׉?4ׁB!בCט ( (u׉׉	 7cassandra://JhgbQQhiK3ET4H4CfNkhZSXjQG85ToTP_DeCFcduSBs z`)׉	 7cassandra://qQowoWWoSTKyuIzWvnwn9_WhPGGwcTjFfOR5q8wP8yw͡`J׉	 7cassandra://SrrKXO2hX64CcoOmnC4RS47fGLRCty1chzNNbjOSyNM.`̰ fO2F2:ΉנfO2F2:Ό ̿9ׁHhttp://www.advocatenews.netׁׁЈ׈EfO2F2:s׉E)REVERE
Vol. 34, No.27
-FREEHave
a Safe & Happy July 4th!
ADVOCATE
www.advocatenews.net
Free Every Friday
Our Lady of Lourdes Faithful
Celebrate 20th Anniversary Mass
781-286-8500
Wednesday, July 3, 2024
City Council
unanimously approves
Mayor’s FY2025 Budget
Balanced budget emphasizes fiscal responsibility
and investments in core City services
Special
to The Advocate
T
his week the Revere City
Council unanimously apTOGETHER
AGAIN: Shown from left to right are, event co-host John Verrengia, Boston College
Philosophy Director Father Ronald Tascelli, Father Thomas Keyes, Father Leonardo Moreira and
event co-host Jim Mercurio. See page 10 for photo highlights. (Advocate photo by Tara Vocino)
proved the City of Revere’s Fiscal
Year 2025 (FY25) Budget. Prepared
and submitted by Mayor
Patrick M. Keefe, Jr. and Chief Financial
Officer Rich Viscay, the
FY25 budget totals $274 million,
with nearly 70% of investments
focused on Revere Public
Schools (RPS) and public safety
and infrastructure. No one-time
revenues were required to balance
the budget.
With an eye towards proBUDGET
| SEE Page 1
Patrick Keefe, Jr.
Mayor
MASSACHUSETTS HOUSE PASSES HOME EQUITY LEGISLATION
Legislation will protect property owners from “equity theft”
BOSTON – The Massachusetts
House of Representatives
last week passed “An Act relative
to municipal tax lien procedures
and protections for property
owners in the Commonwealth,”
which would align current statute
with a recent decision by the
U.S. Supreme Court. The legislation
secures the rights of property
owners to reclaim any excess
equity to which they are entitled
after all taxes and fees are
repaid to the municipalities following
a tax foreclosure, while
substantially increasing notifications
and other protections
for property owners throughout
the foreclosure process.
“This legislation is not only an
effort to ensure that the Commonwealth’s
laws comply with
court rulings, it is also about
protecting the rights of property
owners here in Massachusetts
throughout the tax lien
foreclosure process,” said House
Speaker Ronald J. Mariano (DQuincy).
“I want to thank Chairman
Cusack for his work on this
legislation, as well as all my colleagues
in the House for voting
to advance these important reforms.”
"This
legislation provides
by which property owners lose
all of their equity as a result of a
small amount of unpaid property
taxes," said Rep. Jeffrey Rosario
Turco (D. Winthrop).
The Supreme Court ruled in
Jessica Giannino
State Representative
much needed consumer protections
to property owners
and clarity to municipalities on
tax lien procedures," said Representative
Mark J. Cusack (DBraintree),
House Chair of the
Joint Committee on Revenue.
“Equity will now be returned to
its rightful owner while making
cities and towns whole. Thank
you to Speaker Mariano, Ways
and Means Chair Michlewitz and
my colleagues for their leadership
and diligence on this important
legislation that will positively
impact Massachusetts."
“The tax lien foreclosure process
is already a difficult time for
Jeffrey Rosario Turco
State Representative
anyone facing the situation. It is
only fair that profits are returned
to the rightful owners,” said Representative
Jessica Giannino
(D-Revere). “I’m grateful to the
Speaker, Chairs Michlewitz and
Cusack, and my colleagues for
their support.”
"Cities and towns rely on property
tax receipts to fund important
government services. This
important legislation strikes
a balance by allowing struggling
taxpayers to work with
their communities on workable
payment plans. More importantly,
this legislation eliminates
the abhorrent practice
Tyler v. Hennepin County, Minnesota
that state laws allowing municipalities
to retain equity from
a foreclosed property, in excess
of any taxes and fees owed by
a property owner, were unconstitutional
under the Takings
Clause of the Fifth Amendment
of the U.S. Constitution. This ruling
had an impact on the municipal
tax lien foreclosure process
in the Commonwealth, since
Massachusetts law also allowed
municipalities or third parties
that purchased tax liens to keep
excess equity following a property
foreclosure for unpaid taxes.
Underscoring the need for
legislative action, a recent ruling
by the Massachusetts Superior
Court (Ashley M. Mills v.
City of Springfield) found that the
property foreclosure process in
Massachusetts was unconstitutional,
a ruling that was supported
by legal briefings from the
Massachusetts Attorney General’s
Office.
This bill ensures that Massachusetts
law is constitutional
throughout all municipalities
in the Commonwealth, and
EQUITY | SEE Page 7
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THE REVERE ADVOCATE – WEDnEsDAy, JuLy 3, 2024
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cell phones and attendance
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he school committee tackled
two issues this week that
raised the question of whether
Revere was returning to the old
days of education.
Committee member Anthony
Caggiano opened a discussion
on cell phones.
“Cell phones have to leave the
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classroom, period, end of conversation,”
said Caggiano adding it’s
impossible not to see how disruptive
they are.
The committee approved a cell
phone policy last year that does
not allow cell phone use in class.
High school students can carry
their phones and use them during
their lunch period.
Students who do use a phone
in class can have their phone
confiscated and returned at the
end of the period. Repeated offenses
would mean a confiscated
phone could only be returned
to parents.
“Too many teachers won’t take
phones away,” said Caggiano who
added a ban on cell phones in
schools is being considered at
Celebrating Our 52nd Year
Chris 2024
ing months to figure out which
way to go with a cell phones.
Attendance, which is down
since before Covid, was also
up for discussion at this week’s
meeting. Committee member
John Kingston shared a story
about a conversation with a retired
teacher who told him about
a student who missed 15 days of
school while travelling with his
family.
Kingston questioned the attenANTHONY
CAGGIANO
School Committee Member
the state level. He suggested Revere
be ahead of the curve and
ban them now. “Do the teachers
a favor and throw them out of the
classroom,” he said.
Superintendent Diane Kelly,
who has expressed concerns
about teachers taking a phone
and students physically responding,
said there has been talk
about a contract program with
families, most of whom carry
their kids on their phone plans.
Kelly said parents can go into
their plans and limit their student’s
phone use to emergency
calls during school hours.
Kelly suggested some parents
would embrace the idea of
a contract.
Committee members agreed
to continue hammering out a
policy as they have three upcomdance
policy and if there were
any consequences for students
who missed so much class time.
Supt. Kelly intervened and said
if a student can miss 15 days and
still master class content, there’s
something wrong with the class.
It’s not rigorous or challenging
enough. Kelly asked the committee
if they wanted to go back to
the old days when if you missed
five days, you failed.
And that’s not where committee
members wanted to go. They
suggested better tracking methods
and alerts to parents when
students are absent. Engaging
parents for an intervention about
problems with attendance was
seen as a next step. The committee
also felt there was room to
accommodate family vacations
and trips.
“I get offended when you say
we are going back to the old
days,” committee member Aisha
Milbury-Ellis said to Kelly. “We
don’t want to go back, but we
want to have standards.”
A Day at the Beach:
All-Abilities Beach
Day August 17
By Barbara Taormina
T
he Commission on Disabilities
is putting the final touches
on an All-Abilities Beach Day, a
free event scheduled for August
17 from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. on Revere
Beach. There will be music
and beach accessible mats and
wheelchairs provided by the
MA Dept. of Conservation and
Recreation.
"We want to get people with
disabilities on the sand and in
the water with accessible wheelchairs,"
said Ralph DeCicco, Chairman
of the Commission who will
be spreading the word about this
event throughout the city.
Commission members also
look forward to hearing from a
special guest from a program in
Everett for Alzheimer patients.
According to one Commission
member, the program has a
strong emphasis on community
and social interaction and will be
a good resource for Revere families
and residents struggling with
Alzheimers.
Commissioners also took some
time to discuss accessibility and
a new state law that would allow
homeowners to add a 900
square foot handicapped-accessible
residential unit to their
property by right. Commissioners
feel this would be a huge
benefit to disabled people wanting
to live at home.
Members also discussed the
problems with creating accessibility
in historical buildings and
older structures. They are unable
to get to the top floor of the library.
Commission has a transitions
plan that maps out all the
places and items in Revere that
need upgrades to comply with
requirements in the Americans
with Disabilities Act.
DeCicco reminded fellow
Commissioners that they take
the month of July off and the
next Commission meeting will
not be until August.
׉	 7cassandra://mlpIdMyzuzJ-FN7yKJ28JeCpEKzLowp5p7cfGclsRgw1`̰ fO2F2:u׉E|THE REVERE ADVOCATE – WEDnEsDAy, JuLy 3, 2024
Page 3
Board of Health upholds fine
against convenience store for
selling tobacco to a minor
Revere Beach water quality and residential rodent control also addressed
By Barbara Taormina
he Board of Health met last
week for a round of usual business
and updates on community
health. Board Chair Drew Bunker
and Board member Kathleen
Savage upheld a $2,000 fine and
seven-day license suspension for
Shirley Ave. Variety Store for a
second offense of selling tobacco
products to a minor. The Board
felt the high fine was justified because
it was a second offense and
because the owners of the shop
have several convenience stores
in Revere and hold several tobacco
sales licenses.
The owner of Shirley Ave. VaT
riety
attended the meeting and
told Board members they do not
intentionally sell tobacco products
to underage youth, but he
added that it was difficult to
avoid the error.
Bonny Carroll of Six City Tobacco
Initiative asked if the shop
asked all customers buying tobacco
products for identification.
Carroll stressed requiring an ID is
the only way to avoid selling to
minors and the fines that come
with that.
“We know it’s hard, but a $2,000
fine is hard, too,” said Bunker.
Carroll said the Six City Tobacco
Initiative offers training for employees
and help with signs that
let customers know they need to
provide identification to make tobacco
purchases.
Public Health Director Lauren
Buck gave a monthly update
on various aspects of community
health. Buck said influenza
and Covid cases have decreased,
as expected, during the
warm weather. Buck also noted
that opioid-related deaths in
Massachusetts have decreased
by 10 percent over the past year
and Revere has followed that
trend and seen a similar decrease.
Buck also highlighted some seasonal
health information. She
said the water at Revere Beach
is tested every Tuesday, and any
closures due to bacterial counts
will be listed with a red banner on
the city’s website. Residents can
also check the state’s website at
https://www.mass.gov/beachwater-quality
for a list of any local
beaches closed for health reasons.
Buck offered several other
seasonal reminders, including
one not always heard. She advised
residents taking any medications
to check with doctors or
the CDC website to make sure
their meds do not interfere with
heat tolerance.
The Board of Health also received
an update on the city’s rodent
control program. Residents
who have seen rats or evidence
of rats on their property can request
the city to send a professional
exterminator to inspect
and treat the exterior of a home.
Residents who need help with rodents
must sign a waiver online
or at the 311 Constituents Service
Center. A waiver grants the
City of Revere permission to examine
the exterior of a property,
exterminate any burrows and
place bait stations on the property.
Residents can request up to
six exterminator visits each year.
BBB Scam Alert: Utility impostor scam
U
tility scams happen any time
of year, but will typically pop
up during extreme cold or heat
events when many people are
more likely to need their heat or
air conditioning. Scammers may
impersonate water, electric, and
gas company representatives,
threatening residents and business
owners with deactivation
of service if they don't pay up immediately.
How
the scam works
Utility company impostors will
typically contact customers with
a phone call, text, or knock on the
door, claiming to be a representative
from the local water, electric,
or gas company. In the most
common scenario, they will claim
payment is overdue and the utility
will shut off within the hour if
the bill is not paid immediately.
Scammers use a variety of other
tricks to prey on utility customers.
