׉?4ׁB!בCט U Uru׉׉	 7cassandra://iBdd575B7VQ2HhXEFURn2pQHG3A8jMrb6nO3brT-aWg `'p׉	 7cassandra://CyGHS5crYIKDNSLdQ21WvoKyLXH6R7_XhDhBzILotREͳ`׉	 7cassandra://MLVfnXnR80N7d-jeyUSBTXzn91g_5gnaN9WlcPSEsVk5` j#\^D^^נj#\^D^a ̿9ׁHhttp://www.advocatenews.netׁׁЈ׈Ej"\^D^<׉EEV RETEVT
V
E ER T
Vol. 35, No.19
-FREET
www.advocatenews.net
Your
Local News & Sports Online! Scan & Subscribe!
ADDOCCO TEAT
Free Every Friday
McGonagle Honors Webster School
with House Resolution
State Rep. joined Mayor Van Campen, Schools
Supt. and school offi cials to present the resolution
617-387-2200
Friday, May 15, 2026
Former Everett housing offi cial
sues mayor, city, alleging political
retaliation over election support
By Th e Advocate
A
longtime member of the Everett
Housing Authority has
fi led a federal lawsuit accusing
the city and newly elected Mayor
Robert Van Campen of illegally
removing him from offi ce in retaliation
for supporting the mayor’s
political opponent during the
2025 election campaign.
Philip T. Colameta, who served
Pictured from left to right: Mayor Robert Van Campen, State Representative Joe McGonagle,
Webster School Principal Devon Abruzzese, former Webster Principal/current Asst. Supt. Chris
Barrett and Supt. of Schools William Hart. (Courtesy photo)
Special to Th e Advocate
R
ecently, State Representative
Joe McGonagle
joined Mayor Robert Van
Campen, Superintendent of
Schools William Hart and Interim
Assistant Superintendent
of Finance/former Webster
School Principal Chris
RESOLUTION | SEE PAGE 8
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on the Everett Housing Authority
for 13 years, alleges in a complaint
fi led in U.S. District Court
in Massachusetts that his March
2026 removal violated his constitutional
rights to free speech and
due process, as well as state laws
governing the dismissal of housing
authority board members.
The lawsuit seeks reinstatement
to the board, back pay and
benefi ts, punitive damages, attorney’s
fees and other relief.
Colameta was earning $10,000
annually as a housing authority
member and had been appointed
to a fi ve-year term running
through February 2029, according
to the complaint.
The suit names both the City of
Everett and Van Campen individually
as defendants.
At the center of the dispute is
Colameta’s support for former
Mayor Carlo DeMaria, whom Van
Campen defeated in a closely
contested November 2025 mayoral
election. Colameta alleges
city officials targeted him because
he openly campaigned
for DeMaria and opposed Van
Campen’s candidacy.
“The actions of the City of Everett
and Mayor Van Campen in
removing Plaintiff from his position
were taken solely to punish
Plaintiff for his constitutionally
protected political speech and
LAWSUIT | SEE PAGE 6
City councillors seek answers
from Encore during license
renewal process
By Neil Zolot
C
ity Councillors are looking
for information from Encore
Boston Harbor during the casino’s
innholder’s license process.
“It’s a good time for that as they
renew the license,” Ward 2 Councillor
Stephanie Martins said at
the Council meeting Monday,
May 11. “We haven’t had an update
for a while.”
She suggested the matter be
referred to the Government Operations
Subcommittee. In discussion
she recognized that all
members might like to participate
and later agreed with a suggestion
from Ward 5 Councillor
Anthony DiPierro that the matter
be brought before the whole
Council instead.
It will be on the agenda for the
next meeting later in May.
“I don’t know if Encore not having
met all the requirements affects
renewal,” City Council President
and Councillor-at-Large
Stephanie Smith added.
She did not elaborate, but
Councillor-at-Large Wayne
Matewsky did about the lack of
entertainment at the facility, as
opposed to just having gambling.
There has also been talk
about Encore funding or partially
funding a public safety facility in
the area. “Maybe it’s a good thing
ENCORE | SEE PAGE 7
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THE EVERETT ADVOCATE – FRiDAy, MAy 15, 2026
Regis College awards degrees to more than 1,000, including Everett students
A
s it began to recognize
its centennial year, Regis
College celebrated its
96th
commencement on Saturday,
May 9, at the Leader
Bank Pavilion, where it awarded
1,036 degrees from associate
to doctoral levels. With
more than 600 nursing students
graduating, the nursing
degree was once again
the highest number awarded
among the university’s programs
amid the local, regional
and national nursing shortage.
To address the urgent
need for health care professionals
during a national and
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regional nursing shortage, Regis
has graduated more than
3,700 nursing students in the
past five years.
With her approaching retirement
on June 30, Antoinette
Hays, PhD, RN, reflected on her
15 years as president in her final
remarks to the graduating
class. “I have had the privilege
of witnessing you discover
your voices and your purpose.
Of working alongside dedicated
faculty and staff who bring
the Regis mission to life every
day. I will always be grateful
for the tenacity, compassion,
and resilience of this incredible
community. As we acknowledge
your accomplishments
today, whether it be
an associate, bachelors, masters,
or doctoral, know that it
is an extraordinary achievement,”
she said. Among those
awarded honorary degrees,
President Hays received one
for her compassionate and visionary
leadership.
Kerry Kennedy, President of
the Robert & Ethel Kennedy
Human Rights Center, delivered
the commencement address
and received an honorary
degree. “When President
Hays asked me to speak today,
I didn’t hesitate. With its Catholic
roots and commitment to
service, Regis holds a special
place in my heart,” she said. “As
you graduate, I encourage you
to take some time to reflect on
the lessons you learned at this
uniquely ambitious experiment
of a college and what
you’d like to carry forward for
the rest of your lives. The lessons
you learned, the importance
of teamwork, and most
of all, building partnerships
and community will make a
profound difference.”
Everett students who were
awarded degrees are as follows:
Jose Martinez Zepeda,
Bria Monteiro and Krysonia
Tavares received Nursing degrees;
Sarai Velez received a
Nuclear Medicine Technology
degree.
SNHU announces Spring 2026
President’s and Dean’s Lists
I
t was with great pleasure that
Southern New Hampshire
www.810bargrille.com
University (SNHU) congratulated
its students from Everett
on being named to the Spring
2026 President’s and Dean’s
Lists. Full-time undergraduate
students who have earned a
minimum grade-point average
of 3.700 and above for the
reporting term are named to
the President’s List. Full-time
status is achieved by earning
12 credits over each 16-week
term or paired eight-week
terms grouped in fall, winter/
spring and summer. The following
Everett students made
the President’s List: Gianna Morales,
Tamara Moise, Glendy
Flores and Victor Lopez. Fulltime
undergraduate students
who have earned a minimum
grade-point average of 3.500
to 3.699 for the reporting term
are named to the Dean’s List.
The following Everett students
made the Dean’s List: Kiara Taylor
and Moises Arita.
SNHU is a private, nonprofit,
accredited institution with
a 93-year history of educating
traditional-age students and
working adults. Now serving
more than 200,000 learners
worldwide, SNHU offers approximately
200 undergraduate,
graduate and certificate
programs, available online
and on its 300-acre campus in
Manchester, N.H. SNHU is committed
to expanding access to
high-quality, affordable pathways
that meet the needs of
each learner.
Spring
is Here!
10 Everett Ave., Everett
617-389-3839
Celebrating 67 Years in Business!
n
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Page 3
‘PLAYING FOR JARED’: Malden Catholic Baseball
honors player’s brother with special recognition
Lancer team wore game jerseys recognizing Jared Connor of Everett in recent matchup in Malden
By Steve Freker
ed #4” on the sleeve.
Aaron Connor is a sophoO
ne
of Aaron Connor’s
biggest fans through his
years of playing sports has
been his brother, Jared. Last
week in a switch of roles, Aaron
Connor and his Malden Catholic
Baseball teammates recognized
Jared Connor in a special
way. In a game against Bishop
Fenwick held at Howard Park
in Malden, the Lancer baseball
team wore special game
jerseys emblazoned with “JarBROTHERLY
LOVE: Aaron
Connor, the starting catcher
for Malden Catholic, is shown
with his brother, Jared before
the start of the Lancers game
against Bishop Fenwick last
week. The team honored
Jared with the #4 patch on the
team’s uniform. (Courtesy Photo)
more catcher from Everett who
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THE EVERETT ADVOCATE – FRiDAy, MAy 15, 2026
FIRST PLACE ESSAY: Sacrifi ces and Contribution of Immigrants
By Shashi Pokhrel
Everett High School
I
came to the United States
from Nepal when I was
fi ve years old. I did not understand
what immigration
meant, only that my world
had changed overnight. I remember
gripping my parents’
hands and feeling lost
in a place where I could not
understand a single word.
English surrounded me, but
none of it belonged to me
yet. At school, I stayed quiet,
afraid that speaking would
expose how diff erent I was.
That silence made me feel
invisible, but it also shaped
who I would become.
Immigration deeply aff ect50
Lawrence
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lsimeonejr@simeonelaw.net
ed my school experience,
both in diffi cult and beautiful
ways. At fi rst, language separated
me from others. I struggled
in class, felt embarrassed
asking for help, and watched
friendships form without
me. But slowly, school became
a place where immigration
showed its strength.
