller
How to Choose and
Use a Walking Cane
Dear Savvy Senior,
I have some hip and back problems and could use a walking cane
to help me get around. Is there anything I should know about canes
before I buy one?
Limping Linda
Dear Linda,
When it comes to choosing a cane, most people don’t give it
much thought, but they should. Walking canes come in many
diff erent styles, shapes and sizes today, so you need to take
into account your needs and preferences to ensure you choose
one that’s appropriate for you. Here are some tips that can help.
Types of Canes
The fi rst thing you need to consider is how much support you
need. That will help you determine the kind of cane you choose.
The three basic types of canes you’ll have to choose from include:
1. Straight canes: These are basic, single point canes that typically
incorporate a rounded “crook” handle or “L-shaped” ergonomic
handle. Usually made of lightweight aluminum or wood,
most of the aluminum models are adjustable in height and some
even fold up.
2. Off set-handle canes: These also are single point straight
canes but come with a swan neck curve in the upper part of
the shaft that puts the user’s weight directly over the cane tip
for added stability. These canes are typically aluminum, adjustable-height
and come with a fl at, soft grip handle that’s easy
on the hands.
Some straight canes and off set-handle canes also come with
triple or quad tipped bases that can add gripping support and
allow the cane to stand up on its own when you let go, which
is very convenient.
Both straight and off set-handle canes are best suited for people
with a slight walking impairment.
3. Quad canes: These work best for people who need maximum
weight bearing and support. Quad canes come with four
separate tips at the base, they usually have an off set fl at handle,
and can stand up on its own.
Fitting the Cane
Once you decide on the type of cane, you need to make sure
it has the weight capacity to support you, and it fi ts your height.
To do this, stand up with your arms hanging straight down at
your side. The top of the cane should line up with the crease in
your wrist, so your arm is slightly bent at the elbow when you
grip the cane.
The cane should also have a rubber tip at the bottom to prevent
slipping. A worn or torn rubber tip is dangerous, so check
the tip frequently to ensure it’s in good condition and replace
it when necessary.
The grip is also very important, so choose one that’s ergonomically
designed, or one that has a molded rubber or foam grip
that’s comfortable to hold on to.
And if you travel much, consider getting a folding cane that
can be packed or stored away easily.
How to Use
When using a cane, it should always be held in the hand opposite
of the leg that needs support. For example, if your knee
pain is on your left side, you should use the cane in your right
hand. The cane should then move forward as you step forward
with the bad leg.
If you have to go upstairs, you should lead with the good leg.
And when you go downstairs, you should put your cane on the
step fi rst and then step down with your bad leg.
The Mayo Clinic off ers a slide show at MayoClinic.com/health/
canes/HA00064 that will show you how to choose and use a
cane. It’s also a smart idea to work with a physical therapist.
Where to Buy
You can buy canes at drugstores, discount retailers, medical
supply stores and online, usually between $10 and $50. You’ll
also be happy to know that Medicare covers canes with a written
prescription from a physician.
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.
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THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, May 5, 2023
Multi-Family Yard Sale
Downsizing for retirement
Lots of good stuff including items
in original boxes
Saturday, May 13th, 8:00 – Noon
110 Grand View Ave, Revere
YARD SALE
May 6 & 7 * 9 AM - 3 PM
15 Lewis Lane, Saugus
- LEGAL NOTICE -
City of Malden
Massachusetts
Board of Appeal
215 Pleasant Street
Malden, Massachusetts 02148
Telephone 781-397-7000x2103
MALDEN BOARD OF APPEAL
PUBLIC HEARING
The Malden Board of Appeal will hold a public
hearing on Wednesday, May 17, 2023 at 6:30 pm at
Malden City Hall, 215 Pleasant St, Room #106 Herbert
L.Jackson Council Chambers, Malden, MA on Petition
23-004 by Essence and Nicolas Souffrant seeking a
variance under Code of the City of Malden as amended
-Title 12 Section 12.16.010 Table of Intensity Regulations
- Dwelling two family - Specifically Rear Yard Setback
permitting contruction of an addition to expand kitchen/
dining area and deck as per Plans
RES-052879-2023 at the property known as and
numbered 24-26 Maynard Street, Malden, MA and
also known by City Assesssor’s Parcell ID #165-509-913
Additional information, Petition and plans available for
public review in the Office of Inspectional Services, 215
Pleasant St., 3rd floor, Malden, MA or online at
www.cityofmalden.org or https://maldenma-energovweb.