A “representative” may
appear at the door in a plausible
work uniform claiming that
the electric meter is not working
properly and must be immediately
replaced— at the homeowner's
expense. In another form
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of this con, the scammer may
gain access inside the home to
perform “repairs” or an “energy
audit” with the intent of stealing
valuables or coming across
personally identifiable information
that just happens to be out
in plain sight. These cons may
also involve promises of energy
discounts with the intent of taking
money, personal information,
or possibly the account details
needed to switch the resident
to another utility provider withSCAM
| SEE Page 4
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PבCט   (u׉׉	 7cassandra://yn8qdRECT_S_mb3ek7xp97UlD34YYQOZbYWlhlSv088 5`)׉	 7cassandra://RJAPaJBzU3nR7ixJsMnhdZPWMBnomZnw5tMq059orX8ͩ]`J׉	 7cassandra://91pFAZQxbHR-_By5KwoR9ZJf3MxNlJ3CB0VncV3neyA/`̰ fO2F2:Γט ( (u׉׉	 7cassandra://qaSVFl5CNydep0r8dQW1UjxzObRPX2XVMzBt_RV_QRo `)׉	 7cassandra://JQwXexlm63rccim2FhcqSAuQ3Ph7VJcKaOfU9I2dnGEq`J׉	 7cassandra://FqgOTNJoqnxolgf9LJeVMtn8p0Bw3itNmvkAkN64hyQ%`̰ fO2F2:ΗנfO2F2:Μ V9ׁHhttp://WWW.SABATINO-INS.COMׁׁЈ׉EPage 4
THE REVERE ADVOCATE – WEDnEsDAy, JuLy 3, 2024
A night of cars, trucks and motorcycles
Mom’s Cancer Fighting Angels 10th Annual Car show set for July 14 at saugus Middle-High school; a special tribute
for saugus Route 1 Fuddruckers is planned
By Joanie Allbee
E
njoy a fantastic afternoon
of fun on Sunday, July 14,
at the Saugus Middle-High
School, 1 Pearce Memorial Dr.,
from 4 to 8 p.m. at the Mom’s
Cancer Fighting Angels’ 10th
Annual Car Show. The event
will feature a live WROR 105.7
FM Street Team with games &
prizes and DJ Jim Reece of Lil’
Jimmy’s Stack of Records, as
well as cool cars, trucks and motorcycles
– with raffles and trophies
for the winners.
Guy Moley started this as a
continued tribute to his beloved
mother, Irene Comeau, who
passed away from esophageal
cancer over a decade ago. With
the love and support of his wife,
Gerry
D’Ambrosio
Attorney-at-Law
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CHEERS TO THE GOOD TIMES: Rumble, Roars, Tunes and Chow. This is a photo of a 20x16 acrylic
painting that depicts a montage of Guy Moley’s Mom’s Cancer Fighting Angels Car Show. In the
front, holding the car show sign, are, from left to right, event organizer Guy Moley and Bill Pappas
– the man Moley says “taught me all I know about how to run a car show.” (Courtesy photo and painting
by Joanie Allbee to The Saugus Advocate)
SCAM | FROM Page 3
out consent (an illegal practice
known as “slamming”).
One person shared their experience
with a utility scam on BBB
Scam Tracker: "The caller pretended
to be a [company name
redacted] customer service rep,
telling me my electric is being
shut off within 1 hour if I don't
go to [company name redactLaw
Offices of
JOSEPH D. CATALDO, P.C.
“ATTORNEYS AND COUNSELORS AT LAW”
• ESTATE/MEDICAID PLANNING
• WILLS/TRUSTS/ESTATES
• INCOME TAX PREPARATION
• WEALTH MANAGEMENT
• RETIREMENT PLANNING
• ELDER LAW
369 Broadway Everett, MA 02149 (617)381-9600
JOSEPH D. CATALDO, CPA, CFP, MST, ESQUIRE.
AICPA Personal Financial Specialist Designee
ed] to send them 232 dollars immediately."
Another consumer
reported, "...Lady claimed to be
from [company name redacted]
and told us our power would be
shut off in 45 minutes and we
were to call the billing department.
[My] husband called the
number and they asked for a
credit card. He didn't feel right
about it and called [company
name redacted] and they said
it was a scam."
Tips to spot this scam
• Prepaid debit cards and wire
transfers are a red flag. If a caller
specifically asks for payment by
prepaid debit card, gift card, a
digital wallet app, or wire transfer,
this is a huge warning sign. Legitimate
utility companies will often
accept a check or credit card.
• Pressure to pay immediately.
Utility scammers will press for immediate
payment, typically within
a short time frame under an
hour, and may try high-pressure
tactics to intimidate consumers
into giving them personal and
banking information.
Protect yourself against this
scam
• Call customer service. If you
feel pressured for immediate action
by an unknown caller, hang
up the phone and call the customer
service number listed on
your actual utility bill. If the scammer
provided you with a utility
bill, it could be fake, so be sure to
go back to a previous, real utility
bill and confirm that the phone
number you will be calling is
correct. This will ensure you are
speaking to a real representative
from your utility company. Never
give your personal or banking information
to an unverified or unsolicited
caller.
• Never allow anyone into your
home unless you have scheduled
an appointment or reported
a problem. It is rare that a legitimate
utility company will
show up unannounced and demand
entry into your home. Also,
ask utility employees for proper
identification before letting
them enter.
For more information
Read more about how to
avoid impostor scams @ https://
www.bbb.org/article/newsreleases/21686-how-to-avoidimpostor-scams.
Report scams at
https://www.bbb.org/scamtracker
and learn how to protect yourself,
by going https://www.bbb.
org/article/scams/8767-bbbtips-10-steps-to-avoid-scams
Brenda;
his sister, Jodi Lyn Comeau;
and her daughter, Alexis,
Mom’s Cancer Fighting Angels
continue keeping Irene’s memory
alive while raising money to
strengthen the American Cancer
Society.
“We will be honoring the now
closed Saugus Route One Fuddruckers
one last time as we feel
Fuddruckers held the first nine
car shows – and if not for Fuddruckers,
we may not be here
today,“ Guy said.
Guy also shared a gratitude
for Bill Pappas, the man shown
at the other end of the sign in
the above painting with Guy.
“We will be honoring Bill Pappas,
the owner of the former
Full of Bull Saugus Restaurant.
Bill Pappas actually taught me
ALL I know about how to run a
Car Show,” Guy said. Bill also ran
the Saugus Lions Club Car Show
for years, which took place at
the old Saugus High School, so
we are calling it between the
three bringing it back to where
it all began.
The 10th Annual Car Show
Cruise Night is open to all cars,
trucks and motorcycles. All proceeds
go to benefit the American
Cancer Society Relay For Life
of Wakefield. There will be food,
music, raffles, 50/50 trophies
and more. The rain date is July
21. For any questions, please
call Guy Moley at 781-640-1310.
׉	 7cassandra://91pFAZQxbHR-_By5KwoR9ZJf3MxNlJ3CB0VncV3neyA/`̰ fO2F2:w׉EnTHE REVERE ADVOCATE – WEDnEsDAy, JuLy 3, 2024
Page 5
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Josephine Leone, Marie D’Amore, Rocco Longo, Z’andre Lopez, Anthony DiPierro,
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PHONE: (617) 387-7466
FAX: (617) 381-9186
Visit us online at: WWW.SABATINO-INS.COM
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THE REVERE ADVOCATE – WEDnEsDAy, JuLy 3, 2024
Fo
Representative
Jessica
Giannino
& Family
State
Representative
Jeffrey
Turco
& Family
Ward 6
City Councillor
Christopher
Giannino
Councillor-at-Large
Juan
Jaramillo
& Family
The Publisher & Staff of
Ward 2
Councillor
Ira
Novoselsky
Ward 4
City Councillor
Paul
Argenzio
Ward 5
City Councillor
Angela
Guarino-Sawaya
urth
Please Drive Safely!
State
uly
H
a
of J
p
py
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Page 7
Please Drive Safely!
y Fourth o
Councillor-at-Large
Anthony
Zambuto
Northeast Metropolitan Regional Vocational School Committee &
Revere School Committeeman
Anthony
Caggiano
Ward 1
Councillor
Joanne
McKenna
Kingston
School
Committeeman
John
Go 4th and celebrate!
Have a safe, enjoyable holiday.
100 Salem Turnpike, Saugus, MA 01906
WINWASTESAUGUS.COM
EQUITY | FROM Page 7
fair to those subject to municipal
tax lien foreclosure proceedings.
This legislation does the
following:
• Requires that a detailed accounting
be taken following a
foreclosure in a tax taking of the
excess equity that is available;
• Any excess equity must be
returned to the former owner
within 60 days;
• Allows for retroactive claims
for excess equity from May 25,
2023, until date of passage;
• Updates notice requirements
where the subject property is
residential;
• Allows former owners the
opportunity to file a claim in Superior
Court if there is a dispute
on the amount of excess equity
owed;
• Increases the maximum
length for repayment agreements
for owed taxes from five
to 10 years;
• Decrease the amount for a
down payment for the repayment
agreements from 25 percent
to 10 percent and;
• Establishes a special commission
to conduct a comprehensive
study relative to the current
law and practices around the
collection of delinquent property
tax revenue by municipalities
in the Commonwealth.
“For far too long, unscrupulous
collectors have taken
advantage of Massachusetts
homeowners in foreclosure - a
practice the U.S. Supreme Court
and, more recently, the Hampden
County Superior Court,
has deemed unconstitutional.
This legislation rectifies this
systematic problem once and
for all,” said Representative
John J. Mahoney (D-Worcester),
a lead sponsor of the bill.
“By protecting the hard-earned
equity of our neighbors, while
balancing the needs of cities
and towns, we can stifle the
corruption of bad-faith lienholders
and make the Commonwealth
a more prosperous
place for working families.
Thank you to Speaker Mariano
and Chair Michlewitz for their
leadership in bringing this comprehensive
measure to the floor
for passage today. I also want to
thank Chair Cusack and his staff
for their dedication on this critical
issue.”
“The best way for property
owners to keep the equity
in their homes, is for them to
keep their homes. This bill protects
homeowners by providing
better notices in the municipal
tax lien process and presenting
opportunities to cure
deficiencies,” said Representative
Tram T. Nguyen (D-Andover),
a lead sponsor of the bill. “I
want to thank Speaker Mariano,
Chair Michlewitz, and Chair Cusack
for advancing a thoughtful
antidote to the scourge of home
equity theft.”
“Today’s vote by the legislature
makes the tax taking process
more just and erases the
patently unfair and unconstitutional
processes used to rob
homeowners of their home’s equity
built over years,” said Representative
Jeffrey N. Roy (DFranklin),
a lead sponsor of the
bill. “The bill enhances due process
protections which will ensure
that a homeowner receives
adequate notice and has affirms
their right and opportunity to
claim that equity. Moreover, this
significant legislative step provides
homeowners with an equitable
process for resolving tax
delinquencies and rectifies constitutional
problems with the
current law.”
“This is a matter of simple
fairness. Massachusetts residents
ought to pay municipalities
what they owe; no less,
no more,” said Representative
Tommy Vitolo (D-Brookline),
a lead sponsor of the bill. “I’m
grateful to the Speaker, Chairs
Michlewitz and Cusack, and my
colleagues for their support.”
Having passed the House of
Representatives 154-0, the bill
now goes to the Senate for its
consideration.
y
H
f Jul
app
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THE REVERE ADVOCATE – WEDnEsDAy, JuLy 3, 2024
Raising hope and raising the bar:
Inside Phunk Phenomenon’s winning year
By Dom Nicastro
F
or Saugus’ Reia Briggs-Connor,
it’s been a stellar 2024
for her Phunk Phenomenon
Dance Complex studio. A national
championship and preparations
for an international competition
later this year are just
part of the excitement. Oh, and
don’t forget about their performances
on the Boston Celtics
dance floor during the NBA Finals
this month.
Good times for the studio?
You bet. Briggs-Connor, a lifelong
dancer from her early days
in Chelsea to being a New England
Patriots cheerleader and
now a 25-plus-year dance studio
owner in Everett, is nonstop
and loving every minute of it.
This is all in between her constant,
unconditional care for her
19-year-old son, Jared, who has
Sanfilippo syndrome. This condition
halts normal brain development
and causes hyperactivity,
sleep disorders, loss of
speech, dementia and typically
results in death before adulthood.