I made friends from diff erent
backgrounds who were patient
with me, who shared
their lunches, who invited me
into games without needing
words. Other cultural events,
group projects, and everyday
interactions taught me that
diversity did not weaken our
school community. It made it
richer and more connected.
At home, my family worked
hard to keep our Nepali traditions
alive. We spoke Nepali,
celebrated Dashain and Tihar,
cooked traditional food,
and passed down values of
respect and resilience. Holding
onto our culture gave us
comfort when everything
else felt unfamiliar. Sharing
these traditions with neighbors,
classmates, and teachers
helped others learn and
brought people closer together.
Immigration allowed
cultures to exist side by side,
benefi ting the entire community
by creating understanding
instead of fear.
Being multilingual and multicultural
became a strength
I did not recognize at first.
Learning English while holding
onto my native language
taught me empathy and patience.
I learned how to navigate
different worlds, how
to listen deeply, and how to
help others feel understood.
In my community, multilingual
families translate for one
another, support schools, and
make spaces more inclusive.
These skills are powerful and
necessary, especially in diverse
communities like ours.
My family’s immigration
story is one of sacrifi ce and
contribution. My parents
came here seeking opportunity,
not just for themselves
but for me. They worked long
hours, worried constantly,
and carried the weight of responsibility
on their shoulders.
I helped translate documents,
listened to adult conversations,
and grew up faster
than most kids. Despite
the struggle, my family gave
back by working, supporting
neighbors, and raising children
who want to contribute
positively to society.
There is also a fear that
many immigrant families live
with especially with what
has been happening much
more in the past few years;
immigration enforcement.
They can disrupt livelihoods,
tear families apart, and create
anxiety that spills into
schools and neighborhoods.
When parents are afraid to go
to work or children are afraid
to come home, entire communities
suff er. Being labeled
or treated diff erently based
on where you come from or
what you look like is deeply
unfair. Having papers should
not determine who deserves
dignity.
Immigration is not just a
policy. It is my childhood, my
school, my family, and my
identity. It brought struggle,
but it also brought strength,
culture, language, and connection.
My story is one of
many that shows that immigration
does not harm
communities, it builds them.
So, as one big community,
let’s put in extra love and
show how immigrants are not
“aliens” who don’t deserve
any respect or dignity.
YOUR LOCAL NEWS
& SPORTS
IN SIX LANGUAGES.
SUBSCRIBE TO THE
ADVOCATE ONLINE
BY SCANNING
HERE!
׉	 7cassandra://lwmsYwbdEzYwDJgmEMD32ZugkLz0v1nn7iV_A-CCZB48` j"\^D^@׉ETHE EVERETT ADVOCATE – FRiDAy, MAy 15, 2026
Page 5
Two EHS students earn Jon H. Poteat Scholarships from NTHS
Special to Th e Advocate
E
verett High School seniors
Danica Pham and Jonatan
Vasquez Trochez have been
awarded Jon H. Poteat Scholarships
from the National Technical
Honor Society (NTHS), a
testament to their meaningful
contributions to Everett High
School’s Class of 2026.
“Danica and Jonatan consistently
exemplify the seven attributes
of the NTHS — Skill,
Honesty, Service, Responsibility,
Scholarship, Citizenship, and
Leadership,” said Superintendent
of Schools William D. Hart.
“We congratulate these excellent
students and their families
and thank the NTSH for helping
them in the next step of their
academic journeys.”
Danica is a Marketing Career
and Technical Education (CTE)
student with a 4.4 grade-point
average (GPA). She consistently
demonstrates leadership,
professionalism and a strong
commitment to academics
and the EHS community — as
evidenced by her participation
in several types of groups.
Danica will attend Babson College
to study business law and
sports management.
Jonatan is a Hospitality Management
student with a 4.2
GPA. He is a dedicated and
hardworking leader within his
program, consistently serving
as a positive role model
ists to advocate for and empower
all students to pursue
the technical and academic
skills needed to build their careers
and a skilled global workforce.
In partnership with student
leadership organizations
and industry partners, NTHS
has awarded over $4 million
in scholarships.
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Danica Pham
Jonatan Vasquez
for his peers. Jonatan is headed
to UMass Lowell, where he
plans to study mechanical engineering.
Jon
H. Poteat Scholarships
($1,000 each) honor the
achievements of top CTE students
who are NTHS members
and plan to pursue professional
certifi cation and/or
advanced degrees.
“Danica and Jonatan have
made an incredible impact on
their respective CTE programs
through their leadership, work
ethic, and commitment to excellence,”
said EHS Director of
Career and Technical Education
Siobhan Araya. “I am so
proud of the contributions
they have made both inside
and outside of the classroom.
Their dedication to their academics,
their peers, and their
future goals truly embodies
what Career and Technical Education
is all about.”
Since 1984, NTHS has been
the honor society for CTE, serving
high schools, career centers,
community and technical
colleges, and universities.
Recognizing over 68,000 new
members annually, NTHS exGerry
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THE EVERETT ADVOCATE – FRiDAy, MAy 15, 2026
LAWSUIT | FROM PAGE 1
association,” the complaint states.
The lawsuit paints the removal
as part of a broader political
purge following the election,
alleging Van Campen “has
sought retribution against other
employees of the City of Everett
who supported former Mayor
DeMaria.”
Van Campen took office in January
2026 after a contentious
campaign that marked a major
political shift in Everett, a city
north of Boston where DeMaria
had served as mayor for nearly
two decades. The lawsuit does
not provide examples of alleged
retaliation against other city employees,
but it repeatedly characterizes
the actions against Colameta
as politically motivated.
According to the complaint,
tensions escalated in February
when Christopher Connolly,
identified as a mayoral assistant,
called Colameta and informed
him that Van Campen wanted
his resignation from the housing
authority.
Colameta refused, the lawsuit
says.
“In response Mr. Connolly stated
that Mayor Van Campen was
willing to go to the City Council
to have Mr. Colameta formally
removed from his position,” the
complaint alleges.
Several weeks later, on March
3, Connolly allegedly left Colameta
a voicemail asking “what was
transpiring” regarding his position
on the authority. Later that
day, Colameta learned that Van
Campen had placed an item on
the City Council agenda requesting
action to remove him from
the board.
The City Council voted on the
matter during a March 9 meeting
while Colameta was out of state
and unable to attend, according
to the filing.
The complaint argues that the
council meeting did not constitute
the formal hearing required
under Massachusetts law
for removing a housing authority
member. Instead, Colameta
contends he was dismissed without
written charges, advance notice
or an opportunity to defend
himself.
Massachusetts General Laws
Chapter 121B, Section 6 allows
removal of housing authority
members for “inefficiency, neglect
of duty, or misconduct in
office,” but only after written
charges are provided at least 14
days before a hearing.
The statute also guarantees the
right to counsel and an opportunity
to be heard.
Colameta alleges none of those
protections were provided.
The complaint includes excerpts
from the March 9 City
Council discussion in which some
councilors questioned whether
the removal complied with
state law.
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City Councillor Anthony DiPierro,
according to the filing, argued
during the meeting that housing
authority appointments are governed
by state statute and that
members can only be removed
for specific causes after a formal
hearing process.
“This just really does not pass
the smell test to me,” DiPierro
said, according to the complaint.
City Councillor Stephanie Rogers
also allegedly opposed immediate
removal because there
was “no further information on
why he’s being removed in the
packet.”
The lawsuit claims those comments
demonstrate city officials
understood the legal deficiencies
surrounding Colameta’s dismissal.
“It
was obvious that whether
other members of the City Council
voted to approve the removal
of Mr. Colameta or not, they
all realized what was occurring,
namely an act of retribution to
punish a civil servant for his political
opinions and his free speech,”
the complaint states.
Colameta says he discovered
two letters from Van Campen
upon returning to Massachusetts
on March 10.
One letter, dated March 3, requested
his resignation effective
March 9 and stated that if he
failed to resign, the mayor “may
petition the City Council to remove”
him.
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However, the lawsuit notes that
Van Campen had already sent a
March 4 letter to the City Council
formally requesting Colameta’s
removal before the deadline
to resign had expired.
The mayor’s letter to the council
allegedly did not accuse Colameta
of inefficiency, misconduct
or neglect of duty.
A second letter, dated March
10, informed Colameta that Van
Campen “will not be reappointing
you to the Everett Housing
Authority board, effective March
10, 2026.”
The lawsuit argues the mayor
lacked authority to effectively
terminate an existing appointment
before the expiration of
the term.
Housing authorities in Massachusetts
oversee public housing
operations and affordable housing
programs. Members are often
appointed to fixed terms intended
to provide continuity and insulation
from political pressure.
Colameta’s attorneys argue his
position was not a policymaking
role requiring political loyalty to
the mayor.
“In his position as a Member of
the Everett Housing Authority,
Mr. Colameta was not employed
as a policymaker,” the complaint
states. “Mr. Colameta was not significantly
connected to policy
making as a Member of the Everett
Housing Authority.”
That distinction is important
because federal courts have recognized
limited exceptions allowing
elected officials to dismiss
certain high-level policymaking
employees for political reasons.