tylerhost.net/apps/SelfService#home
Nathaniel Cramer, Chair
April 28, 2023
May 5, 2023
Discount Tree Service
781-269-0914
Humane Removal Service
COMMONWEALTH
WILDLIFE CONTROL
ANIMAL & BIRD REMOVAL
INCLUDING RODENTS
CALL 617-285-0023
City of Everett Income-Restricted Rental Opportunity
302 Broadway
Everett, MA 02149
2 Income-Restricted Rental Units
# of Units # of Bedrooms Rent Maximum Income Limit
(% AMI)
2
1-Bedroom
Minimum Incomes
(set by owner + based on # of bedrooms + Area
Median Income (AMI))
# of Bedrooms
Maximum Income
80% AMI
$2,044
80%
Maximum Incomes
(set by HUD + based on household size + Area
Median Income (AMI))
Household Size
1
2
3
1-Bedroom
$61,320
4
5
6
$111,850
$120,800
$129,750
* 2022 Area Median Incomes for Boston, Cambridge, Quincy, MA-NH MSA.
Minimum incomes do not apply to households receiving housing
assistance such as Section 8, MRVP, or VASH.
Applications are available during the application period, from Monday,
March 27th, 2023 through Friday, May 26th, 2023
To request an online application or to have one sent by email,
visit www.302BroadwayLottery.com,
email 302Broadway@MaloneyProperties.com
or call (617) 639-3064 Ext 770.
If you cannot complete the application online, please call us at
(617) 639-3064 Ext 770, to request that we mail you one and to ask
us for any support or guidance you might need to complete the
application. Applications can also be picked up in-person at:
Parlin Memorial Library 410 Broadway Everett, MA 02149
Monday – Thursday, 9:00 am – 9:00 pm
Friday, 9:00 am – 5:00 pm
Saturday, 10:00 am - 2:00 pm
DEADLINE: Applications must be submitted online or postmarked
no later than Friday, May 26th, 2023.
Mail to:
Professional
TREE
REMOVAL
& Cleanups
24-HOUR SERVICE
Maloney Properties, Inc.
Attn: 302 Broadway Lottery
27 Mica Lane, Wellesley, MA 02481.
2 Income-Restricted Rental Opportunity
302 Broadway
Everett, MA 02149
2 Income-Restricted Rental Units
Find your local number:
https://maloneyproperties.zoom.us/u/knh6MVN7F
● Selection by Lottery.
● Use & Occupancy Restrictions apply.
For more information, language assistance, or reasonable accommodations
for persons with disabilities, please call (617) 639-3064 Ext 770
or email 302Broadway@MaloneyProperties.com.
Equal Housing Opportunity
Maximum Income
80% AMI
$78,300
$89,500
$100,700
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Page 21
RON’S OIL
Call
For
PRICE
MELROSE, MA
02176
NEW
CUSTOMER’S
WELCOME
ACCEPTING VISA, MASTERCARD & DISCOVER
(781) 397-1930 OR (781) 662-8884
100 GALLON MINIMUM
AAA Service • Lockouts
Trespass Towing • Roadside Service
Junk Car Removal
617-387-6877
26 Garvey St., Everett
MDPU 28003 ICCMC 251976
Frank Berardino
MA License 31811
We follow Social Distancing Guidelines!
● 24-Hour Service
● Emergency Repairs
BERARDINO
Plumbing & Heating
J.F & Son Contracting
Snow Plowing
No Job too small! Free Estimates!
Commercial & Residential
781-656-2078
- Property management & maintenance
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
For Advertising with Results,
call The Advocate Newspapers
at 617-387-2200 or Info@advocatenews.net
Advocate
Call now!
617-387-2200
advertise on the web at
www.advocatenews.net
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.
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
$
$
$
$
Classifieds
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THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, May 5, 2023
INTERN | FROM PAGE 15
tions from the Fifth Middlesex
District are strongly encouraged.
Hours and duration of internship
are fl exible, though ideal appli-
LEGAL NOTICE -
City of Malden
Massachusetts
1. 1. Recently a town in what country organized the third
annual European seagull screeching championship (where
people imitated seagulls): Belgium, England or Portugal?
2. 2. What part of the body has the most bones?