Her dance studio leads a
fundraising and awareness effort
called “Hip Hop for Hope”
to contribute to research and
development in the healthcare
community for Sanfilippo syndrome.
The
fight for Jared and others
like him is deeply embedded
The Phunk Phenomenon Dance Team are shown performing on the TD Garden parquet floor at
halftime during Game 1 of the NBA Finals Celtics game against the Dallas Mavericks. (Courtesy Phunk
Phenomenon)
Portal To Hope (“PTH”) serves people whose
lives have been impacted by domestic violence
and related assault crimes.
Job Opportunities Available:
PTH is seeking an
Operations Assistant
and a Licensed Social Worker
to join our team!
If you would like to join PTH’s award-winning
team and share your leadership in the cause to
end domestic violence,
please call (781) 338-7678 for more information;
or, email: nita@portaltohope.org.
J&
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The Phunk Phenomenon Dance Team are shown performing on the TD Garden parquet floor at
halftime during Game 1 of the NBA Finals Celtics game against the Dallas Mavericks. (Courtesy Phunk
Phenomenon)
into the fabric of all that BriggsConnor
does within her studio
and for her dancers. Some proceeds
go to the fight to find a
cure for Sanfilippo syndrome.
“I don’t sleep,” Briggs-Connor
tells people when they ask how
she does it. “It’s crazy. Everyone
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asks how we do it. Jared’s 19
now, which is really great because
they told us he wouldn’t
live that long. We’re constantly
trying to raise awareness for his
disease and our mission.”
They’ve had a gig with the
Celtics for most of the 21st century,
performing routines a
couple of times per night during
timeouts for two to three
games per month. They performed
in Games 1 and 2 of the
NBA Finals, where her hometown
Celtics beat the Mavericks,
4-1, clinching Banner No. 18, under
which Phunk Phenomenon
will perform next season. They
also performed in early games
of the Celtics’ dominating playoff
performance, where they finished
16-3.
Performing during a Celtics
championship run was simply
priceless for Briggs-Connor
and her studio. The entire experience
was steeped in Boston
spirit. Donnie Wahlberg, New
Kids on the Block legend and
actor whom Briggs-Connor has
known over the years through
mutual dance contacts, provided
her dancers with shirts to
wear during performances. As
glamorous as it all sounds – she
has also taught Red Sox legend
David Ortiz’s daughters and had
Shaquille O’Neal hang out with
her team during the NBA Finals
– this is serious work for BriggsConnor.
She wants the routines
to be flawless while performing
in front of a sold-out,
19,600-people arena.
“I definitely do put pressure
on myself,” Briggs-Connor said.
“And I try to think what’s going
to be the best option to
keep this crowd up, especially
because they’re going to be
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Page 9
—The Phunk Phenomenon
team is raising funds for their
international competition trip
to Arizona in August. Find out
more at https://app.99pledges.
com/fund/PHUNKatHHIworlds.
You can also learn more about
Phunk Phenomenon at https://
www.phunkphenomenon.com/.
And to learn more and contribute
to Jared Connor’s fight with
Sanfilippo syndrome, the family
has a website: http://www.jaredsfight.org/.
8
Norwood St.
Everett
(617) 387-9810
Open Tues. - Sat.
at 4:00 PM
Closed Sun. & Mon.
Announcing our Classic Specials
Dine In Only:
hot the whole time. It’s almost
like they don’t even need entertainment
because they’re all
in it. The crowd is already loud.
So, I try to keep the music to
match that, obviously taking
what they love like ‘Shipping up
to Boston’ and keeping it in the
theme of Boston. And then Donnie
Wahlberg, he sponsored the
team with these beautiful New
Kids on the Block Boston shirts.
So, I did a nice tribute piece to
the Boston boy bands to keep
the crowd pumped for everything
that comes from Boston
and keep that luck flowing. That
was my idea of what I went into
this year.”
The NBA Finals appearance for
her younger dancers – called Lil
Phunk and ranging in ages from
five to 13 – was a crowning moment
much like the Boston Celtics’
championship. Her dancers
have been hard at work at their
craft, and they now got to shine
on an international stage right
in the TD Garden, which they’ve
called home for decades.
The studio prides itself on “urban
dance,” and Briggs-Connor
describes it as a “non-traditional
dance studio.” Their mission?
To connect with youth through
the art of urban dance.
“Hip Hop is not just a dance;
it is a culture containing five elements,”
according to the mission
statement on the studio’s
website. “Our goal is to educate
our students on those five elements
within each of our specialized
classes. Urban dance
styles have always been the
heart of inner cities as a way
of expression and a means of
building self-esteem.”
She refers to a teaching style
called “EDUTAINMENT,” or teaching
the history behind each art
form in addition to choreography.
Boston, she said, has a specific
dance style that includes
a penchant for a very hypedup
and energetic vibe. “We still
have a very bouncy style compared
to the West Coast teams,
who are more smooth,” she told
The Advocate, “so we like artists
like DMX. The studio that I own
and the company is predominantly
Hip Hop. We do mostly
urban dance, street styles, so
break-dancing from back in the
day, we still do that, popping,
locking, krump. New school HipHop,
old-school Hip Hop. So, it’s
all Hip Hop.”
And this studio is not just performing;
they’re winning on a
large stage. A group of 40 dancers
from Phunk Phenomenon
recently competed in a national
competition run by Hip Hop
International. Ranging in ages
from nine to dancers in their 30s,
the team won a Gold Medal for
the Megacrew category. Now
they’re preparing for an international
competition in Arizona
in August, where they will compete
against 50 countries.
They secured the nationals
win earlier this year with a routine
to the song “Ante Up,” a collaboration
by Hip Hop artists
Busta Rhymes, Teflon and Remy
Martin. When she makes a mix,
Briggs-Connor likes to entertain
all ages of her audiences,
blending old-school memories
with new beats. For this routine,
they took “Ante Up” and layered
it with new beats like dance hall
and Afrobeat.
“Everything had to be within
the realm of street dance for the
rules of this competition,” BriggsConnor
said, “so we’re going
with a full mixed style routine,
basically hitting all the genres
of hip-hop dance.” For BriggsConnor,
these competitions
are full-circle moments where
all the hard work of choreography,
dancing and sweating until
near midnight on weekday
nights comes together.
She’s been hitting the dance
floor since she was three years
old at Genevieve’s Dance Studio
in Chelsea, and she basically
hasn’t left since. “I danced
at that studio in Chelsea, and I
grew up there,” Briggs-Connor
said. “My mom [Barbara Casino
of Chelsea] put me in when
I was three years old because I
loved to dance. I danced all the
way until I was 18 there, and I
started teaching for her when I
was 16, and I cheered for Chelsea
High School. I’ve danced my
whole life.”
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call The Advocate
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Page 10
THE REVERE ADVOCATE – WEDnEsDAy, JuLy 3, 2024
Our Lady of Lourdes Faithful
Celebrates 20th Anniversary Mass
By Tara Vocino
T
he Grotto Park of Our Lady of Lourdes celebrated their 20th anniversary
outdoor Mass in Beachmont Square on Sunday morning.
The parish faithful have been meeting every year to honor the
Our Lady of Lourdes Church which was closed by the archdiocese
over 20 years ago.
The crowd listens on during the homily.
The crowd sings the entrance hymn, “Here I am,
Lord.”
Communion celebrates Jesus’s life and resurrection, according
to the Scriptures.
Cantor Sandy Strate sings “Alleluia.”
Organizers
Jim Mercurio, at
left, with John Verrengia.
The priests walked into the procession.
425r
Broadway, Saugus
Located adjacent to Kohls Plaza Route 1 South
in Saugus at the intersection of Walnut Street
We are on MBTA Bus Route 429
781-231-1111
We are a Skating Rink with
Bowling Alleys, Arcade and
two TV’s where the ball
games are always on!
PUBLIC SKATING SCHEDULE
12-7 p.m.
Sunday
Monday
Tuesday
$9.00
Price includes Roller Skates
Rollerblades/inline skates $3.00 additional cost
Private Parties
7:30-11 p.m.
Wednesday
Thursday
Friday
Saturday
$10.00
Price includes Roller Skates
Adult Night 18+ Only
Private Parties
Private Parties
4-8 p.m. $10.00 8:30-11 p.m. $11.
18+ Adults Only After 7 PM
12-9 p.m.
$9.00
Everyone must pay admission after 6 p.m.
Sorry No Checks - ATM on site
Roller skate rentals included in all prices
Inline Skate Rentals $3.00 additional
BIRTHDAY & PRIVATE PARTIES AVAILABLE
www.roller-world.com
Cheryl Delaney, at left, with Valda Barry by
the refreshments.
Shown from left to right, are: Mary Vigliotta, Juan Jaramillo,
Juanita Haas, Kathleen Heiser and Carol Tye
prays.
Event Organizer Jim
Mercurio thanked the
Beachmont Improvement
Committee, the
Department of Public
Works, and dessert
donors.
Event Co-Organizer
John Verrengia read
from the Book of Wisdom.
Benjamin
Soares,
17 months, dances
to “Ave Maria.”
Our Lady of Lourdes Father
Thomas Keyes read from the
Gospel of Mark.
Event co-host Jim Mercurio
holds the stoal with Father
Ronald Tascelli, which
is an ecclesiastical vestment
consisting of a long usually
silk band worn traditionally
around the neck by bishops
and priests.
Shown from left to right, are: McKenna’s
Campaign Manager Larry
Smith, Ward 1 City Councillor
Joanne McKenna and CouncillorAt-Large
Juan Jaramillo.
Shown from left to
right, are: event cohost
John Verrengia,
Former Ward
1 Councillor Doug
Goodwin, and Boston
College Philosophy
Director Jesuit
Father Ronald
Tascelli.
Immaculate Concept
ion Parochial
Vicar Father
Leonardo
Moreira.
Father Ronald Tascelli
is a Jesuit priest from
Boston College.
Erin Murphy prays the
Lord’s Prayer.
׉	 7cassandra://aufDvdx7tYYyDszigw1g6_44dDzekvJwYfVgXAMPg9s1`̰ fO2F2:}׉ETHE REVERE ADVOCATE – WEDnEsDAy, JuLy 3, 2024
Page 11
School Committee Roundup
By Barbara Taormina
Congrats, Mrs. Martell
The School Committee at their
last meeting congratulated and
celebrated Nancy Martell, who
was named the new principal
of the Staff Sergeant James J.
Hill school. “You’ve been ready
to take over this leadership role
for a long time,” School Superintendent
Dianne Kelly told Martell
as she was announcing Martell’s
appointment to the committee.
Martell
said she felt her job involved
understanding the stories
of students, families, colleagues
and others. “Thank you for entrusting
me with this opportunity,”
Martell told the committee.
Welcome, Mr. Huppert
Superintendent Dianne Kelly
also introduced Ryan Huppert,
a Harvard Graduate School of
Education resident who will be
working with the administration
for the next 10 months. Huppert
told the committee he wanted
his residency to be in place with a
leader doing great work and Revere
is where he landed.
Caregiver survey gives district
high marks
Dr. Kelly shared some of the
highlights of a recent parent
and caregiver survey with the
School Committee. The survey
drew 603 responses. Among
those who answered the questions,
which ranged on a variety
of topics, 83 percent said they
feel welcomed and included in
their child’s school. Among parents
and caregivers, 82 percent
feel teachers are responsive and
communication with teachers is
good. Among parents with children
with special needs, 90 percent
said they felt engaged in
creating their child’s individual
education plan. For families
with children in English as a second
language classes, 72 percent
of parents and caregivers said
they agreed they understand
how their child receives ESL instruction.
The
new math
Parents of school-age children
sometimes complain and sometimes
joke about the troubles
they have helping with math
homework. The days of math
facts, multiplication tables and
algorithms are over and math
has become an exciting and relevant
world.
Superintendent Dianne Kelly
gave the School Committee
an update on the district’s math
curriculum.
Lower elementary grades have
been using the Illustrative Mathematics
program for the past few
years. A pilot program will now
expand Illustrative Mathematics
through middle school.
According to Kelly, the advisory
team that assessed different
math curricula choices liked
that Illustrative Mathematics asks
students to describe what they
were seeing and discovering. The
program promotes classroom
conversation and collaboration
among students and builds on
students’ innate knowledge, explained
Kelly.