Colameta argues no such exception
applies in his case.
The complaint alleges violations
of the First and Fourteenth
Amendments under federal civil
rights law, specifically 42 U.S.C.
Section 1983. It also asserts
claims under the Massachusetts
Civil Rights Act and accuses Van
Campen individually of intentional
interference with contractual
or advantageous relations.
Under the First Amendment
claims, Colameta argues he engaged
in protected political
speech and association by campaigning
for DeMaria and opposing
Van Campen during the
election.
The lawsuit alleges that support
was a “substantial and motivating
factor” behind his removal.
“The First Amendment right
to association includes a right
to be free of discharge in public
employment merely because
of political affiliation and political
speech,” the complaint states.
The Fourteenth Amendment
claims focus on procedural due
process. Colameta contends he
had a property interest in completing
his term on the housing
authority and could not legally
be removed without proper notice
and hearing procedures.
“Procedural due process under
the Fourteenth Amendment requires
notice, a neutral decision
maker and an opportunity to be
heard,” the lawsuit states. “Mr. Colameta
had no notice, no neutral
decision maker and no meaningful
opportunity to be heard.”
The complaint also accuses Everett
of adopting or executing an
unconstitutional policy through
the actions of the mayor and
City Council, arguing the city itself
can be held liable because
the alleged violations stemmed
from decisions by top municipal
policymakers.
Colameta’s attorney, Mitchell J.
Notis of Brookline, filed the lawsuit
in federal court seeking a jury
trial on all counts.
The suit says Colameta suffered
lost wages and benefits, emotional
distress and a reduction in
anticipated pension benefits as a
result of the dismissal.
The case could test the boundaries
between political patronage
and protected speech in local
government appointments,
particularly in the wake of hardfought
municipal elections.
Political dismissals in public
employment have long been
subject to constitutional scrutiny.
The U.S. Supreme Court has ruled
in several cases that government
workers generally cannot be fired
solely for political affiliation unless
party loyalty is an appropriate
requirement for the position.
Colameta’s lawsuit argues his
role on the housing authority was
administrative and civic in nature
rather than political.
The filing repeatedly emphasizes
his family’s longstanding
involvement in Everett civic affairs
and his history of service to
residents seeking housing assistance.
“Mr.
Colameta served as a
Member of the Everett Housing
Authority to benefit members
of the Everett community and
to help them with their housing
needs,” the complaint states.
The lawsuit does not indicate
LAWSUIT | SEE PAGE 7
׉	 7cassandra://nVL813T3txUP7h4C4j-AlCSpov7KTK107DQhjbP5BPU4` j"\^D^B׉ETHE EVERETT ADVOCATE – FRiDAy, MAy 15, 2026
Page 7
ENCORE | FROM PAGE 1
they come here and get a reality
check on how we feel,” he said.
“It’s the only way we’ll get answers
from them,” Ward 6 Councillor
Peter Pietrantonio agreed.
“They treat us like they own the
city. Let’s hold their feet to the
fire.”
Data Center proposal
discussed
Another long-standing issue
that came up was The Davis Companies’
proposal to build a data
center in the Docklands Innovation
District in the Commercial
Triangle bordered by Lower
Broadway, Revere Beach Parkway
and the Mystic River. A data
center is a facility that enables
the internet by processing data.
Email, web searches and virtually
everything on the internet is
processed by them. The Science
Feedback website reports there
are 9,000 in the world, but more
are needed and planned. “Without
them, our tightly interconnected
civilization would not exist,”
it explains.
It also reports data centers
need and use a lot of power, often
drawn from local grids, including
power needed for cooling.
Up to one-third of the power
needed may be for cooling.
They can run on solar and wind
power, but the inconsistency of
LAWSUIT | FROM PAGE 6
whether Colameta has pursued
any separate administrative remedies
or state court challenges related
to his removal.
As of Monday, no response
from the city or Van Campen had
been included in court filings attached
to the complaint. The defendants
will have an opportunity
to answer the allegations in
federal court.
If successful, Colameta could
be reinstated to the housing authority
board and awarded damages.
The case also could prompt
broader scrutiny of how municipalities
handle appointments
and removals following political
transitions.
For now, the lawsuit underscores
lingering tensions from
Everett’s 2025 mayoral race and
raises questions about the intersection
of local politics, public
employment and constitutional
protections.
The complaint ultimately
frames Colameta’s dismissal not
as an isolated personnel dispute,
those sources requires conventional
sources of power as well.
In Public Participation, Davis
Companies’ chief development
officer Mike Cantalupo and
vice-president for development
Ben Masselink tried to allay fears
about the impact of such a facility
and rebut proposed changes
in zoning for the area to ban or
limit them. “We know there are
concerns and are prepared to
impose some significant restrictions,”
Cantalupo said. “We understand
the need for controls and
hope we can find a way to reach
an agreement with the city to get
to a workable solution.”
Masselink added that a data
center would be “essential in getting
the kind of commercial uses
everybody wants.”
More specifically, Cantalupo
said there are no plans to use the
entire 5 million square feet in the
area for data centers.
Masselink suggested a 200,000
square foot cap, which he said is
less than 5% of the area.
Councillors and citizens have
expressed concern about water
use in discussion among the
Councillors and during Public
Participation at meetings. Data
centers use water for cooling, the
volume of which could increase
water use rates for the residents
ENCORE | SEE PAGE 8
but as a warning about political
retaliation in municipal government.
“The
retaliatory termination of
Mr. Colameta’s employment as a
Member of the Everett Housing
Authority,” the suit states, “constitutes
interference through
threats, intimidation or coercion.”
In an email statement released
by Mayor Robert Van Campen
regarding the lawsuit, it read:
“We’re grateful for Mr. Colameta’s
years of service, but at this
point I believe it’s in the best interest
of the City of Everett and
the Everett Housing Authority to
create space for new representation.
The work of the Housing
Authority is critical to supporting
some of our most vulnerable residents,
and it’s important that the
board continues to reflect strong
engagement and a range of perspectives.
Bringing in other qualified
members of the community
will help strengthen that work
and maintain public confidence
in the board’s role and responsibilities.”
RECOGNITION
| FROM PAGE 3
sity baseball team, coached
by Brian Blumsack, also in his
first season at the helm at Malden
Catholic. Aaron’s brother
Jared has been living for
many years with a rare genetic
condition called Sanfilippo
syndrome. The rare neurodegenerative
disease has taken
away his ability to walk and
speak, But, for many years, he
has inspired others to run or
walk in “Jared’s Run,” which is
held in Everett.
At the Malden Catholic
game, this was another type
of special recognition, as every
member of the Malden
Catholic Baseball team wore
the specially made game jerseys,
indicating their support
for their teammate, Aaron,
who also plays on the Lancer
football team, and his brother.
In addition to his brother
Aaron, grateful for the show
of support for Jared are the
two brothers’ parents, Richard
and Reia Connor. Richard
Connor is a longtime Everett
Police Officer and his wife is
the owner of Phunk Phenomenon
Dance Studio in Everett
as well as a former New England
Patriots cheerleader.
For those with the disease,
there is no cure and the life expectancy
is 12 to 14 years old.
Jared has been a marvel, having
this year marked his 21st
birthday.
“Our team really got behind
this cause to support our
Lancer player Aaron Connor
and his brother Jared, it was
great to see,” said Coach Blumsack.
“It is an excellent way for
Aaron’s teammates to show
their support.
“Jared’s Run” is organized
by Richard and Reia Connor
and raises money for Sanfillipo
syndrome research with
the goal of giving kids like Jar#4
FOR JARED: The special
Malden Catholic game jerseys
against Bishop Fenwick with
the “#4 Jared” patch. (Courtesy/
Gino Spadafora Photo)
ed an edge in the fight. This
year’s event is planned for Saturday,
October 10, starting at
the Everett Recreation Center
across from Glendale Park at
10:00 a.m. The event is supported
by the City of Everett,
Everett Recreation and the Everett
Police Department.
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THE EVERETT ADVOCATE – FRiDAy, MAy 15, 2026
RESOLUTION | FROM PAGE 1
Barrett to present Webster
School Principal Devon Abruzzese
and her team a House
Resolution in honor of their
school’s being named a 2025
ESEA Distinguished School.
The resolution, which was adopted
by the House of Representatives
in session, recognizes
the honor received by
the school for their achievements
in education, including
their success with English Language
Learners. ESEA stands
for the national Elementary
and Secondary Education Act.
“I am beyond proud of all
our schools in Everett but particularly
the Webster School
for their awesome achievement,”
said McGonagle. “Principal
Abruzzese and her team
do a fantastic job educating
all our students, but especially
those who may require more
time and attention. It was an
honor to join them in celebrating
this incredible feat.”
The Webster School received
this national recognition
in the category of “shows
excellence in serving special
populations of students.” The
Webster School has approximately
351 students, of which
72% speak a language other
than English at home and 48%
are English language learners.
Their curriculum and model
support English language
learners through integrated
skills across the core content
areas in different spaces of
the classroom and school environment.