3. 3. On May 5, 1862, Mexican troops defended Puebla from
what country’s soldiers?
4. 4. How many double stiches are on an MLB baseball: 50,
26 or 108?
5. 5. May 6, 2023, is the Kentucky Derby: in what year was
the fi rst Kentucky Derby: 1822, 1875 or 1911?
6. 6. What is a bibliophile?
7. 7. May 7 is World Laughter Day; the fi rst celebration of
this day, in 1998, was organized by the founder of what
yoga-related movement?
8. 8. How many years did Sleeping Beauty sleep?
9. 9. The FIFA Women’s World Cup 2023 will be held where?
10. 10. What is the name of the science concerning motion
of projectiles?
11. 11. On May 8, 2012, what author/illustrator of “Where the
Wild Things Are” died?
12. 12. What are the fastest growing hairs on the body?
13. 13. What is considered the smartest reptile: chameleon,
crocodile or monitor lizard?
14. 14. On May 9, 1914, what U.S. president proclaimed the
celebration of Mother’s Day?
15. 15. What are gneiss, schist and marble?
16. 16. How can spiders climb walls?
17. 17. On May 10, 1717, Judge John Hathorne died; he is
primarily known for helping lead what trials?
18. 18. How are “A very good restaurant in its category,”
Excellent cooking, worth a detour” and “Exceptional cuisine,
worth a special journey” similar?
19. 19. Why is the American quarter horse called that?
20. 20. On May 11, 1997, IBM computer Deep Blue won what
kind of match?
ANSWERS
Sandy Juliano
Broker/President
Board of Appeal
215 Pleasant Street
Malden, Massachusetts 02148
Telephone 781-397-7000 x2103
MALDEN BOARD OF APPEAL
PUBLIC HEARING
The Malden Board of Appeal will hold a public hearing
on Wednesday, May 17, 2023 at 6:30 pm at Malden City
Hall, 215 Pleasant St, Room #106 Herbert L Jackson
Council Chambers, Malden, MA on Petition 23-003 by
DiPrete Engineering acting as agent for The Parikh
Network to submit application for the potential
development of property seeking variances under Code
of the City of Malden as amended – Title 12 Section
12.12.06D Fast Food Service off street parking in the
required set back of lot and Title 12 Section 12.20.010
Table of Off-street parking and loading regulations–
Restaurant Fast Food – required number of parking spaces
as per Plans CMID-050466-2022 at the property known
as and numbered 1100 Main Street, Malden, MA and
also known by City Assessor’s Parcel ID #044-855-507
Additional information, Petition and plans available for
public review in the Office of Inspectional Services, 215
Pleasant St., 3rd floor, Malden, MA or online at
www.cityofmalden.org or https://maldenma-energovweb.
tylerhost.net/apps/SelfService#/home
Nathaniel Cramer, Chair
April 28, 2023
May 5, 2023
cants will be available 8-10 hours
per week. This position will be
in-person, hybrid, or fully remote.
Our offi ce does not discriminate
in employment on the basis
of race, color, religion, sex, pregnancy,
gender identity, national
origin, political affi liation, sexual
orientation, marital status,
disability, genetic information,
or age. Applicants of color are
strongly encouraged to apply.
Candidates should send a resume
and a brief letter of interest
to Jason.Lewis@masenate.gov
by Thursday, May 4, 2023. References
should be available upon
request. Applications will be reviewed
on a rolling basis, so interested
parties are encouraged
to apply promptly. With questions,
please call (617) 722-1206.
OBITUARIES | FROM PAGE19
years old.
Jo Ann was the wife of the late Robert
DeSimone and the longtime companion
of the late Carmine Sorrentino.
She was the loving mother of Christina
LaConte and her husband Peter of
Lynnfield and Robbie DeSimone of
Malden. Jo Ann was the dear sister of
Richard Cipriano and his wife Marilyn
and George Cipriano and his late wife
Tammy. She is also survived by loving
grandchildren, great grandchildren,
and nieces and nephews.
Visiting hours were held at the A. J.
Spadafora Funeral Home, Malden on
Friday April 28th followed by a graveside
service at Forest Dale Cemetery,
Malden.
COMMERCIAL & RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY SALES & RENTALS
Happy
Spring
Follow Us On:
THIS WEEKEND!
EVERETT -
26-26A Victoria
Street. 2 family, 5 &
6 room, $850,000.