According to the illustrative
Math website, “6-8 math is a
problem-based core curriculum
rooted in content and practice
standards to foster learning and
achievement for all. Students
learn by doing math, solving
problems in Mathematical and
real-world contexts, and constructing
arguments using precise
language.”
At Revere High, students will
participate in a pilot program
with Reveal Math, which the advisory
team chose because the
program allows for differentiation
to accommodate low and
high achievers. According to the
Reveal Math website, the program
is derived from the latest
research on how students learn
best. The goal is to fuel student
engagement and deepen conceptual
understanding. Curriculum
advisors also liked the
online component of Reveal
Math, which provides personalized
or customized help to students
based on their individual
strengths and needs.
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THE REVERE ADVOCATE – WEDnEsDAy, JuLy 3, 2024
EVERETT KIWANIS 38th ANNUAL FRANK E. WOODWARD GOLF
TOURNAMENT!!!
Supporting Scholarships for Everett High School Students
Register online to play and to buy tee box signs at www.everettkiwanisgolf.com
Date: July 26, 2024
Time: 7:00AM Registration – 8:00 AM Shotgun Start
Location: Mount Hood Golf Course – 100 Slayton Rd. Melrose, MA
Fee: $150.00 per golfer – includes 18-hole best ball scramble format, cart, greens fees,
lunch, and prizes
Please buy a tee box sign for $125.00 per hole
Questions: Contact David LaRovere at david@larovere.com or 617-387-2700
Online registration gives option to be invoiced or
pay online
Fireworks Caused More Than 200 Injuries,
$1.5M in Property Damage since 2019
STOW – Every year in Massachusetts,
illegal fireworks cause
fires, explosions, property damage,
and serious injuries. As we
enter the weeks around July 4th
,
when more than 60% of these
incidents occur, State Fire Marshal
Jon M. Davine is reminding
residents and visitors to leave
fireworks to the professionals.
“Fireworks are inherently dangerous,”
said State Fire Marshal
Davine. “Possessing or using
them in Massachusetts requires
licensing and certification. They
are illegal for personal use here
even if purchased legally in another
state. These laws work: the
rate of fireworks injuries in Massachusetts
is about one-fifth the
national average.”
Over the past five years, fireworks
have caused 532 fires and
explosions, about $1.5 million
in property damage, and more
than 200 serious injuries that required
treatment in a hospital
emergency department. The following
incidents were reported
last year alone:
• On May 21, 2023, a Kingston
man who was allegedly manufacturing
destructive devices for
use as homemade fireworks suffered
life-altering injuries to his
hands, chest, and face. He was
MedFlighted to Brigham and
Women’s Hospital. Additional
devices found at the scene were
secured and rendered safe by
the State Police Bomb Squad.
• On July 3, 2023, commercial-grade
fireworks caused a
fire on the second-floor porch
of a multi-family home in Chelsea.
State Police fire investigators
assigned to the State Fire
Marshal’s office and Chelsea officials
determined that commercial-grade
aerial fireworks being
discharged in front of a nearby
masonry business struck the rear
porch and ignited combustible
materials. Additional fireworks
were found nearby and seized.
• On July 4, 2023, a West Yarmouth
man was badly injured
after attempting to discharge
illegal fireworks. He was transported
first to Cape Cod Hospital
and then to Brigham and Women’s
Hospital with severe injuries
to his right hand and thigh.
• On July 5, 2023, a teenage
boy lost part of his hand and a
teenage girl suffered burn inFIREWORKS
| SEE Page 15
License Commission
issues 1-day licenses
for summer events
By Barbara Taormina
A
t their last meeting, the Licensing
Commission approved
applications for events
for residents looking for ways to
enjoy the summer locally.
The Neighborhood Developers
received 1-day entertainment
license for the Shirley
Ave. Cultural Festival scheduled
for Sept. 14 from 1 p.m. to 4
p.m. This is an established annual
event that allows Shirley Ave
neighbors to gather at Sandler
Square and share food, music
and other aspects of their different
cultures.
The American Legion reFor
Advertising with Results,
call The Advocate Newspapers
at 781-286-8500
or Info@advocatenews.net
ceived beer, wine, and food licenses
for evening concert
events at Veterans Memorial
Park. On the following Sundays,
July 7, July 14, July 21, July 28,
August 4 and August 11, the Legion
will host a beer and wine
garden with hot dogs, hamburgers,
sausages and chips to
accompany the city's Sunday
night concerts.
The Commission granted the
Revere Beach Partnership a special
1-day license for all Alcohol
to be served at a special VIP party
on July 20, from 6 to 10 p.m.
for donors and sponsors of the
International Sand Sculpting
Festival. The event will be held
in a roped off tent with security
and police details.
The Revere Beach Partnership
also received three 1-day licenses
for July 19, 20, and 21 to serve
beer and wine from noon to 8
p.m. as part of the Sand Sculpting
festival.
Diana Cardona was granted
a 1-day virtually and entertainment
license for an event celebrating
Colombian Independence
Day, on July 18, 5 -7 p.m.
at McMakin Memorial Park. Cardona
said she expected a crowd
of about 120 people.
Have a Safe, Happy
4th
of July: Leave
Fireworks to the
Professionals
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viding equitable municipal
resources and services, Mayor
Keefe also emphasized his
goals of benefitting neighborhoods
and fostering local
economic development.
“The approval of this budget
affirms some of the key initiatives
that this administration
has prioritized: developing a
culture based on results, and
achieving a common goal. I’m
proud of all the teamwork that
went into it, including the City
Councillors who made every
consideration to ensure that
the right decisions were being
made for our taxpayers,”
stated Mayor Keefe. “We want
to do what’s right by our residents,
our businesses, and our
neighborhoods. I feel confidently
that this budget reflects
that effort.”
CFO Rich Viscay added, “I
want to thank all of the departments
who collaborated
on this budget. I also want to
thank the City Council for their
vote, and to my team for their
hard work in preparing this
budget.”
FY25 Budget Highlights
THE REVERE ADVOCATE – WEDnEsDAy, JuLy 3, 2024
• Investments in Public Education:
Nearly 44% of the FY25
budget is dedicated to RPS.
The City Council appropriated
$126,284,616 for RPS in FY25,
$102,000,000 of which is Chapter
70 funding provided by the
Commonwealth, as the City
works toward full funding of
the Student Opportunity Act
by FY2027. RPS continues to
work toward district goals of
purchasing new instructional
tools, upgrading technology
and facilities and providing
appropriate supplemental services
for all students.
• Investments in Public SafePage
13
ty: The FY25 budget increases
uniformed police officers
from 115 to 117, and firefighters
from 119 to 121.
• Reorganization and Increased
Efficiency: Strategic
planning is at the forefront of
this administration’s mission,
with the aim of consolidating
and centralizing city services
to benefit residents and personnel
alike. Mayor Keefe initiated
a major departmental
reorganization to ensure ease
of access to resources for residents
and emphasized his
mission to protect the tax dollar.
Some of the consolidation
includes common-sense solutions,
such as incorporating
Consumer Affairs into Constituent
Services (311) and consolidating
DEI, the Community
School and Talent and Culture
under the umbrella of
Human Resources. In addition,
the DPW, Water and Sewer
Enterprise, and Engineering
Departments were reorganized
to increase productivity,
and the Parks and Recreation
department was reenvisioned
to accommodate
their expanded offerings, including
the Haas Health and
Wellness Center.
FOR SALE - MIXED-USE COMMERCIAL/RESIDENTIAL
225-229 Highland Ave., Malden
MIXED-USE
Two Commercial Convenience Stores
AND
Three Apartments - Two, 2-Bedoroom
& One, 1-Bedroom
Yearly Rental Income: $166,200
Call (781) 520-1091
Revere
SUMMER
LUNCH MENU
June/July
2024
Please visit us on
Facebook at
RPSDiningservices
or https://x.com/rpsdining
for more information and
updates!
Revere Summer Lunch
Program free meals for
children upto 18 years
old, at the following
sites:
* American Legion Lawn12-1
(Monday-Thursday starting July 8)
*Hill School 11-1
*Paul Revere School 11-1
Monday-Thursday
*Revere Beach Bandstand 11-1
*Sonny Meyers Park 11:30-1
*RHA Rose St 11:30-1
*RHA Adams Ct 11;30-1
*Ciarlone Park 11:30-1
*Louis Pasteur Park 11:30-1
*Costa Park 11-1
*DeStoop Park 12-1
  
    
6/24
Jumbo Chicken Bites
Choice of Veggie/ Fruit
Whole Grain Snack
Ice Cold Milk
6/25
Juicy Cheeseburger
Choice of Veggie/ Fruit
Whole Grain Snack
Ice Cold Milk
6/26
Ball Park Frank
Choice of Veggie/ Fruit
Whole Grain Snack
Ice Cold Milk
6/27
Crispy Chicken Sandwich
Choice of Veggie/ Fruit
Whole Grain Snack
Ice Cold Milk
6/28
Fun Pack Friday
7/1
7/2
Jumbo Chicken Bites
Choice of Veggie/ Fruit
Whole Grain Snack
Ice Cold Milk
Nachos & Cheese
3 Bean Salad
Choice of Veggie/ Fruit
Whole Grain Snack
Ice Cold Milk
7/8
Jumbo Chicken Bites
Choice of Veggie/
Fruit
Whole Grain Snack
Ice Cold Milk
7/9
Nachos & Cheese
3 Bean Salad
Choice of Veggie/ Fruit
Whole Grain Snack
Ice Cold Milk
7/15
Jumbo Chicken Bites
Choice of Veggie/ Fruit
Whole Grain Snack
Ice Cold Milk
7/16
Nachos & Cheese
Choice of Veggie/ Fruit
Whole Grain Snack
Ice Cold Milk
Jumbo Chicken Bites
Choice of Veggie or
Fruit
Ice Cold Milk
7/3
Pizza Crunchers
Choice of Veggie/ Fruit
Whole Grain Snack
Ice Cold Milk
7/4
NO MEALS SERVED
Happy 4th of July!
7/5
NO MEALS SERVED
7/11
7/12
7/10
Ball Park Frank
Choice of Veggie/ Fruit
Whole Grain Snack
Ice Cold Milk
Pizza Crunchers
C Choice of Veggie/ Fruit
Whole Grain Snack
Ice Cold Milk
Fun Pack Friday
7/17
7/18
Ball Park Frank
Choice of Veggie/ Fruit
Whole Grain Snack
Ice Cold Milk
Pizza Crunchers
Choice of Veggie/ Fruit
Whole Grain Snack
Ice Cold Milk
7/22
Jumbo Chicken Bites
Choice of Veggie/ Fruit
Whole Grain Snack
Ice Cold Milk
7/23
Nachos & Cheese
3 Bean Salad
Choice of Veggie/ Fruit
Whole Grain Snack
Ice Cold Milk
7/24
7/25
Ball Park Frank
Choice of Veggie/ Fruit
Whole Grain Snack
Ice Cold Milk
Pizza Crunchers
Choice of Veggie/ Fruit
Whole Grain Snack
Ice Cold Milk
Fun Pack Friday
7/19
7/26
Fun Pack Friday
All meals come complete with fruit, veggies and milk.
              
         
      
                   
                
      
For Advertising with Results, call The Advocate Newspapers
at 781-286-8500 or Info@advocatenews.net
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	` )׉	 7cassandra://sJ_cy-e_vAraP3OykKvB1iSVtI_T1VdskzD_Rm6tU8k͜S`J׉	 7cassandra://4keBkswv3iUpwRYa0nxh3FwhtK67bPnaubq0NyoL5gA($`̰ fO2F2:ηט ( (u׉׉	 7cassandra://vRxxBP1970CGegRcIioG4AnHkymFAKCuysgOYORerHo 	`)׉	 7cassandra://_D9WDAc18sOg2xKhQisM-37GmmtxGbjSoZeR47hjKlI͞`J׉	 7cassandra://6xzsRFiDfSaWBbqhG6Dphp63YJg3cjjQtSwtxSKPv-g+ `̰ fO2F2:θנfO2F2: ̇9ׁHhttp://SavvySenior.orgׁׁЈנfO2F2: 	b9ׁHhttp://CareLinx.comׁׁЈנfO2F2:ο 	OB9ׁHhttp://Care.comׁׁЈנfO2F2:ξ 	1ne9ׁHhttp://nySource.comׁׁЈנfO2F2:ν C9ׁHhttp://Medicare.gov/careׁׁЈנfO2F2:μ X9ׁHhttp://www.mass.gov/infoׁׁЈ׉E,Page 14
THE REVERE ADVOCATE – WEDnEsDAy, JuLy 3, 2024
By Bob Katzen
If you have any questions about this week’s report, e-mail us
at bob@beaconhillrollcall.com or call us at (617) 720-1562
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aPTLucKs
THE HOUSE AND SENATE: Beacon
Hill Roll Call records local representatives’
and senators’ votes on roll
calls from the week of June 24-28.