“The
City of Everett is incredibly
proud of the Webster
School for earning national
recognition as a 2025
ESEA Distinguished School,”
said Mayor Van Campen. “In
a community where nearly
half of our students are English
Language Learners, this
award highlights the excellence
and dedication of our
staff, families, and the Everett
School Committee. We congratulate
Principal Abruzzese,
Superintendent Hart, and
the entire Webster community
for ensuring that every student
in Everett, regardless of
the language they speak at
home, has the opportunity to
achieve greatness.”
“My thanks to Rep. McGonagle
for formally recognizing
this prestigious honor
with a State House citation
and making it an official part
of the Commonwealth’s history,”
said Superintendent
Hart. “Thanks, as well, to the
Department of Elementary
and Secondary Education
for nominating the Webster
School for a Distinguished
School honor in recognition
of the tremendous work they
are doing to boost student
achievement.”
Webster School Principal Devon Abruzzese pictured with
Webster School staff. (Courtesy photo)
ENCORE | FROM PAGE 7
because the volume of use will increase.
In effect, residents could
be subsidizing the data center by
having to cover the cost of more
water being used citywide.
The idea of using non-potable
or non-drinkable water would,
theoretically, have less effect because
most of the water used by
residents is potable. Even water
in toilets is technically potable,
as is water used for watering
lawns. Masselink countered that
new technologies use less water
than older technologies but still
require potable water.
He also said the facility would
be at the east end of the site near
railroad tracks in the area to minimize
noise pollution.
Feasibility Study for
High School
In other items, the members
referred to a proposal to borrow
$2 million for a High School
Feasibility Study Project for the
state School Building Authority
(MSBA) to the Subcommittee on
Ways and Means. “The proposed
borrowing will fund the feasibility
phase required by the MSBA,
allowing the City to hire an Owner’s
Project Manager (OPM) and
an architectural/design team,”
reads a May 5 communication
to the Council from Mayor Robert
Van Campen. “This project is
necessary to determine the most
cost-effective, educationally appropriate,
and sustainable longterm
solution for addressing the
City’s high school facility needs,
including overcrowding, aging
infrastructure, and programmatic
deficiencies. Approval of this
borrowing authorization will allow
the City to proceed with the
MSBA-mandated feasibility process,
remain on schedule within
the MSBA pipeline and secure the
professional services required to
advance the project to the next
phase. These services will support
the development and evaluation
of multiple options for the
future of Everett High School, including
addition/renovation scenarios
and a potential new-build
option. This phase includes educational
visioning, site and building
assessments, cost modeling,
and the preparation of all documentation
required by MSBA.”
Other business
A proposal to borrow
$1,326,928.00 for the Chelsea
Street Park renovation project
was referred to the Planning
Board to discuss the design. In a
January 26 letter to the Council,
Van Campen wrote, “The original
funding assumptions were
based on construction being
completed in 2024-25. This request
is based on a revised budget
included in construction documents
prepared by the City’s
landscape designer SLR, dated
December 2, 2025.”
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Page 9
~ Everett Public Libraries Calendar of Events ~
May 18–23
Parlin Adult and Teens
Parlin Book Group: Parlin
Meeting Room and Zoom, Monday,
May 18, at 6 p.m. (18+). Discuss
Stephen Puleo’s “The Great
Abolitionist”!
Gaming Club: Parlin YA
Room, Tuesdays and Thursdays
at 3 p.m. Join us for board games
and video games at the library!
Bring your own or play what we
have here — for ages 12 and up.
Yarn Club: Parlin Fresco
Room, Tuesdays at 7 p.m. Come
chit-chat and stitch! Bring your
crocheting, knitting or any other
yarn craft and sit and socialize
with other members of the
crafting community. Recommended
for ages 14-109!
Parlin Children’s
Lego Club: Parlin Children’s
Room, Mondays from 3-5 p.m.
Come to the Children’s Room after
school on Mondays for some
free Lego building fun. Open to
all ages; children under six years
old must be accompanied by an
adult. No registration required.
Storytime and Sing-along
with Karen: Parlin Children’s
Room, Wednesdays at 11 a.m.
Join us for a fun-filled morning
of singing and storytelling with
Karen! Suggested ages: newborn
to six.
Creative Drama Class: Parlin
Children’s Room, Wednesdays
at 3 p.m. Do you have a drama
queen or king at home? Drama
Class in the Parlin Children’s
Department is the perfect opportunity
for your child to put
those acting skills to use with
our drama coach! Suggested
ages: six to 14.
Story Time Adventures with
Mrs. McAuliffe: Parlin Craft
Room, Fridays at 11 a.m. Join
Mrs. McAuliffe for our enchanting
Story Time! You will be
whisked away on magical adventures
through the pages
of your favorite books. Bring a
friend or make a new one in our
circle of friends. Recommended
for children six and under.
Friday Family Movie Night!
Parlin Meeting Room, Friday,
May 22, at 3 p.m., break out
the popcorn! Come and watch
a movie with your friends and
family. Free, fresh popcorn will
be served.
Origami Club: Parlin Children’s
Room, Saturday, May 23,
at 12 p.m. Learn how to fold paper
animals of all kinds! Open to
all ages and abilities. Paper and
instruction will be provided.
Shute Adult and Teens
Ready Player One Games:
Shute Meeting Room, Wednesdays
at 2:30 p.m. Level up your
Wednesdays with our ultimate
gaming hangout! Grab your
friends and dive into fun Nintendo
Switch and PlayStation
games; whether you’re racing,
battling or teaming up for co-op
fun, there’s something for everyone.
No registration required;
recommended for ages 11 and
up. This program will run every
Wednesday from 2:30 to 4:30
p.m. unless otherwise noted on
our online calendar.
Shute Children’s
Storytime at the Shute: ChilFor
Advertising with Results,
call The Advocate Newspapers
at 617-387-2200
or Info@advocatenews.net
dren’s Room, Mondays at 10 a.m.
and Tuesdays at 12 p.m. What’s
better than a good story? Sharing
it with friends! Join Miss Val
at the Shute Library for Fairytale
Fun!
For Better or Verse — Poetry
Club: Shute Memorial Library
Meeting Room, every other
Tuesday from 5:00-6:30 p.m.
Maybe you love poetry; maybe
you’re just curious about it. Maybe
you’re looking for a creative
outlet and want to meet some
other creative people. Whatever
your reason, and whatever
your knowledge or skill level,
come join the Shute Memorial
Library’s Poetry Club, “For Better
or Verse.” Read, write and share
poetry and create some fun art
projects that might inspire poetry.
Recommended for ages
nine to 13.
Master Builders: Lego Freeplay:
Children’s Room, Thursdays
from 3-5 p.m.; free play
session with Legos and other
building blocks. Bring a buddy,
or make a new one, as you
explore your imagination brick
by brick! We provide the space
and the materials to let your vision
take shape. What will you
create?
Sherlock Holmes Day: Scavenger
Hunt: Friday, May 22,
Children’s Room. It is Sir Arthur
Conan Doyle’s Birthday. To celebrate,
we’ll use all of the skills of
his most famous character, Sherlock
Holmes, to solve a mystery
by tracking down clues in the
library. Stop by the Shute Children’s
Desk for your first clue.
Disguises are welcome. Children
under six must be accompanied
by an adult.
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	NJ9ׁHhttp://DEA.gov/ׁׁЈנj'\^D^ 
	9J9ׁHhttp://DEA.gov/ׁׁЈנj'\^D^ d̠9ׁHhttps://www.bbb.org/ׁׁЈנj'\^D^ t9ׁHhttp://www.nspo.orgׁׁЈ׉E;Page 10
THE EVERETT ADVOCATE – FRiDAy, MAy 15, 2026
Are You Backyard Ready for Spring?
Y
our family yard is an extension
of your home – providing
a respite from stress, offering
an outside entertainment
area, expanding your living
space, and giving kids and
pests a safe place to play.
Here are TurfMutt’s top tips!
Take Stock of Tools: Do you
need to replace your outdoor
power equipment (lawn mower,
leaf blower, trimmer, etc.?)
Want to install a smart irrigation
system? Plan now so you’re
ready!
Remember Wildlife and Pollinators:
Nature starts at your
back door. Grass, trees, shrubs,
and flowering plants provide
food and habitat for birds, small
mammals and pollinators, plant
accordingly.
Plant for Kids and Pets:
There are many species of turfgrass.
Your local garden center
or landscaper can help you
identify what will work best.
Plan for Fun: You might want
an outdoor room fire pit, pergola,
sandbox, outdoor furniture
or a decorative water feature,
furniture, or a decorative
water feature.
For more information visit
www.turfmutt.com
About the TurfMutt Foundation
TurfMutt,
which celebrated
its 15th anniversary in 2024,
was created by the Outdoor
Power Equipment Institute’s
(OPEI) TurfMutt Foundation
and has reached more than 70
million children, educators and
families since 2009. The Foundation
is title sponsor of “Lucky
Dog,” the Emmy Award-winning
CBS broadcast television
show in support of dog rescue
and rehabilitation. Both TurfMutt
spokesdogs have been
rescue dogs, and Mutt Mulligan
is a cast character on the show,
where her “Mulligan Minute”
segments teach viewers about
the benefits of green space. In
2024, the Great Lawn at Louisville’s
award-winning Waterfront
Park on the Ohio River was
renamed the TurfMutt Foundation
Great Lawn as part of a $1
million sponsorship. Championed
by Mulligan the TurfMutt,
and through education partners
such as Scholastic, Discovery,
Weekly Reader, and the USBGC
Global Learning Lab, TurfMutt
has taught students and
teachers how to “save the planet,
one yard at a time.” TurfMutt
has been an education resource
at the U.S. Department of Education’s
Green Ribbon Schools,
the U.S. Department of Energy,
the U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency, Green Apple, the
Center for Green Schools, the
Outdoors Alliance for Kids, the
National Energy Education Development
(NEED) project, Climate
Change Live, Petfinder
and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife
Service. In 2017, the TurfMutt
animated video series won the
coveted Cynopsis Kids Imagination
Award for Best Interstitial
Series. More information
at www.TurfMutt.com.