Call Sandy at
617-448-0854
OPEN HOUSE - SUN., MAY 7
Norma Capuano Parziale
617-590-9143
LISTED BY SANDY!
UNDER
AGREEMENT
FROM 12 - 2:00 PM
3 Bedroom,
1 1/2 Bath Ranch,
6 Bridge Street,
Tewksbury - $499,900.
Open House Sunday,
April 30 from 12-2.
Call Sandy with
questions,
617-448-0854.
List Your Home or Apartment With Us!
Open Daily From 10:00 A.M. - 5:00 P.M.
433 Broadway, Suite B, Everett, MA 02149
www.jrs-properties.com
Joe DiNuzzo
617-680-7610
Rosemarie Ciampi
617-957-9222
Denise Matarazzo
617-953-3023
617-294-1041
1. Belgium (the coastal town of De Panne)
2. Feet
3. France
4. 108
5. 1875
6. A person who collects rare books
7. Laughter Yoga
8. 100
9. Australia and New Zealand
10. Ballistics
11. Maurice Sendak
12. Beard
13. Monitor lizard
14. Woodrow Wilson
15. Metamorphic rocks
16. They have hairy feet that create a “force of attraction,” and
tarantulas’ feet spin silk to help stick.
17. Salem witchcraft trials
18. They are the definitions of one, two and three stars,
respectively, in the 1936 Michelin Guide.
19. Because it could outrun other horses in quarter mile or less
races.
20. Chess
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Page 23
Your Hometown News Delivered!
EVERETT ADVOCATE
MALDEN ADVOCATE
REVERE ADVOCATE
SAUGUS ADVOCATE
One year subscription to
The Advocate of your choice:
$150 per paper in-town per year or
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Sec. code____ Advocate (City):___________________
Clip & Mail Coupon with Credit Card, Check or Money Order to:
Advocate Newspapers Inc.
PO Box 490407, Everett, MA 02149
FOR SALE - SAUGUS
Location! Location! Welcome to Saugus where 19 Gilway awaits your creative
touch. This cozy home is nestled in one of the most desirable areas in
Saugus. Leave it as is or upgrade the kitchen and baths. Don’t delay and miss
out. Did I mention close to major routes and accessibility to Boston, Airport,
and Transportation? Come to one of our open houses on Thursday May 11th
from 5:00-7:00 pm Saturday & Sunday May 13th & 14th from 12:00-2:00 pm.
For Advertising with Results,
call The Advocate Newspapers
at 617-387-2200 or Info@advocatenews.net
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THE MALDEN ADVOCATE–Friday, May 5, 2023
.............
#
1
Listing & Selling
Office in Saugus
“Experience and knowledge
Provide the Best Service”
Free Market Evaluations CRE
CarpenitoRealEstate.com
View our website from
your mobile phone!
335 Central St., Saugus, MA
781-233-7300
SAUGUS - 1st AD - 6 rm, 3 bedrm Colonial, 1 ½ baths,
hardwood flooring, central air, two car gar w/loft storage &
attached screen house, nicely located off Saugus Center in
Iron Works neighborhood!...$515,000
WAKEFIELD - 1st AD - Custom-built Contemporary offers
8 rms, 3 bdrms, 3 ½ baths, updated kit w/overside island open
to solarium & dining room, stunning familyrm w/wet bar & fireplace,
fin LL, 2 car gar, too many custom features to mention,
MUST BE SEEN – IMPRESSIVE!...$925,000.
Wendy
LYNN - 6 NEWLY COMPLETED STORE FRONT FACADES offers
consisting of two condos. ALL occupied – great income, minimal
expenses make this a great investment, 1031 tax exchange, etc,
centrally located, close to public transportation…$2,799,900.
NORTH OF BOSTON - Well-established, immaculate Pilates Studio
offers top-of-the-line equipment, 950+sq ft of perfectly laid out
space, can be easily suited to your schedule to make this a perfect
investment! $25,000. MOTIVATED SELLER-MAKE AN OFFER!!
Wendy has proudly been selling real
estate for 40 years! She has served her
community and surrounding areas
with great affection and attention.
Wendy has had the privilege of being
recognized by Boston Magazine as
Top Real Estate Producer multiple
times. Carpenito Real Estate is proud
to be the #1 Listing and Selling office
in Saugus every year since 2002!!