$540 MILLON FISCAL 2024 SUPPLEMENTAL
BUDGET (H 4790)
House 153-1, approved and sent
to the Senate a $540 million fiscal
2024 supplemental budget to close
out the books for fiscal year 2024.
Provisions include millions of dol-
LEGAL NOTICE -
COMMONWEALTH OF MASSACHUSETTS
THE TRIAL COURT
PROBATE AND FAMILY COURT
Suffolk Probate and Family Court
24 New Chardon Street
Boston, MA 02114
(617) 788-8300
Docket No. SU22P1091EA
Estate of: JOSEPH R LUNETTA
Date of Death: 03/19/2024
CITATION ON PETITION FOR
FORMAL ADJUDICATION
To all interested persons:
A petition for Formal Adjudication of Intestacy and
Appointment of Personal Representative has been filed by:
Marcia Rossi of Boston, MA requesting that the Court enter a
formal Decree and Order and for such other relief as requested
in the Petition.
The Petitioner requests that:
Marcia Rossi of Boston, MA be appointed as Personal
Representative(s) of said estate to serve Without Surety on the
bond in unsupervised administration.
IMPORTANT NOTICE
You have the right to obtain a copy of the Petition from
the Petitioner or at the Court. You have a right to object
to this proceeding. To do so, you or your attorney must file
a written appearance and objection at this Court before:
10:00 a.m. on the return day of 07/15/2024.
This is NOT a hearing date, but a deadline by which you must
file a written appearance and objection if you object to this
proceeding. If you fail to file a timely written appearance and
objection followed by an affidavit of objections within thirty
(30) days of the return day, action may be taken without further
notice to you.
UNSUPERVISED ADMINISTRATION UNDER THE
MASSACHUSETTS UNIFORM PROBATE CODE (MUPC)
A Personal Representative appointed under the MUPC in
an unsupervised administration is not required to file an
inventory or annual accounts with the Court. Persons interested
in the estate are entitled to notice regarding the administration
directly from the Personal Representative and may petition
the Court in any matter relating to the estate, including the
distribution of assets and expenses of administration.
WITNESS, Hon. Brian J. Dunn, First Justice of this Court.
Date: June 03, 2024
STEPHANIE L. EVERETT, ESQ.
REGISTER OF PROBATE
July 03, 2024
lars in funding for 18 collective bargaining
agreements; $26.5 million
for cities and towns to prepare for
and celebrate in 2026 the 250th anniversary
of the American Revolution;
$5.5 million for tax abatements
for veterans, widows, blind persons
and the elderly; and $29.6 million
for Income-Eligible Child Care; $2.1
million for Women, Infants and Children
Nutrition Services.
Supporters said the bill funds
necessary and important projects
and programs to help close out the
books on fiscal 2024.
Rep. Marc Lombardo (R-Billerica),
the only member who voted
against the bill, did not respond to
repeated requests by Beacon Hill
Roll Call to comment on why he opposed
the bill.
(A “Yes” vote is for the bill. A “No”
vote is against it.)
Rep. Jessica Giannino
Rep. Jeff Turco
4791)
Yes
Yes
BAN HOME EQUITY THEFT (H
House 154-0, approved and sent
to the Senate a measure that would
prohibit cities and towns that foreclose
on properties on which the
owner owes back property taxes,
from keeping all of the profits when
the city or town sells the property at
auction. Current Massachusetts law
allows this practice. The bill would
allow the city or town to keep only
the amount owed in back taxes and
send the remainder to the owner.
Last year, the United States Supreme
Court ruled that cities and
towns that foreclose on properties
on which the owner owes back
property taxes, cannot keep all of
the profits when the city or town
sells the property at auction. Supreme
Court Chief Justice John
Roberts, writing a unanimous decision
about a similar Minnesota law,
said that “a taxpayer who loses her
$40,000 house to the state to fulfill
a $15,000 tax debt has made a far
greater contribution to the public
fisc than she owed.”
“This legislation provides much
needed consumer protections to
property owners and clarity to municipalities
on tax lien procedures,”
said Rep. Mark Cusack (D-Braintree),
House Chair of the Committee on
Revenue. “Equity will now be returned
to its rightful owner while
making cities and towns whole.”
The bill was based on earlier versions
of the measure sponsored by
Reps. John Mahoney (D-Worcester),
Tram Nguyen (D-Andover) and Jeff
Roy (D-Franklin),
“For far too long, unscrupulous
collectors have taken advantage
of Massachusetts homeowners in
foreclosure,” said Mahoney. “This
legislation rectifies this systematic
problem once and for all. By protecting
the hard-earned equity of
our neighbors, while balancing the
needs of cities and towns, we can
stifle the corruption of bad-faith
lienholders and make the commonwealth
a more prosperous place for
working families.
“The best way for property owners
to keep the equity in their
homes, is for them to keep their
homes,” said Nguyen. “This bill protects
homeowners by providing
better notices in the municipal tax
lien process and presenting opportunities
to cure deficiencies.”
“Today’s vote by the Legislature
makes the tax taking process
more just and erases the patently
unfair and unconstitutional processes
used to rob homeowners of
their home’s equity built over years,”
said Roy. “The bill enhances due process
protections which will ensure
that a homeowner receives adequate
notice and affirms their right
and opportunity to claim that equity.
Moreover, this significant legislative
step provides homeowners
with an equitable process for resolving
tax delinquencies and rectifies
constitutional problems with
the current law.”
(A “Yes” vote is for the bill.)
Rep. Jessica Giannino
Rep. Jeff Turco
Yes
Yes
$3.4 BILLION ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT
PACKAGE (H 4789)
House 155-2, approved and sent
to the Senate a $3.4 billion economic
development package that supporters
said includes an array of investments
and policy initiatives that
aim to bolster support for workers
and businesses, particularly in the
life sciences, clean energy technology
and manufacturing industries,
while retaining a larger focus on
making Massachusetts more affordable
and competitive.
Provisions include $500 million
for the Massachusetts Life Sciences
Center to provide grants and loans
to grow the life sciences industry
in Massachusetts; $400 million for
MassWorks public infrastructure
grants to cities and towns; $150 million
for grants for cities and towns
for library projects; $100 million for
the Rural Development Program
providing financial assistance to
exclusively rural areas; $100 million
for the Seaport Economic Council
Grant program for municipalities
for the construction and repair of
coastal assets; and $100 million for
Applied AI Hub Capital grant program
to support the adoption and
application of AI technology in the
state’s tech sectors.
The bill includes several tax credits
including a $30 million annual
tax credit for a program to expand
the Climatetech industry; $7 million
annual tax credit to support
pre-Broadway, pre-off Broadway,
national tour launches and regional
professional theater productions;
$5 million per year, to support the
production of video games; and a
$10 million tax credit for employers,
consisting of $100,000 per employee
that employ for 12 weeks a
recent graduate of a public or private
institution of higher education
in Massachusetts.
“Through billions of dollars in critical
investments and tax credits, the
House’s economic development bill
provides support for companies at
the forefront of innovation in the
clean energy and the life sciences
sectors, among other burgeoning
industries,” said House Speaker
Ron Mariano (D-Quincy). “Ultimately,
this legislation will help to ensure
that the commonwealth remains a
hub for those industries of the future,
while also enhancing support
for workers across Massachusetts.”
“This well-rounded economic development
package makes significant,
targeted investments into major
sectors of the commonwealth’s
economy,” said Rep. Aaron Michlewitz
(D-Boston), Chair of the House
Committee on Ways and Means. “By
renewing our commitment to the
life sciences industry, and by making
significant new investments
into ClimateTech, we will be elevating
the commonwealth’s economy
to be able to compete and thrive for
years to come.”
“This legislation promotes economic
growth across all regions
of the state and makes several targeted
investments in key sectors
like life sciences and climatetech,”
said Rep. Jerry Parisella (D-Beverly),
House chair of the Committee
on Economic Development and
Emerging Technologies. “Highlights
of this session’s bill include $700
million in meaningful tax credits,
new permitting reforms, workforce
training and consumer protections
around ticket sales, electric vehicle
charging and home improvement
contractors. This is an exciting time
in Massachusetts history and I’m
proud of the work done to keep us
not only competitive, but a leader
in vital industries.”
Reps. Marc Lombardo (R-Billerica)
and Nicholas Boldyga (R- Southwick),
the only two members to
vote against the bill, did not respond
to repeated requests by Beacon
Hill Roll Call to comment on the
bill and why they opposed it.
(A “Yes” vote is for the bill. A “No”
vote is against it.)
Rep. Jessica Giannino
Rep. Jeff Turco
Yes
Yes
CLEAN ENERGY (S 2829)
Senate 38-2, approved and sent
to the House climate legislation
that supporters say will make systemic
changes to the state’s clean
energy infrastructure that will help
the state achieve its net zero emissions
by 2050 goals. They say it will
also expand electric vehicle use and
infrastructure and protect residents
and ratepayers.
The bill would ban competitive
energy suppliers from enrolling
new individual residential customers
– a move that supporters say will
save residents’ money and protect
residents from unfair and deceptive
practices.
Other provisions would lower
utility rates for consumers with
low- and middle-incomes by directing
utility providers to offer
lower rates to eligible consumers;
consolidate the review of clean energy
siting and permitting and expedite
the timeline of projects; extend
through 2027 the state’s MOREV
program which gives residents
$3,500-$6,000 for the purchase of
BEACON | SEE Page 16
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Page 15
OBITUARIES
Salvatore R.
Giarrantani
so). Loving father of Robert Giarratani
and his wife Susan of
Winthrop, Cheryl Giarratani of
Revere and Nicholas Giarratani
and his wife Sumiko of Japan.
Dear brother of Nina Whipple
of NH, Michelangelo Giarratani
and his wife Mary of FL, Paulina
Swift of Wakefield and the
late Phyllis Gorman and Nicholas
Giarratani. Cherished grandfather
of Samantha, Robert Alexander,
Vanessa and Victoria. Also
survived by his granddogs, Levi
and Gustavo.
Family and friends were invitO
f
Revere, formerly of Somerville.
Passed away on June
27, 2024. Devoted husband
of the late Sylvia (SantosuosFIREWORKS
| FROM Page 12
juries after igniting illegal fireworks
in Hyde Park. Both were
transported to the hospital for
their injuries.
• On July 7, 2023, a residential
structure fire in Danvers
displaced four residents. State
Police and Danvers fire investigators
determined that it was
caused by the unsafe use of
sparklers in the home’s basement
during an Independence
Day party. This was the second
year in a row in which sparklers
caused a fire that displaced all
residents from a home: in 2022,
a similar fire in Dracut went to
three alarms.
Massachusetts law requires
police to seize any illegal fireworks
they encounter in the
course of their duties. People
ed to attend the Visitation and
Funeral from the Ernest P. Caggiano
and Son Funeral Home
in Winthrop, on Monday, July 1.
Services concluded with the Interment
in the Holy Cross Cemetery,
Malden.
who use or possess them illegally
are also subject to a fine,
while the illegal sale of fireworks
is an arrestable offense
that carries potential jail time.
“We want everyone to have
a safe, happy Fourth of July,”
State Fire Marshal Davine said.
“Please don’t risk a fire, injury,
or a day in court. There are
dozens of permitted municipal
shows across Massachusetts
this season, so leave fireworks
to the professionals.”
The Department of Fire Services
posts a list of permitted
fireworks displays and updates
it each week through the
summer. To view the list – and
to learn more about the dangers
of illegal fireworks – visit
the DFS website at https://
www.mass.gov/info-details/
leave-fireworks-to-the-professionals
~
School Bus Drivers Wanted ~
7D Licensed School Bus Drivers
Malden Trans is looking for reliable drivers for
the new school year. We provide ongoing training
and support for licensing requirements. Applicant
preferably lives local (Malden, Everett, Revere).