BBB Eastern New England urges parents to help graduates
navigate job scams, student loans, and financial independence
As graduation season begins, families face new financial and emotional challenges
G
raduation season is a time
of celebration for families
across New England, but it also
marks the beginning of major
financial and life transitions for
young adults entering today’s
competitive job and housing
markets. The Better Business
Bureau (BBB) Eastern New England
is encouraging parents
to take an active role in helping
graduates navigate student
loans, employment searches,
rental agreements and the
growing number of scams targeting
young adults.
“As someone who speaks regularly
at colleges across New
England — and as a parent of
college-aged children myself
— I see firsthand how overwhelming
this transition can
feel for families,” said BBB Eastern
New England’s Chief Marketing
and Sales Officer, Paula
Fleming. “Parents are trying to
support their graduates emotionally
and financially while
also helping them avoid costly
mistakes and scams.”
According to BBB Scam Tracker
data, scammers increasingly
target recent graduates with
the following:
• Fake job offers
• Student loan forgiveness
scams
• Rental listing fraud
• Phishing texts and emails
• Fake check scams tied to
employment offers
BBB Eastern New England recommends
parents talk openly
with graduates about:
• Budgeting and financial
planning
• Understanding student loan
repayment options
• Verifying employers and
apartment listings
• Protecting personal and
banking information
• Building realistic expectations
around today’s job market
“Career paths are rarely linear
anymore,” Fleming added.
“Many graduates may need
time to find the right opportuBBB
SCAM TRACKER | SEE PAGE 11
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Page 11
North Shore Philharmonic Orchestra
announces 3rd annual Children’s Concert
Featuring the Premiere of “Ballad of Dick
Whittington - A ‘Purr-fect’ Musical Adventure”
T
he North Shore Philharmonic
Orchestra (NSPO)
was thrilled to announce its
third annual Children’s Concert,
a family-friendly celebration
of music and community.
This year’s event takes place
on Sunday, June 7, at First Baptist
Church in Beverly and features
conductor Marshunda
Smith leading an afternoon of
interactive musical discovery.
The festivities kick off at 2:00
p.m. with a variety of preconcert
activities. Children and
their families are invited to explore
the world of orchestral
music hands-on at the popular
“Instrument Petting Zoo,”
where they can see, touch and
try out different instruments.
The preconcert hour will also
feature interactive musical
crafts and special prelude performances
by talented local
music students.
At 3:00 p.m. NSPO will take
the stage for the main event.
The highlight of the program
is the highly anticipated premiere
of “Ballad of Dick Whittington
- A ‘Purr-fect’ Musical
Adventure” by local Danvers
composer Charles Turner. This
enchanting musical storytelling
experience will bring the
classic English folktale to life
through the dynamic and expressive
power of the symphony
orchestra.
Tickets are available now at
www.nspo.org.
About the North Shore PhilBBB
SCAM TRACKER | FROM PAGE 10
nity, adjust financially, or even
move back home temporarily.
Parents can play an important
role by offering guidance,
encouragement, and practical
support without trying to solve
everything for them.”
BBB also encourages families
to watch for red flags tied
to employment and housing
scams, including the following:
•
Requests for upfront payments
US
DEA Public
Safety Advisory
Heightened Threat: Fentanyl Mixed
with Emerging Synthetic Drugs
T
he United States continues
to face an unprecedented
and evolving drug
threat driven by illicit fentanyl,
which is increasingly
mixed with a dangerous array
of synthetic substances
emerging in the illicit market.
These combinations are making
an already deadly drug
supply even more unpredictable
and lethal.
Law enforcement and public
health officials are seeing
fentanyl combined with highly
potent substances such as
xylazine, nitazenes, cychlorphine,
and medetomidine.
Many of these substances are
not approved for human use
and are often undetectable
to the user.
Xylazine and medetomiConductor
Marshunda Smith
harmonic Orchestra: Founded
in 1947, NSPO has spent nearly
eight decades bringing the joy
of music to the region. Under
the artistic leadership of Music
Director Robert Lehmann,
the NSPO is dedicated to providing
high-quality, accessible
• Job offers without interviews
•
Apartment listings with unusually
low rent
• Pressure to act immediately
• Requests to communicate
outside official platforms
Graduation season also creates
emotional transitions for
parents themselves, Fleming
noted. “We spend years preparing
our children for adulthood,”
she said. “Graduation is not the
end of parenting — it’s the beginning
of a different kind of
support. One built less on mansymphonic
music to the communities
of the North Shore.
Comprised of dedicated volunteer
musicians, the orchestra
strives to enrich the cultural
life of the region through diverse
programming and educational
outreach.
aging and more on mentoring.”
For resources to help young
adults navigate careers, finances,
housing and scams, visit
BBB’s Young Adult Resource
Center at https://www.bbb.org/
all/young-adult-resources.
—This info is from BBB Eastern
New England. The mission
of BBB Eastern New England is
to advance marketplace trust
by setting standards for ethical
business behavior, supporting
consumers and helping businesses
build trust with the public
throughout the region.
dine are used by veterinarians
to sedate animals. Nitazenes
and cychlorphine are
potent, unregulated, synthetic
opioids. New nitazenes
tend to be introduced
when regulatory actions, enforcement,
and drug scheduling
put pressure on existing
analogues. DEA has reported
22 unique nitazenes
compounds since 2020, 21 of
which are listed as Schedule I
controlled substances.
Why This Matters:
Extreme Potency: These
emerging synthetic drugs
can be significantly more
powerful than fentanyl and
greatly increase the risk of
suffering a fatal overdose.
Hidden Mixtures: These
substances are frequently
mixed into counterfeit pills
or fentanyl powder without
the user’s knowledge.
Reduced Reversal Effectiveness:
Drugs like xylazine
and medetomidine are not
opioids, meaning naloxone
may not fully reverse their
effects, complicating overdose
response. Other synthetics,
such as nitazenes and
cychlorphine, might require
several doses of naloxone to
be effective.
Severe Health Impacts:
Xylazine has been linked
to devastating soft tissue
damage, infections, and prolonged
sedation, while other
synthetics can cause rapid
respiratory depression and
death.
Public Safety Guidance:
Never take a pill that wasn’t
prescribed to you and dispensed
by a licensed pharmacy.
Assume
all illicit drugs may
contain fentanyl or other
deadly additives.
Carry naloxone and be
trained in how to use it but
understand it may not fully
reverse all substances present.
Call
911 immediately in any
suspected drug poisoning or
overdose. Time is critical.
Stay informed and spread
awareness. This threat is
evolving rapidly.
Today’s illicit drug supply
is more dangerous, more
deceptive, and more deadly
than ever before. One pill,
one try can kill.
Public awareness and prevention
are critical. For more
information, visit DEA.gov/
fentanyl free and DEA.gov/
onepill.
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THE EVERETT ADVOCATE – FRiDAy, MAy 15, 2026
Crimson Tide Sports Weekly Notebook
Plenty of highlights from the diamonds to the courts
By Joe McConnell
Tide freshman hurlers
Young, Foley shut
down Chelsea
T
he youthful Crimson Tide
baseball team (3-13) is
coming of age as of late, and
they were able to put it altogether
on Monday, May 11, to
beat the Red Devils at Chelsea’s
Carter Park in a mercy
rule-shortened game, 12-0.
Second year coach Malik
Love was thrilled to witness
the progress of his freshman
hurlers Nick Young (2 walks,
3 strikeouts) and Caden Foley
(5 strikeouts), who combined
to pitch two innings apiece to
help secure the team’s third
win of the year.
“(Young and Foley) continue
to gain confidence, while getting
more comfortable playing
on the varsity level,” said Love.
The Everett offense banged
out eight hits. Senior Charlie
Govostes and junior Tyler Freni
helped power the attack with
one double apiece. Luke Wood,
another freshman, chipped in
with two singles. Juniors Anderson
Santiago and Derek
Soper, sophomore M.J. Guida
and Young each singled once.
“It was finally good to get
back into the win column,” said
Love. “We were able to capitalize
on offense by playing situational
baseball with players
that have been making tremendous
strides lately.”
Love went on to say that he
wants to see them put together
positive results in the last
four games of this season to
go into next year feeling pretty
good about themselves.
The Tide was scheduled to
face host Medford on May 13
after press deadline to close
out this week. They will then
begin the final week of the
season on Monday, May 18,
against Lynn Classical at Lynn’s
Fraser Field, starting at 4 p.m.,
and will return home right
away after the game to get
ready to face visiting Somerville
two days later at the same
time. Non-league Lynn Tech
will follow the Highlanders
to Glendale for a Friday night
game on May 22 at 6:30 p.m.,
which will complete the 2026
campaign.