Wendy attributes her office’s success
to the incredible agents she is surrounded
with every day! She is not retiring
anytime soon – she loves real estate
and adores all her clients!
EAST BOSTON -
1st AD, 3 Family
offers 5/6/6 rooms,
2/3/3 bedrooms,
wood flooring, eat-in
kitchens, laundry in
units, rear porches,
finished lower level,
replacement
windows,
gas/electric heat.
$1,075,000.
THINKING OF SELLING?
Carpenito Real Estate can
provide you with the
BEST price,
BEST service and
BEST results!
Call us today!
UNDER
CONTRACT
FOR SALE- DUPLEX STYLE SINGLE
FAMILY ATTACHED HOME. SPACIOUS
LIVING AREA. 1ST FLOOR LAUNDRY,
3 BED, 3 BATH, WALK UP ATTIC,
LOWER LEVEL FAMILY ROOM WITH
WET BAR, LARGE, FENCED IN YARD
WITH ABOVE GROUND POOL. GAS
HEAT. SAUGUS $659,900
LOOKING TO
BUY OR SELL ?
CALL
RHONDA
COMBE
CALL BRANDI 617-462-5886
FOR SALE - RARE FIND! BRAND NEW
HOME FEATURING 3 BEDS, 3
BATHS,QUALITY CONSTRUCTION
THROUGHOUT. FLEXIBLE FLOORPLAN.
OPEN CONCEPT, CATHEDRAL CEILINGS, SS
APPLIANCES, LARGE ISLAND, SLIDER TO
DECK. MAIN BED HAS 2 CUSTOM CLOSETS
AND EN SUITE. FINISHED WALK OUT LL
OPEN FOR FUTURE EXPANSION.
SAUGUS $899,900
CALL DEBBIE: 617-678-9710
FOR SALE-SPACIOUS, 2 BED, 2
UNDER
CONTRACT
BATH, gas heat, HISTORIC
BROWNSTONE CONDO IN WATERFRONT
DISTRICT OF CHELSEA
WITH AMAZING CITY AND WATER
VIEWS!
CHELSEA $599,000
CALL DANIELLE 978-987-9535
UNDER
CONTRACT
FOR SALE -SAUGUS SPLIT-ENTRY,
2000 SQUARE FEET, 3 BEDROOM,
1.5 BATH, HARDWOOD
FLOORING, GARAGE UNDER,
FENCED IN PRIVATE YARD.
SAUGUS $599,900
CALL RHONDA 781-706-0842
UNDER
CONTRACT
FOR SALE- 3 BED, 2 BATH
RANCH. UPDATED SYSTEMS,
2 FIREPLACES, GARAGE,
FENCED YARD, IN-GROUND
POOL, GREAT
NEIGHBORHOOD.
SAUGUS $565,000
CALL DEBBIE 617-678-9710
CALL RHONDA
FOR ALL YOUR
REAL ESTATE
NEEDS.
781-706-0842
FOR SALE - 3 BED, 1 BATH,
VINYL SIDING, HARDWOOD,
GAS HEAT, CENTRAL AC, GREAT
LOCATION,
SAUGUS $425,000
CALL KEITH 781-389-0791
MOBILE HOMES
WE ARE HIRING!
WE ARE LOOKING FOR
AGENTS IN OUR SAUGUS
OFFICE. OFFERING A SIGN
ON BONUS TO QUALIFIED
AGENTS!
FOR SALE- 3 ROOM, 1 BED, 1 BATH NICELY UPDATED HOME WITH NEW
PITCHED ROOF, ELECTRIC, HOT WATER AND MORE.
SAUGUS $119,900
FOR SALE-4 ROOMS, 2 BED, 1 BATH, NEW ROOF AND FURNACE.
DESIRABLE PARK. NEEDS SOME UPDATES. PEABODY $119,900
CALL ERIC 781-223-0289
MOBILE HOME
FOR SALE-BRAND NEW 14 X
52 UNITS. ONLY 2 LEFT!
STAINLESS APPLIANCES AND
FULL SIZE LAUNDRY. 2BED 1
BATH. FINANCING AVAILABLE
WITH 10% DOWN
DANVERS $199,900
Thinking of BUYING OR SELLING soon? CONFUSED about the current market?
WE ARE HERE TO HELP! GIVE US A CALL TODAY!
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