Part-time positions available and based on AM &
PM school hours....15-30 hours per week. Good
driver history from Registry a MUST! If interested,
please call David @ 781-322-9401.
CDL SCHOOL BUS DRIVER WANTED
Compensation: $28/hour
School bus transportation company seeking
active CDL drivers who live LOCALLY (Malden,
Everett, Chelsea and immediate surrounding
communities).
- Applicant MUST have BOTH S and P endorsements
as well as Massachusetts school bus certificate.
Good driver history from Registry a MUST!
-
Part-time hours, BUT GUARANTEED 20-35
HOURS PER WEEK depending on experience.
Contact David @ 781-322-9401.
Savvy Senior
How to Hire a Caregiver for In-Home Help
Searching Sarah
Dear Sarah,
Finding a good in-home caregiver
for an elderly parent is not
always easy. How can you find
one that’s reliable and trustworthy,
as well as someone your
parent likes and is comfortable
with? Here are some tips that
can help.
Know His Needs
Before you start the task of
looking for an in-home caregiver,
your first step is to determine
the level of care your dad needs.
For example, if he only needs
help with daily living tasks
like shopping, cooking, doing
laundry, bathing or dressing, a
“homemaker” or “personal care
aide” will do. But if he needs
health care services, there are
“home health aides” that may
do all the things a homemaker
does, plus they also have training
in administering medications,
changing wound dressings
and other medically related
duties. Home health aides
often work under a nurse’s supervision.
Once
you settle on a level
of care, you then need to decide
how many hours of assistance
he’ll need. For example,
does your dad need someone
to come in just a few mornings
a week to cook, clean, run errands
or perhaps help him with
a bath? Or does he need more
continuous care that requires
daily visits?
After you determine his
needs, there are two ways in
which you can go about hiring
someone. Either through an
agency, or you can hire someone
directly on your own.
Hiring Through an Agency
Hiring a personal care or
home health aide through an
agency is the safest and easiest
option, but it’s more expensive.
Costs typically run anywhere
between $15 and $30
an hour depending on where
you live and the qualification
of the aide.
How it works is you pay the
agency, and they handle everything
including an assessment
of your mom’s needs, assigning
appropriately trained and prescreened
staff to care for her,
and finding a fill-in on days her
aide cannot come.
Some of the drawbacks, however,
are that you may not have
much input into the selection
of the caregiver, and the caregivers
may change or alternate,
which can cause a disruption.
To find a home care agency in
your dad’s area use search engines
like Google or Bing and
type in “home health care” or
“non-medical home care” followed
by the city and state
your dad lives in. You can also
use Medicare’s search tool at
Medicare.gov/care-compare –
click on “home health services.”
Most home health agencies offer
some form of non-medical
home care services too.
You also need to know that
original Medicare does not
cover in-home caregiving services
unless your dad is receiving
doctor ordered skilled nursing
or therapy services at home
too. But, if your dad is in a certain
Medicare Advantage plan,
or is low-income and qualifies
for Medicaid, he may be eligible
for some coverage.
Hiring Directly
Hiring an independent caregiver
on your own is the other
option, and it’s less expensive.
Costs typically range between
$12 and $25 per hour. Hiring directly
also gives you more control
over who you hire so you
can choose someone who you
feel is right for your dad.
But be aware that if you do
hire someone on your own,
you become the employer so
there’s no agency support to
fall back on if a problem occurs
or if the aide doesn’t show up.
You’re also responsible for paying
payroll taxes and any worker-related
injuries that may
happen. If you choose this option,
make sure you check the
aide’s references thoroughly
and do a criminal background
check at companies like eNannySource.com.
To
find someone use an elder-care
matching service
like Care.com or CareLinx.com,
which both provide basic background
checks.
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.
Dear Savvy Senior,
I need to hire a good in-home caregiver to help my elderly father who lives alone.
What’s the best way to do this?
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THE REVERE ADVOCATE – WEDnEsDAy, JuLy 3, 2024
BEACON | FROM Page 14
new or used electric vehicles; allow
residents who own parcels within
condominiums, homeowner associations
and historic districts to install
EV chargers; make it easier to
decarbonize buildings across the
state; modernize the ‘bottle bill’ by
adding noncarbonated beverages,
wine and spirits to the list of containers
eligible for a bottle deposit and
increasing the deposit amount from
5 cents to 10 cents; and rein in a statutory
provision that for decades has
given gas companies a preferential
ratemaking advantage over providers
of other heating sources.
“Today’s vote isn’t just a step toward
reaching our net-zero emissions
mandate,” said Senate Majority
Leader Cynthia Creem (D-Newton),
Chair of the Senate Committee
on Global Warming and Climate
Change. “It’s a leap toward a greener,
cleaner future. The gas system
reforms in the Senate climate bill
make Massachusetts the national
leader in the transition from gas
to clean forms of heating, and they
also protect residents’ wallets.”
“We are in a climate crisis,” said
Senate President Karen Spilka (DAshland).
“The Senate has heard
loud and clear from residents, advocates
and clean energy leaders
that we need systemic infrastructure
changes to deliver on our net
zero by 2050 emissions goals. Today
we are taking action to make it easier
and more efficient to build clean
energy infrastructure so that Massachusetts
can deliver on our climate
commitments and leave our
kids with the green state and planet
that they deserve.”
“Mass Audubon is proud that our
legislative climate and energy leaders
and the Healey Administration
have delivered an omnibus climate
bill which reflects so many of the
recommendations of the Commission
on Clean Energy Infrastructure
Siting and Permitting,” said Michelle
Manion, Vice President of Policy and
Advocacy at Mass Audubon. “[The
bill] accelerates clean energy while
also recognizing the importance of
nature – our forests, wetlands and
farms – in the climate fight, and
that our towns and cities are essential
partners in delivering on the solution
set. This bill is the commonwealth’s
next best step in addressing
the climate crisis.”
“The Massachusetts Senate has
approached this legislation like Don
Quixote, mistaking natural gas as an
enemy worth eliminating when instead
it should be considered a useful
ally,” said Sen. Ryan Fattman (RSutton)
who voted against the bill.
“This legislation not only severely
undercuts the use of natural gas, it
fails to address the cost of electricity
in the commonwealth which is
currently ranked as the fourth highest
in the nation. If you love paying
higher costs for electricity year after
year, you’ll love this Senate legislation.”
Fattman
continued, “While more
than half of Massachusetts households
rely on natural gas for heating
their homes and cooking their
food, this legislation all but eliminates
that possibility without providing
a clear path on making other
energy sources achievable, accessible
and affordable. We are not
prepared to implement these vast
changes to our energy sector and
a lack of preparation will, no doubt,
lead to chaos down the road.”
Sen. Peter Durant (R-Spencer)
the only other senator who voted
against the bill, did not respond to
repeated requests by Beacon Hill
Roll Call asking him to comment on
the bill and his vote.
(A “Yes” vote is for the bill. A “No”
vote is against it.)
Sen. Lydia Edwards
Yes
$1 BILLION CLEAN ENERGY AND
CLIMATE ACTION FUND (S 2829)
Senate 1-38, rejected an amendment
that would create a $1 billion
Clean Energy and Climate Action
Fund to be administered by the
Massachusetts Clean Energy Technology
Center, which would distribute
funds to efficient retrofits
and upgrades that fit into the state’s
commitment to reducing emissions
from the built environment.
“I am extremely disappointed
that this amendment was rejected
as part of this bill,” said amendment
sponsor Sen. Mark Pacheco
(D-Taunton). “The transition to clean
energy will require a significant investment,
and this investment is
currently one of the biggest barriers
to the transition to clean energy.
The cost of this fund pales in comparison
to the costs the Commonwealth
will incur if the transition to
clean energy is not expedited.”
Amendment opponents said
the $1 billion would come from the
Rainy Day Fund which, because of
lower tax revenue, has not been
as flush with money as the Senate
thought it would be.
Sen. Mike Barrett (D-Lexington), a
lead sponsor of the bill, did not respond
to repeated requests by Beacon
Hill Roll Call to comment on his
opposition to this amendment.
(A “Yes” vote is for the amendment.
A “No” vote is against it.)
Sen. Lydia Edwards
No
HOUSING (S 2834)
Senate 40-0, approved a housing
bill that would authorize $5.4 billion
in borrowing to spur housing production
in the Bay State. Supporters
said the package makes crucial policy
changes with the goal of building
new housing, accelerating the
rehabilitation of existing housing,
reducing barriers to development
and promoting affordable housing.
The House has already approved
a different version of the package
and a House-Senate conference
committee will likely attempt to
hammer out a compromise version.
Provisions include $2.2 billion for
repairs, rehabilitation and renovation
of public housing; $425 million
for the Housing Stabilization and Investment
Trust Fund which works
with cities and towns, non-profits
and developers to support housing
preservation, new construction,and
rehabilitation projects to create affordable
rental units; $800 million
for the Affordable Housing Trust
Fund to create and preserve housing
for households with an income
at or below 110 per cent of the area’s
median income; $275 million
for innovative, sustainable and
green housing initiatives; $200 million
for the CommonWealth Builder
program to further the production
of housing in gateway cities for
first-time homebuyers; and creates
a process for tenants to seal their
eviction records in cases of no-fault
evictions.
“The … bill is more than a legislative
measure -- it is a bold commitment
to the principles of production,
preservation and protection of
housing across the commonwealth,”
said Sen. Lydia Edwards (D-Boston),
Chair of the Senate Committee on
Housing. “With a $5.4 billion investment,
we are building new homes,
preserving existing ones and ensuring
that all residents, especially the
most vulnerable, have access to safe
and affordable housing.”
“An affordable, equitable, and
competitive commonwealth is one
in which a renter can find an apartment
within their budget, a family
can afford a down payment on
their first home, and residents aren’t
priced out of communities where
they want to live,” said Senate President
Karen Spilka (D-Ashland). “Today
the Senate took concrete action
to make that vision a reality, a
first step in rectifying decades of underinvestment
that has led to our
housing crisis.”
“I’m thrilled that the Senate, in
partnership with the House and the
Healey-Driscoll administration, has
addressed the very real housing crisis
we face today, the greatest impediment
to making it in Massachusetts,”
said Sen. Mike Rodrigues (DWestport),
Chair of the Senate Committee
on Ways and Means. “This crisis
takes many forms, including the
lack of available housing, the lack of
affordable housing, housing access
and the waitlist for seniors and lower
income families. This comprehensive
bond bill addresses those barriers—and
more—by dedicating
$5.4 billion in a multi-year package
to tackle this crisis head on. The passage
of this legislation today now
puts our ambitious plans in motion.”
Although no senators voted
against the bill, some tenant advocates
criticized the package, noting
that while both the House and
Senate versions would take meaningful
steps towards expanding affordable
housing options, neither
version does anything for people
who are currently struggling to stay
in their homes.
“Even if all the housing envisioned
in the bond bill is ultimately built, it
would still be a drop in the bucket
compared to the scale of the
housing crisis that is forcing working
people out on the street today,”
said Carolyn Chou, executive director
of Homes for All Mass. “Without
immediate relief, tens of thousands
of Massachusetts residents will be
forced out of their homes by rising
rents in the coming years, and we’ll
continue to lose the working people
who power our economy as
they fall victim to predatory real estate
speculators.”
(A “Yes” vote is for the bill.)
Sen. Lydia Edwards
Yes
APPEAL MBTA COMMUNITIES
ACT (S 2834)
Senate 6-34, rejected an amendment
that would require the Department
of Housing and Community
Development to develop and
promulgate regulations allowing
a city or town affected by the zoning
provisions of the MBTA Communities
Act to appeal for relief
from those provisions. Any appeal
would have to be based on at least
one of the following criteria: the
community’s inability to meet the
drinking water supply or wastewater
requirements necessary to support
the housing units authorized
by the law’s zoning provisions; the
inability of municipal transportation
infrastructure to safely accommodate
the increased population
attributable to this housing development;
any adverse environmental
impacts attributable to the development
of housing units under this
act; and any adverse impacts on historic
properties.