Tide softball beats up
Chelsea to remain in
the postseason hunt
W
ith two wins in its last
five games, the Everett
High school softball team (88)
still controls its own destiny
in terms of playing once again
in the Division 1 state tournament.
The Crimson Tide girls
defeated Lynn English (27-12,
May 6) and Chelsea (13-1, May
11). Both games were played
at Glendale, and were halted
in the fifth inning, because of
the mercy rule.
For the record, they lost to
Sliding into home plate was
MJ Guida during recent action
against Malden.
Revere (14-7, May 4) and Watertown
(20-8, May 9) on the
road, while Medford (16-1, May
12) defeated them at home.
They have four regular season
games left on the schedule
against host Winthrop (May
14), Lynn Classical (May 18, 4
p.m., at Glendale), Somerville
(May 20, 4 p.m. at Somerville’s
Amanda Verteiro with the ball during recent action against Revere. (Advocate photo)
Trum Field) and Cambridge
(May 22, 4 p.m., at Glendale).
Against Chelsea on Senior
Day, Coach Stacy Schiavo’s
team tore into the Red Devils
early on to win this mercy
rule game.
“The girls came out with energy
right away, and stayed aggressive
at the plate all game
long,” said Schiavo. “Juliette
(Romboli) and McKenzie (Rivera)
both belted huge home
runs. We also had contributions
up and down the lineup.
Defensively, we made a
lot of solid plays behind Victoria
(Cutler), while also staying
focused even with runners
on base. Olivia (Dresser) made
some big plays at shortstop,
(Romboli) tracked down key
fly balls in center and Kyleigh
(Ridlon) made plays at first
to help us get out of innings.
Overall, it was a great win on
a very special day for our seniors.”
Cutler
went all five innings
in the circle, allowing five hits,
seven walks and one earned
run. She fanned one.
The Red Devils scored their
lone run of the game in the
top half of the first inning. But
Everett bounced right back to
tie up the proceedings. when
they came to the plate. Ridlon
knocked in the run with
a single.
The Everett girls tacked on
two more in the second. Bianca
Moran-Leal led off with a walk.
Rivera followed with a single.
They moved up into scoring
position on a passed ball, and
scored on a double by Arianna
Osorio-Bonilla.
The Tide broke the game
open with five in the third.
Dresser was hit by a pitch to
start the threat. Ridlon followed
with a walk, before
Romboli blasted a three-run
shot. Moran-Leal kept the inning
going with a single up the
middle, paving the way for Rivera’s
round tripper.
In the fourth, Ridlon drew a
one-out walk, and advanced to
second on a passed ball. With
two outs, Moran-Leal doubled
home Ridlon. Rivera then
drove her home with a double,
as well. A short time later, Cutler
singled in Rivera with the
team’s 11th
run.
The home team closed
things out in the fifth. Lindsey
Sylva drew a walk to begin
the final uprising. Dresser
then reached on an error to
second, before Ridlon walked
to load the bases for Romboli,
who produced the hit that
drove home the final two runs
of the game.
Girls tennis dominates
English, Classical in
Lynn
O
n May 4, the girls tennis
team (4-11) took on
Somerville in a doubleheader
at Tufts University, only to
come up short in both matches.
A
scheduled matchup
against host Lynn Classical
two days later was postponed,
because of rain. It was made
up on May 12, with the Everett
girls winning it, 4-1.
Prior to that encounter, the
Tide girls returned to Lynn
to face the Lynn English Bulldogs
on May 8, where they
walked away with an impressive
5-0 win.
“We played outstanding
tennis against a solid English
squad,” said coach Courtney
Meninger.
SPORTS | SEE PAGE 13
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Page 13
EHS Crimson Tide Softball Team Host Senior Night
Everett softball head coach Stacy Schiavo stands with the 2026
seniors; Lindsey Sylva, Juliette Romboli, Victoria Cutler and
assistant coach Bridget Cifuni.
Senior Victoria Cutler stands with her parents, Marc and Maria Cutler, brothers Nicolas and
Anthony and her cousin, Maria LoRusso. (Advocate Photos by Emily Harney)
Senior Juliette Romboli stands with her Papa John Romboli,
Giavana Bono and Jahkoby Gerard.
Seniors, Juliette Romboli and Lindsey Sylva
react to family and friends through the fence
as they celebrated their senior night.
SPORTS | FROM PAGE 12
Sophomore Abby Falkowski
and senior Luna Sepulveda led
the way, blanking their English
foes, 6-0, 6-0 in second doubles.
Junior Trina Le, playing
second singles, also secured
a win, 6-3, 6-1. Junior Brigitte
Parada set the tone with a 6-0,
6-1 triumph in fi rst singles.
Third singles player Thy
Phanhang was credited with
the Tide’s fourth win of the
day, 6-2, 3-6, 7-4 in a tiebreaker.
Juniors Sophia Hernandez
and Lizzy Castro did likewise
he Everett High School Crimson Tide softball
team celebrated their seniors Monday
night before taking on Chelsea.
T
in a thrilling second doubles
match, 6-3, 5-7, 15-13 to complete
the sweep.
Everett closed out this week
against Revere (May 13) and
Peabody (May 14) after press
deadline. The regular season
will then come to an end on
Monday, May 18, against nonleague
Mystic Valley at Malden
Catholic, starting at 4:30 p.m.
Girls lacrosse heads
down the home stretch
T
he girls lacrosse team (3-10)
dropped its last four games
to Revere (5-4, April 29), Saugus
(18-1, May 4), Medford (172,
May 5) and non-league Lowell
(14-6, May 6). They have three
games left on the regular season
schedule against the likes
of Malden (May 14), Revere (May
15, 4 p.m., at 7-Acres) and nonleague
Mystic Valley (May 20,
4:30 p.m., at Malden Catholic).
“It was a tough matchup
against Revere,” said coach
Nicola Jones. “We came out
strong to take a 3-0 lead in the
fi rst quarter, but Revere rallied
to secure the close win.”
Senior Lindsey Sylva stands with her parents, Tricia and Steven
Sylva.
Amanda Verteiro, Nicole Damaceno,
Isabela Bicalho and
senior Saline Duck netted the
Everett goals. Duck’s goal was
her fi rst career varsity marker.
The Tide fell behind early
against Saugus, and struggled
to recover, according to Jones.
“Despite the fi nal score, there
were several highlights, including
solid efforts from Nicole
Damaceno, Amanda Verteiro,
Isabela Bicalho, MariaJose
Cardenas and Melissa Meireles,”
added the veteran coach.
“But the highlight of the day
was Isabella Aguirre Jimenez
scoring her fi rst varsity goal. It
was certainly an exciting milestone
achievement for the entire
team.”
The game against Medford
was hard-fought. Damaceno
and Verteiro accounted for the
goals. Jones singled out the
contributions of Lindsey Cherichel-Paul,
Samantha Lemus
and Allia Polynice. “All three
players displayed much eff ort
and determination (against
the rival Mustangs),” the coach
added.
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THE EVERETT ADVOCATE – FRiDAy, MAy 15, 2026
Announcing the Winners of the 2026 Everett Public Libraries Poetry Contest
DAWN OF INDEPENDENCE
by Arielle Louis (Youth Category Winner)
Independence
It is not gained by sitting around
waiting. It doesn’t come easily.
Independence must be earned; it is both
giving and taking. Lives lost, and hearts swallow
in sorrow on the day we earned independence.
Library Director Kevin Sheehan addresses the audience
during the opening of the ceremony.
On May 7th, 2026, the Parlin Memorial Library hosted the Awards Ceremony
for this years’ contest, in which the three finalists from each of the three
categories - youth, teen, and adult - were invited to recite their poems for the
judges. The judging panel was composed of library staff, including the Parlin
and Shute Children’s Librarians, Kristin McAuliffe and Valerie Terenzi
respectively, Head of Circulation, Victoria Iannuzzi, and Library Director,
Kevin Sheehan.
“We were so pleased with the turnout for the contest, this being only the second
year of resurrecting this annual tradition,” states Iannuzzi. The poetry contest
has been a longstanding yearly competition hosted by the Everett Public
Libraries, but was on hiatus for a few years as a result of the COVID-19
pandemic. “This year we decided to inspire our poets with a theme,” added
Sheehan. He elaborated that “we wanted the community to ruminate on the
250th anniversary of our nation, so we provided the theme ‘250 Years of
Independence’ as a suggestion to our local poets.”
The evening was filled with thoughtful expression, which the crowd of onlooking
parents, friends, and fellow poets took in with heartfelt tears of joy. With
compelling messages and vivid lyricism, the finalists offered unique
perspectives on the last 250 years of American history. After much deliberation,
the judges concluded that the winners of the contest were Arielle Louis (youth
category), Lee Walsh (teen category), and Paige Anderson (adult category).
This year’s contest was generously sponsored by the Kiwanis Club of Everett,
who provided cash prizes for the winners at the conclusion of the ceremony.
The Everett Public Libraries would like to offer a special thanks to the Kiwanis
Club for their support of this contest and for providing the refreshments for the
evening; it is community advocates like the Kiwanis Club of Everett that allow
for wonderful celebrations of artistic merit such as the Poetry Contest to
continue to be a yearly tradition.
Please read at right for the winning entries for each category of the
competition:
250 years have passed, wow! It is amazing what
people did for independence. So let us think,
is independence just a word, or part of America?
LORD, LET AMERICA BE AMERICA ONCE AGAIN
by Lee Walsh (Teen Category Winner)
I am American dreaming of the star spangled banners soaring
in the sweltering heat of early July.
I am singing Bruce Springsteen, lighting the grill, and I am
praying.
Lord, let America be America once again.
Let the immigrants gaze upon lady liberty with hopeful eyes
and hungry hearts.
Let the mother’s prayers be answered, and return our soldiers
safely to our homeland.
I am American dreaming of prosperity, community and
freedom. I am singing “this land is your land”, extending my
hand, and praying.
Lord let America be America once again.
Let us crack open a cold one with the ones we love most.
Let the war end, and the fireworks fly.
Let the tables be overflowing with food, let no one go hungry.
Paul’s midnight ride helped win us our freedom, and tonight
we shall enjoy it.
Lord, let us be free to love.
Let us be free to enjoy all of these little liberties.
250 years of freedom
lord let us see 250 more!
ASSOCIATION
by Paige Anderson (Adult Category Winner)
The grains of sand stilled around the New Haven Harbor
As African men, women, and children cried over their forced
departure.
The ripplets of water washed across the Ann Lee Pond
As the Shakers announced that man and woman are equal
under God.
The stones stampeded down Blair Mountain
As coal miners fought for their rights by the thousands.
The branches broke under the weight of the Chicago snow
As the police dealt the Black Panthers the final blow.
The tufts of grass glowed on Sandhills
The winners present their poems at the Poetry Awards
Ceremony.
As Standing Rock protestors stood in the way of the drills.
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Page 15
Sa
Sa
a
Sa
y Senior
enior
Sen
by Jim Miller
How to Prepare to Be
an Executor of an Estate
Dear Savvy Senior,
My uncle recently asked me to
be the executor of his will when he
dies. I feel honored that he asked
me, but I’ve never done this before
and I’m not exactly sure what the
job entails. What can you tell me
about it?
--Helpful Nephew
Dear Helpful,
Being named executor is indeed
an honor. It shows your
uncle trusts you. But it can also
be a signifi cant responsibility,
especially if his estate or family
situation is complicated. Here’s a
look at what the role involves so
you can decide if it’s something
you’re comfortable taking on.
Executor Duties
As executor, you’ll be responsible
for settling your uncle’s affairs
after his death. Depending
on the estate, your duties
may include:
• Filing paperwork with the
probate court to validate the
will and officially open the
estate.
• Locating and taking inventory
of all assets.
• Paying outstanding bills, funeral
expenses, and any taxes
owed using estate funds.
• Notifying banks, government
agencies (including Social Security),
credit card companies,
and the post office of
his death.
• Preparing and fi ling his fi nal
income tax return.
• Distributing remaining assets
to the benefi ciaries named in
the will.
Keep in mind that executor
responsibilities and deadlines
vary by state. Most state bar association
websites off er probate
guides or checklists that outline
the rules where you live.
Get Organized
If you agree to serve, one of
the best things you can do now
is help your uncle get organized.
Make sure his will is up to date
and fi nd out where important
documents are stored – such as
deeds, fi nancial account statements,
insurance policies, passwords,
and contact information
for advisors. Having quick access
to these items will save you
time and stress later.
If the estate is complex, you
don’t have to handle everything
alone. An estate attorney or
tax professional can guide you
through the process, and their
fees are typically paid by the estate.
To fi nd qualifi ed help, you
can search directories at the National
Association of Estate Planners
& Councils (naepc.org) and
the National Academy of Elder
Law Attorneys (naela.org).
Prevent Family Confl icts
One of the biggest challenges
executors face is family tension.
Ask your uncle to clearly communicate
his wishes to benefi -
ciaries ahead of time, including
who will receive personal belongings
and family heirlooms.
Wills often leave these decisions
to the executor, which can create
unnecessary friction.
If he hasn’t already, suggest
he create a written list outlining
how personal property should
be distributed. Clarity now can
prevent confl ict later.
Executor Fees
Executors are generally entitled
to compensation, which
is paid by the estate. In many
states, fees are based on a percentage
of the estate’s value,
often ranging from 1 to 5 percent,
depending on size and
complexity.
However, if you’re also a benefi
ciary, you may choose to waive
the fee. Executor compensation
is taxable income, while inheritances
typically are not subject
to income tax.
If you’d like a step-by-step resource
to guide you through the
process, “The Executor’s Guide:
Settling a Loved One’s Estate or
Trust,” from Nolo, is a helpful reference
and costs about $32 at
nolo.com.
Serving as executor can be
time-consuming, but with good
organization and clear communication,
it’s a manageable responsibility,
and a meaningful
way to honor your uncle’s trust.
Send your questions or comments
to questions@savvysenior.org,
or to Savvy Senior,
P.O. Box 5443, Norman,
OK 73070.
Dir: Lincoln Ave to Bristow Street
to 9 Carr Road
Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices
Commonwealth Real Estate
Formerly Carpenito Real Estate
nr
ior
Charlotte “Pat” DiNapoli
W
ith
g r e a t
sadness we
announce
the passing
of our mother
Charlotte
Patricia DiNapoli,
who
passed peacefully at home
on May 9, 2026. Born in Everett,
Charlotte (or Pat as she
was known by some family
and friends) graduated from
Everett High in 1960. Married
Thomas (Tom) DiNapoli in
1964. While living in Everett,
Charlotte and her husband of
61 years raised four children.
As a life-long resident of Everett,
she was highly active in
her community volunteering
for many activities such as the
Cub Scouts, the Girl Scouts,
girls’ softball teams, and youth
skating organizations. Charlotte
was employed as a special
education paraprofessional
with the Everett Public
Schools for 29 years most at
the Lafayette School.
Charlotte is survived by her
husband Tom and her children
Thomas DiNapoli Jr. and his
wife Donna of Peabody, Cynthia
DiNapoli of Everett, Lauri
DiNapoli-Stickney and her
husband Scott of Everett, and
Jennifer DiOrio and her husband
Kevin of Peabody. She
was the beloved grandmother
to Matthew, Joshua, Allison,
and Gianna. She was pre-deOBITUARIES
ceased
by her parents Frank
and Margaret Williams and her
two brothers James McCabe
and George Patrick McCabe.
Visitation was held on Thursday,
May 14, from the Salvatore
Rocco & Sons Funeral
Home, Everett. Funeral Service
will be held at the funeral
home on Friday, May 15, at
8:45 AM followed by a mass at
10:00 AM in the Immaculate
Conception Church, Broadway,
Everett. Burial at 11:30
AM in the Woodlawn Cemetery,
302 Elm Street, Everett.
Marlene Di Nino
P
assed
away on
T hursda y ,
M a y 7th,
2026 at the
age of 89.
Born on June
19, 1936, to
Oscar & Mary
J. (Colangelo) Di Nino. Beloved
fi ancée of the late John
Caron, she was predeceased
by her parents; her brothers,
Larry G. Di Nino, Joseph R. Di
Nino, and Oscar Di Nino; her
nephew, Larry G. Di Nino, Jr.;
and her grandnephew, Rocco
Weiss. She is survived by
her loving sister-in-law, Maryellen
Di Nino of Hampstead,
NH; ten devoted nieces &
nephews; twelve grandnieces
& grandnephews whom she
loved dearly; as well as many
cherished cousins, friends, &
neighbors.
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Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices symbol are registered service marks of Columbia Insurance Company, a Berkshire Hathaway affiliate. Equal Housing Opportunity.
Funeral service was held at
the A. J. Spadafora Funeral
Home, 865 Main St., Malden
on Thursday May14th. Visiting
hours were held at the funeral
home on Wednesday May
13th.Relatives & friends were
respectfully invited to attend.
Interment in Woodlawn Cemetery,
Everett. In lieu of fl owers,
donations in Marlene Di
Nino’s memory are requested
to St. Jude’s Children’s Hospital.
To sign online guestbook, visit
Spadaforafuneral.com
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THE EVERETT ADVOCATE – FRiDAy, MAy 15, 2026
Beacon Hill Roll Call
Volume 51 - Report No.19
May 4-8, 2026
By Bob Katzen
T
HE HOUSE AND SENATE: Beacon
Hill Roll Call records local
senators’ votes on roll calls from
the week of May 4-8. There were
no roll calls in the House last week.
THE “PROTECT ACT” (S 3072) –
Senate 37-3, approved its own version
of the PROTECT Act that supporters
said would establish statewide
standards governing interactions
between state and local law
enforcement and federal immigration
enforcement. The House has
already approved its own version
of the measure and a House-Senate
conference committee will
eventually hammer out a compromise
version.