Amendment supporters said the
amendment would offer a reasonable
appeal process to assist cities
and towns impacted by the MBTA
Communities Act.
Sen. Bruce Tarr (R-Gloucester), the
sponsor of the amendment, did not
respond to repeated requests by
Beacon Hill Roll Call to comment on
his amendment.
Sen. Mike Rodrigues (D-Westport)
said that this amendment is similar
to budget amendments that were
discussed robustly and noted the
Senate was firm in its opinion that
it did not want to change course on
the MBTA Communities Act.
(A “Yes” vote is for the amendment
allowing an appeal. A “No” vote is
against the amendment.)
Sen. Lydia Edwards
No
HOME INSPECTIONS (S 2834)
Senate 39-0, approved an amendment
that requires the Executive Office
of Housing and Livable Communities
to implement regulations
that secure a homebuyer’s right to
have an inspection done on a property
before finalizing the purchase
of the home. The regulation bans
the conditioning of a sale on waiving
or limiting the buyer’s right to
inspect the home.
“Buying a home is one of the biggest
purchases many families will
ever make,” said amendment sponsor
Sen. Mike Moore (D-Millbury).
“Shouldn’t you have the right to
know exactly what you’re purchasing
before you sign a binding contract?
This amendment will curb the
practice of making offers that waive
the right to a home inspection,
something that’s become increasingly
common in this ultra-competitive
real estate market.
Moore continued, ”Buyers must
not feel obligated to waive inspections,
risking their most important
investment, in order to find their
forever home. In a commonwealth
where we have long taken a strong
approach to consumer protections,
this is an obvious step to protect
families from financial ruin due to
costly undisclosed repairs.”
(A “Yes” vote is for the amendment.)
Sen.
Lydia Edwards
Yes
ALSO UP ON BEACON HILL
REQUIRE SPRINKLER SYSTEMS
(H 2289) – The House approved
and sent to the Senate legislation
that would allow cities and towns
to require the installation of an automatic
sprinkler system in every
newly-constructed 1- or 2-family
home.
Sponsor Rep. Ruth Balser (DNewton)
said that today’s new
homes burn hotter and faster than
those of the past because of modern
construction techniques and
synthetic furnishings. She noted
that as a result, residents have only
one to three minutes to flee the average
home without sprinklers.
“Automatic sprinklers work fast
and give people more time to escape,”
said Balser. “According to the
Massachusetts Fire Sprinkler Coalition,
having both sprinklers and
smoke alarms reduces the risk of
dying in a home fire by 80 percent.
Additionally, automatic sprinklers
put out 90 percent of home fires
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Page 17
Copyrighted material previously published in Banker & Tradesman/The Commercial Record, a weekly trade newspaper. It is reprinted with permission
from the publisher, The Warren Group. For a searchable database of real estate transactions and property information visit: www.thewarrengroup.com
BUYER1
Hourani, Cannan
Lako, Gentian
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before the fire department arrives,
which reduces firefighters’ exposure
to the toxic products of combustion
that cause cancer.”
SEXUAL ASSAULT BY FRAUD (H
4350) - The House approved and
sent to the Senate a proposal that
would make it a crime for a doctor
or other medical professional to
commit sexual contact with a patient
even when the doctor claims
the contact is necessary for a legitimate
medical purpose.
Under current law, sexual contact
by medical professionals represented
to the patient as necessary
for a legitimate medical purpose
cannot be prosecuted, as the
patient may be viewed as consenting
to it, either explicitly or implicitly.
Two courts have ruled that if
a person consents to sexual intercourse,
even under false pretenses,
it is still consent.
“I am pleased to see [the bill]
once again be passed by the Massachusetts
House,” said the bill’s
sponsor Rep. Kate Hogan (D-Stow).
“The bill establishes protections for
vulnerable patients and criminalizes
medical or healthcare professionals
who knowingly and falsely
claim sexual contact for a medical
purpose. This legislation provides
necessary updates to Massachusetts’
sexual assault laws.”
REQUIRE SUICIDE PREVENTION
HOTLINE INFO ON STUDENT IDS (H
1999) – The House approved and
sent to the Senate legislation that
would require all public schools
with grades 6 to 12, and all public
and private colleges to include on
their student identification cards
the telephone and text number for
the 988 Suicide and Crisis Lifeline.
The bill includes a provision that
allows any schools and colleges
which have a supply of old ID cards
without the 988 line to continue to
distribute those IDS until the supply
is gone.
Supporters said that while suicide
is a leading cause of death
for people of all ages in the United
States, young people are particularly
at risk. They noted that according
to a study published by the
National Center for Health Statistics
at the end of last year, suicide
was the second leading cause of
death for Americans aged 15-24,
representing a 56 percent increase
from the previous decade. They argued
that there are significant disparities
in these numbers, with LGBTQ+
youth being at greater risk
and Black youth seeing a 73 percent
increase in youth suicide rates
in that same time period.
“Suicides were the second leadREAL
ESTATE TRANSACTIONS
SELLER1
BUYER2
Lako, Elvana
Pano, Anastas
Saliaj Ft
Dineen, Judith
ing cause of death among children
in Massachusetts in 2020, which
is an alarming statistic,” said cosponsor
Rep. Jack Lewis (D-Framingham).
“We must ensure that every
student has the information at
their fingertips to get the support
and resources they need. Seeking
help is hard even for the most selfaware
adults. Providing the avenues
to support is essential to promoting
positive and sustainable
public health practices.
“This is a simple proposal that
can have critical impact, ensuring
our students are equipped with the
988 Behavioral Help Line on their
student IDs, if they, or their friends,
need to connect with resources to
support and trusted mental health
resources,” said co-sponsor Rep.
Natalie Higgins (D-Leominster).
DELIVERING CARS TO DEALERSHIPS
(H 3472) – The House gave
initial approval to a bill that would
prohibit any car carriers delivering
cars to a dealership from parking on
a public street or highway. A car carrier
operator who violates this law
would be subject to a $250 fine and
potential license suspension. The
carrier company is also subject to
forfeiting its carrying permit.
Supporters said that regular drivers
are often forced to take evasive
action, on short notice, to avoid
a collision with the haphazardly
parked car carrier and the vehicles
being offloaded and driven perpendicular
to traffic to their dealership
destinations.
“Like many Peabody residents
who drive on Route 114, I experience
first-hand the risky and dangerous
practice of car carriers unloading
their vehicles in the center
lane and driving across several
lanes of oncoming traffic to reach
the dealerships,” said Rep. Tom
Walsh (D-Peabody). “To protect
roadway user safety, we filed this
common-sense legislation to explicitly
outlaw this practice and provide
our police the tools they need
to enforce the law accordingly.”
QUOTABLE QUOTES
“Ensuring every veteran receives
the proper status and respect they
deserve is a top priority of the Executive
Office of Veterans Services.
The injustices faced by LGBTQ+ service
members are a stain on our history
that we are committed to erasing.
Massachusetts is leading the
way when it comes to supporting
our veterans and this initiative is a
crucial step to healing past wounds
and fostering a more inclusive military
community.”
---Secretary Jon Santiago of the
Massachusetts Executive Office of
Veterans Services, applauding President
Joe Biden’s decision to pardon
thousands of former U.S. service
members convicted under
the now-repealed Article 125 of
the Uniform Code of Military Justice,
which criminalized consensual
gay sex. This law, in effect since
1951, was revised in 2013 to prohibit
only forcible acts.
“When someone is struggling
with feelings of despair, a caring
and compassionate presence on
the other end of the 988 Lifeline can
be lifesaving. Suicide prevention is
a critical public health responsibility
and the 988 Lifeline is a resource
that offers emotional support at
some of the most vulnerable moments
in a person’s life.”
---State Public Health Commissioner
Robbie Goldstein on the
Department of Public Health’s announced
that $8.3 million in state
and federal grant funding will be
awarded to five community organizations
to support the continuation
of services for the 988 Suicide
and Crisis Lifeline Network.
“Fireworks are inherently dangerous.
Possessing or using them
in Massachusetts requires licensing
and certification. They are illegal
for personal use here even if
purchased legally in another state.
These laws work: the rate of fireworks
injuries in Massachusetts is
about one-fifth the national average.”
---
State Fire Marshal Davine on
the upcoming 4th of July celebrations.
HOW
LONG WAS LAST WEEK’S
SESSION?
Beacon Hill Roll Call tracks the
length of time that the House and
Senate were in session each week.
Many legislators say that legislative
sessions are only one aspect of
the Legislature’s job and that a lot
of important work is done outside
of the House and Sena er matters
that are important to their districts.
Critics say that the Legislature does
not meet regularly or long enough
to debate and vote in public view
on the thousands of pieces of legislation
that have been filed. They
note that the infrequency and brief
length of sessions are misguided
and lead to irresponsible late-night
sessions and a mad rush to act on
dozens of bills in the days immediately
preceding the end of an annual
session.
During the week June 24-28, the
House met for a total of 15 hours
and 46 minutes and the Senate
met for a total of 23 hours and 44
minutes.
Mon. June 24 House 11:02 a.m.
to 11:09 a.m.
SELLER2
Saliaj, Anisa
Saliaj, Anisa
ADDRESS
168 Winthrop Ave
17 Waverly Ave
65 Davis St #4
DATE
06.10.24
06.13.24
06.12.24
PRICE
1200000
1160000
350000
Revere
1. On July 5, 1865, what
would later become The Salvation
Army was founded;
around what wartime was the
song “Don’t Forget The Salvation
Army (My Doughnut Girl)”
published?
2. Who takes The Hippocratic
Oath?
3. On July 6, 1933, the first
MLB All-Star Game was played
at Comiskey Park in what city?
4. What common Asian plant
is the world’s tallest grass?
5. What gourmet item did
William Perrins and John Lea
first bottle?
6. What is mycology?
7. July 7 is World Chocolate
Day; what Massachusetts woman
(Ruth) whose last name is
that of a town invented chocolate
chip cookies?
8. What fictional character
has a dog named Pluto?
9. What is the world’s tallest
flower: corpse flower, holly
hock or sunflower?
10. What was branded Good
Humor?
11. On July 8, 1775, during
the Siege of Boston, there was
a fight at Boston Neck – a then
peninsula in what current BosAnswers
ton
neighborhood?
12. What frozen dessert containing
not much or any air has
a World Cup competition?
13. Hampton Court Palace’s
“The Great Vine,” the world’s
largest grape vine (one part
120’ long) was planted in what
year by Lancelot “Capability”
Brown: 1768, 1905 or 1947?
14. Where would you find the
fictional sisters Anna and Elsa?
15. On July 9, 1819, Elias
Howe, inventor of the sewing
machine, was born in Spencer,
Mass.; he was a factory apprentice
in what city on the Merrimack
and Concord Rivers?
16. What is the world’s largest
cat?
17. On July 10, 1941, what
composer and jazz pianist with
a nickname like a dessert died?
18. In 1830 the lawn mower
was invented and took the
place of what?
19. What Maryland-born former
slave said, “The life of the
nation is secure only while the
nation is honest, truthful and
virtuous”?
20. On July 11, 1960, what
book by Harper Lee with a bird
in its title was published?
Senate 11:07 a.m. to 11:45 a.m.
Tues. June 25 No House session
Senate 11:30 a.m. to 8:52 p.m.
Wed. June 26 House 11:00 a.m.
to 3:50 p.m.
No Senate session
Thurs. June 27 House 11:00 a.m.
to 9:49 p.m.
Senate 10:08 a.m. to 11:52 p.m.
Fri. June 28 No House session
No Senate session
Bob Katzen welcomes feedback at
bob@beaconhillrollcall.com
Bob founded Beacon Hill Roll Call
in 1975 and was inducted into the
New England Newspaper
and Press Association (NENPA)
Hall of Fame in 2019.
1. World War I
2. Doctors
3. Chicago
4. Bamboo
5. Worcestershire
Sauce (Lea & Perrins)
6. The study of mushrooms
7.
Ruth Wakefield
8. Mickey Mouse
9. Corpse flower
10. The first (1920)
chocolate-covered
ice cream bars
11. The South End
(The area was filled
in over the years.)
12. Gelato
13. 1768
14. “Frozen”
15. Lowell
16. Tiger
17. “Jelly Roll” Morton
18.
The scythe (The
lawnmower was a
catalyst for creating
sports fields.)
19. Frederick Douglass
20.
“To Kill a Mockingbird”
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THE REVERE ADVOCATE – WEDnEsDAy, JuLy 3, 2024
American Exterior and
Window Corporation
Contact us for all of your
home improvement projects
and necessities.
Call Jeff or Bob
Toll Free: 1-888-744-1756
617-699-1782 / www.americanexteriorma.com
Windows, Siding, Roofing, Carpentry & More!
All estimates, consultations or inspections completed
by MA licensed supervisors. *Over 50 years experience.
*Better Business Bureau Membership.
Insured and
Registered
Complete Financing Available.
No Money Down.
Licensed
& Insured
Free
Estimates
Carpentry * Kitchen & Bath * Roofs * Painting
Decks * Siding * Carrijohomeimprovement.com
Call 781-710-8918 * Saugus, MA
General Contractor * Interior & Exterior
Frank Berardino
MA License 31811
• 24 - Hour Service
• Emergency Repairs
BERARDINO
Plumbing & Heating
Residential & Commercial Service
Gas Fitting • Drain Service
617.699.9383
Senior Citizen Discount
J.F & Son Contracting
Snow Plowing
No Job too small! Free Estimates!
Commercial & Residential
781-656-2078
- Property management & maintenance
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
AAA Service • Lockouts
Trespass Towing • Roadside Service
Junk Car Removal
617-387-6877
26 Garvey St., Everett
MDPU 28003 ICCMC 251976
We follow Social Distancing Guidelines!
ADVOCATE
Call now!
781-286-8500
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.
Clean-Outs!
We take and dispose
from cellars, attics,
garages, yards, etc.
Call Robert at:
781-844-0472
The Kid Does
Clean Outs
From 1 item to 1,000
* Basements * Homes * Backyards
* Commercial Buildings
The cheapest prices around!
Call Eric: (857) 322-2854
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
$
$
$
$
׉	 7cassandra://BWbsG_tyAoC2hfeXnl87cuZSZPKCzdpcF3yLqAIL3SM7`̰ fO2F2:΅׉ETHE REVERE ADVOCATE – WEDnEsDAy, JuLy 3, 2024
Page 19
MANGO REALTY INC
Let's make your real estate journey a success—schedule an
appointment with me today!
Contact Us;
781-558-1091
infowithmango@gmail.com
www.mangorealtyteam.com
Mango Realty - Sue Palomba
Everett, MA
Saugus, MA
Charming 3-bedroom, 1-bath home with a 2-car garage,
driveway, and yard. This lovely residence is conveniently
located just minutes away from Boston, Encore, and the
airport. It's perfect for those looking for easy access to the
city while enjoying the comfort of suburban living. The
spacious yard is ideal for outdoor activities and family
gatherings. Inside, you'll find a cozy atmosphere with
plenty of natural light and beautiful finishes. For more
information or to schedule a viewing, please call Norma at
617-590-9143. Call us for more details!
Welcome to this beautiful cozy 8-room, 3-bedroom home
with so much space and a comfortable farmers porch. The
large eat-in kitchen and dining rom with a built-in hutch
enhance its character. Sliding doors lead to a deck,
offering seamless indoor-outdoor living perfect for
entertaining. With a new roof installed in 2021, new front
doors and new stairs, and a new deck, the exterior is wellmaintained.
Enjoy the spacious, level fenced-in yard, great
basement, and a walk-up attic, all within close proximity
to Boston, transportation and the airport.
Saugus, MA
This charming home nestled on a beautiful tree-studded
lot with a sunlit family room on the first floor, perfect for
gatherings, and an oak kitchen with gleaming hardwood
floors. The main bedroom is a true retreat, featuring a
private balcony and his-and-her closets. With 2.5 baths, a
spacious deck for outdoor entertaining, and a convenient
garage, this home offers both comfort and functionality.
Despite its serene, private setting, the homes provides easy
access to all amenities. Enjoy the perfect blend of
tranquility and convenience in this exceptional property.
Happy 4th of July from Mango Realty Inc.! - As we celebrate the birth of our
great nation, Mango Realty Inc. wishes you and your family a day filled with joy,
freedom, and wonderful memories. May your Independence Day be sparkling with
pride, happiness, and festivities. Thank you for being a part of our community.
Have a safe and spectacular holiday!
Saugus, MA
Here’s your chance to own not one, but two beautiful pieces of land in the soughtafter
area of Saugus. This unique package offers endless possibilities for creating
your dream estate or investment project. Nestled in the tranquil beauty of Saugus,
each parcel comes with its own address and a combined price of $995,000. Don’t
miss out on this incredible value! Call Sue at 617-877-4553 or email at
soldwithsue@gmail.com.
Reading, MA
Gloucester, MA
This home offers the main bedroom on the first floor with
a full bath. 2 electric meters. This property is ideally
situated in a prime location, close to Market Basket for all
your grocery needs, and close distance to the commuter
rail, making your daily commute effortless. Enjoy the
convenience of nearby shopping centers and major
highways, providing quick and easy access to the airport,
as well as a seamless drive to downtown Boston. The
perfect blend of suburban tranquility and urban
accessibility. Call Sue at 617-877-4553 or email at
soldwithsue@gmail.com.
This gorgeous year-round rental apartment has all the
amenities you will ever need. Step into this inviting 2bedroom
home, where beauty meets functionality. Adorned
with gleaming hardwood floors, elegant high ceilings and
bathed in natural light. This well-maintained space exudes
warmth and comfort. To maintain our standards, we
require a credit score of 680 or higher along with
references. Enjoy a pet-free and smoke-free environment,
fostering a clean and tranquil atmosphere for all. Don't
miss out on the opportunity to make this lovely residence
your own!
Peabody, MA
Welcome to your new home! Step into this inviting 2bedroom
apartment, where beauty meets functionality.
Adorned with gleaming hardwood floors and bathed in
natural light, this well-maintained space exudes warmth
and comfort. With convenient washer dryer hookups
included, keeping up with laundry has never been easier.
To maintain our standards, we require a credit score of
680 or higher along with references. Enjoy a pet-free and
smoke-free environment, fostering a clean and tranquil
atmosphere for all. Don't miss out on the opportunity to
make this lovely residence your own!
Spacious 1-bedroom, 1st-floor apartment ideally suited for a single individual or
couple. This charming unit offers the convenience of easy access and includes one
off-street parking space. Inside, you'll find a well-designed layout that maximizes
space and functionality, making it a comfortable living option. The tenant is
responsible for paying the electric and gas heat bills, giving you control over your
utility usage. This lovely apartment is perfect for those seeking a cozy, manageable
living space with all the essential amenities. For more information or to schedule a
viewing, contact Peter at 781-820-5690.
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THE REVERE ADVOCATE – WEDnEsDAy, JuLy 3, 2024
COMING SOON
COMING SOON- BRAND
NEW CONSTRUCTION! TWO
TOWNHOUSE CONDOS. EACH
UNIT HAS 3 BEDROOMS, 2.5
BATHS, HARDWOOD FLOORING,
GAS HEAT, CENTRAL AIR,
FINISHED LOWER LEVEL AND
GARAGE.
SAUGUS
CALL KEITH 781-389-0791
FOR MORE DETAILS
FOR RENT
COMMERCIAL OFFICE SPACE FOR RENTPRIME
LOCATION. PROFESSIONAL BUILDING
JUST OUTSIDE OF SAUGUS CENTER. PLENTY
OF PARKING. THIS SPACE IS PERFECT FOR
LAWYERS OFFICE, INSURANCE COMPANY,
REAL ESTATE OFFICE, MORTGAGE COMPANY.
WALK IN AREA, SEPARATE OFFICES, RECEPTION
AREA, MENS AND WOMAN'S BATHROOMS,
COMMON CONFERENCE ROOM.
CONVENIENT TO ROUTE 1 AND DOWNTOWN.
SPACE COULD BE SHARED, SPLIT OR THE
ENTIRE SPACE COULD BE LEASED.
FOR SALE
FOR SALE- ATTENTION FLIPPERS &
CONTRACTORS, 6 ROOMS, 3 BEDROOM,
1.5 BATH COLONIAL. LOCATED ON DEAD
END STREET.
LYNN $399,000
RHONDA 781-706-0842
FOR SALE
FOR SALE- TRADITIONAL 3 BED, 1.5 BATH COLONIAL FEATURING
PERIOD DETAIL THROUGHOUT INCLUDING ORIGINAL
HARDWOOD FLOORS, GORGEOUS BANISTER &
NEWEL POST, DETAILED WOODWORK AND MOLDINGS,
LARGE SPACIOUS ROOMS, HIGH CEILINGS ON BOTH
FLOORS, AND ORIGINAL STAIN GLASS WINDOW AND ICE
BOX. EXPANSION POTENTIAL IN THE WALK-UP ATTIC. GAS
HEAT, CENTRAL AIR, ROOF, REPLACEMENT WINDOWS,
GENERATOR, AND SUNROOM ALL DONE ABOUT 10 YEARS
AGO. SAUGUS $629,900
CALL DEBBIE 617-678-9710
FOR SALE
FOR SALE
FOR SALE- BEAUTIFUL SUN FILLED
CONTEMPORARY HOME WITH 3
BEDROOMS, 2 & 1/2 BATHS, OPEN
CONCEPT DINING ROOM AND LIVING
ROOM, SPACIOUS FAMILY ROOM AND A
BONUS ROOM. THE OUTSIDE HAS AN
OVERSIZED DECK GREAT FOR
ENTERTAINING. TOPSFIELD $849,900
CALL JULIEANNE 781-953-7870
FOR SALE
FOR SALE- VERY DESIRABLE INDIAN ROCK
NEIGHBORHOOD, OVERSIZED SPLIT
ENTRY ON A LEVEL SIZABLE LOT. 4+
BEDROOMS, 3 FULL BATHS, 2800+ SQFT.
ROOM FOR EXTENDED FAMILY IN THE
FINISHED BASEMENT. CUSTOM BUILT BY
ONE OWNER AND WELL CARED FOR.
SAUGUS $925,000
CALL DANIELLE FOR DETAILS
978-987-9535
FOR SALE- CONTRACTOR SPECIAL! NEEDS WORK, BUT
WORTH THE EFFORT, HOUSE HAS GREAT POTENTIAL.
BRING YOUR IDEAS TO THIS 3000 SQUARE-FOOT
COLONIAL FEATURING SIX BEDROOMS AND TWO BATHROOMS
WITH OVER 3 FLOORS OF LIVING SPACE (NOT
INCLUDING WALK-OUT LOWER LEVEL). BEAUTIFUL
ORIGINAL WOODWORK, FIVE FIREPLACES, 10 FOOT
CEILINGS. VINYL SIDING, NICE SIZE LOT. PARKING FOR 6+
CARS. ALL THE OFFERINGS OF THE NORTHSHORE. 15
MINUTE DRIVE TO BOSTON. SAUGUS $850,000
CALL KEITH 781-389-0791
BUILDABLE LOT
LOOKING TO
BUY OR SELL?
JUSTIN
KLOACK
978-815-2610
CALL HIM
FOR ALL YOUR
REAL ESTATE
NEEDS
• SAUGUS $125,000 CALL KEITH 781-389-0791 FOR FURTHER DETAILS
MOBILE HOMES
• GREAT YOUNG ONE BEDROOM UNIT IN A VERY DESIRABLE PARK IN MOVE IN CONDITION. 2 CAR
PARKING. LOW PARK RENT OF 410 DANVERS 79,900
• LOT AVAILABLE IN DESIRABLE FAMILY ESTATES COOPERATIVE MOBILE PARK. APPROX 120' X 30' SEWER
AND WATER BRING YOUR UNIT AND HAVE A BRAND NEW BEAUTIFUL HOME....COOP FEE IS ONY
300- 350 A MONTH PEABODY $84,900
• TWO NEW PRE CONSTRUCTION MANUFACTURED HOMES. BOTH ONE BED WITH MANY UPGRADES
FROM CAR PARKING TO FULL SIZE LAUNDRY, SO MUCH MORE. DANVERS $199,900
• LARGE SPACIOUS 2 BEDROOM ON CORNER LOT. NEW RUBBER ROOF. PEABODY $99,900
CALL ERIC 781-223-0289
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