Provisions include prohibiting
state and local law enforcement
from stopping, questioning or
targeting individuals based solely
on immigration or citizenship status;
prohibiting warrantless civil
immigration arrests in sensitive
locations such as schools, childcare
centers, hospitals, houses of
worship and state courthouses;
strengthening protections for immigrants
who are victims or witnesses
of crimes, including trafficking
victims and expediting
visa processes so they can safely
assist law enforcement and prosecutors;
blocking unauthorized deployment
of other states’ National
City of Everett
PLANNING BOARD
484 BROADWAY
EVERETT, MA 02149
Frederick Cafasso- Chairman
Type of Person Needed:
LEGAL NOTICE
EVERETT PLANNING BOARD
PUBLIC HEARING NOTICE
PUBLIC HEARING FOR PROPOSED ZONING ORDINANCE AMENDMENT
TO SECTION 2 – “DEFINITIONS” – AND TO CREATE A NEW SECTION 38 –
“DATA CENTERS” – WITHIN THE CITY OF EVERETT ZONING ORDINANCE
In accordance with M.G.L. Chapter 40A and Section 12 of the City of Everett Zoning Ordinance
(Revised Ordinances, Appendix A), the Everett Planning Board shall conduct the required public
hearing for a submitted zoning ordinance amendment. Said public hearing shall be held during a
regular meeting of the Planning Board, scheduled on Monday, June 1st, 2026 at 6:00PM in the
Speaker George Keverian Room at Everett City Hall, Third Floor, 484 Broadway, Everett, MA
02149.
At said meeting, the public shall be allowed to speak on the proposed amendment to the City of
Everett’s Zoning Ordinance, which contemplates to amend Section 2 (“Definitions”), creating
definitions for Computer Room, Data Center, Data Center (Small), and Data Center (Large), as
well as creating a new Section 38 entitled “Data Centers”.
A copy of the proposed zoning amendment is on file and available in the Office of the City Clerk
and the Department of Planning and Development, both located at City Hall, 484 Broadway,
Everett, MA 02149 and can be inspected online anytime at http://www.cityofeverett.com/449/
Planning-Board and/or by request during regular City Hall business hours by contacting The
Planning and Development Office at 617-394-2334.
All persons interested in or wishing to be heard on the applications may attend and participate in
the virtual hearing designated above in accordance with the information for public participation
that will be included on the Agenda of the meeting that will be posted in accordance with the
Open Meeting Law under Planning Board at: http://www.cityofeverett.com/AgendaCenter.
Questions and comments can be directed in advance of the public hearing to Matt Lattanzi of the
Department of Planning & Development at Matt.Lattanzi@ci.everett.ma.us or 617-394-2230.
Frederick Cafasso
Chairman
May 15, 22, 2026
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Guards into Massachusetts; and allowing
parents facing detention or
deportation to pre-arrange guardianship
for their children.
“The PROTECT Act is comprehensive
legislation that defends
the values enshrined in the Massachusetts
Constitution, particularly
equal protection under the
law for all,” said Sen. Cindy Friedman
(D-Arlington). “This bill will
increase protections for our residents,
spells out plainly and clearly
that Massachusetts law enforcement
officers are not responsible
for aiding civil immigration
enforcement, and importantly,
stands up for our immigrant community
in the face of an adversarial
federal government.”
“My parents came to Lawrence
with very little and gave everything
they had to this community,”
said Sen. Pavel Payano (D-Lawrence).
“That same story is being
lived by immigrant families across
our Gateway Cities today. They
are our neighbors, our teachers,
our health care workers, our small
business owners. The people who
keep Massachusetts moving.”
Payano continued, “The PROTECT
Act makes clear that no matter
what happens in Washington,
Massachusetts will not allow our
institutions or our communities to
be weaponized against the people
who helped build them. Today we
made clear whose side we are on.
This is an important step forward,
but the fi ght to protect dignity and
basic humanity is far from over.”
Sen. Adam Gomez (D-Springfi
eld) said, “When the Federal government
fails to protect our communities,
and starts attacking our
immigrant neighbors, we stand
up in Massachusetts for what is
just and right. To those immigrant
families forced now to live in fear
we tell them: We are standing with
you. You are not alone. Fear will
not win. We will keep leading and
protecting our neighbors from any
kind of abuse. Hate doesn’t have
a place in the Commonwealth of
Massachusetts.”
Sen. Ryan Fattman (R-Sutton)
who voted against the bill, said
that while he supports the underlying
premise of the legislation, he
voted “No” because he vehemently
objects to a provision that prohibits
local and state law enforcement
from working with federal
law enforcement to apprehend
dangerous felons accused of committing
violent crimes.
The only two other senators
who voted against the bill, Sens.
Peter Durant (R-Spencer) and Kelly
Dooner (R-Taunton), did not respond
to repeated requests from
Beacon Hill Roll Call asking them
why they voted against the bill,
nor did they speak out against the
bill during Senate debate on it.
(A “Yes” vote is for the bill. A “No”
BEACON | SEE PAGE 17
~ HELP WANTED ~
׉	 7cassandra://WnQ2y4_gFU1uZQsCGresRSgD_WmN4e9TBGzjmLZ5238+j` j"\^D^T׉ETHE EVERETT ADVOCATE – FRiDAy, MAy 15, 2026
Page 17
BEACON | FROM PAGE 16
vote is against it.)
Sen. Sal DiDomenico Yes
GET OPINION OF SUPREME
JUDICIAL COURT (S 3083) – Senate
5-35, rejected a motion to suspend
Senate rules to allow the
Senate to seek the Supreme Judicial
Court’s (SJC’s) opinion on the
constitutionality of three provisions
in the PROTECT bill.
Supporters of rule suspension
said there are serious questions
as to whether the bill is constitutional.
They argued the Senate
should seek this opinion instead
of just continuing consideration
of the measure.
Opponents of rule suspension
said that this bill was crafted carefully
and that they are confident
the bill is constitutional. They also
argued that a final version of the
bill has not yet passed and the SJC
will not likely respond because it
has ruled in the past it cannot rule
on something that has not been
given final approval.
(A “Yes” vote is for suspending
rules to allow the Senate to seek the
SJC’s opinion. A “No” vote is against
suspending the rules.)
Sen. Sal DiDomenico No
ALLOW SOME WORKING RELATIONSHIP
BETWEEN LOCAL,
STATE AND FEDERAL ENFORCEMENT
OFFICERS (S 3072) – Senate
10-29, rejected an amendment
to a section of the bill that prohibits
local and state police from participating
in civil federal immigration
enforcement.
The amendment would allow
limited cooperation between local,
state and federal law enforcement
agencies only in cases involving
individuals convicted of
serious crimes under state and
federal law such as rape, murder
and human trafficking. Under the
amendment, Massachusetts law
enforcement agencies would be
allowed to continue honoring
federal immigration detainer requests
only for these violent, convicted
felons.
“I cannot support hindering the
ability of our state and local law
enforcement to make our communities
safer by barring them from
working with federal law enforcement
to apprehend dangerous felons
accused of committing some
of the most heinous crimes,” said
amendment sponsor Sen. Ryan
Fattman (R-Sutton). He noted that
his amendment would only apply
to the “worst of the worst.”
Sen. Cindy Friedman (D-Arlington)
said that if someone’s been
convicted of a felony and been
sentenced to a Department of
Correction (DOC) facility, that person
will already be subjected to
DOC’s 287g agreement which allows
authorizing U.S. Immigration
and Customs Enforcement (ICE) to
delegate state and local law enforcement
officers the authority
to perform specified immigration
officer functions under ICE’s
direction and oversight. She noted
that the bill allows DOC to continue
this agreement beyond just
transporting that person to ICE
and deputizes a staff member at
the DOC to act as an ICE agent. She
argued that the state already participates
in a significant amount of
immigration enforcement when it
comes to those who have committed
to selling felonies.
“While it is my understanding
that the unamended PROTECT Act
allows law enforcement cooperation
with federal officials when serious
crimes are being investigated,
I voted in favor of [this] amendment
out of an abundance of caution,”
said Sen. Michael Moore
(D-Millbury).
(A “Yes” vote is for the amendment
that would allow limited cooperation
between local, state and federal
law enforcement agencies only
in cases involving individuals convicted
of serious crimes. A “No” vote
is against the amendment.)
Sen. Sal DiDomenico No
ALSO UP ON BEACON HILL
LEGISLATIVE STIPENDS – The initiative
petition to reform the system
under which lawmakers receive
extra pay for serving in a
leadership position and as committee
chairs will not proceed to
the ballot following the Supreme
Judicial Court’s opinion that it is
unconstitutional, according to
Assistant Attorney General Anne
Sterman who sent a letter to Secretary
of State Bill Galvin last week
saying the measure “may proceed
no further.” Ironically in August,
Attorney General Andrea Campbell’s
office originally certified the
measure as eligible for the ballot,
but the letter nixes the proposal
in light of the court opinion. The
advisory opinion was sought by
~ LEGAL NOTICE ~
NOTICE OF MORTGAGEE’S SALE OF REAL ESTATE
By virtue and in execution of the Power of Sale contained in a certain mortgage given by 126 Central Ave LLC, to Raymond
C. Green Funding, LLC, and RCG Companies, LLC, dated December 6, 2024, and recorded at the Middlesex County
(Southern District) Registry of Deeds in Book 83556, Page 300, of which mortgage the undersigned together is the present
holder, for breach of the conditions of said mortgage and for the purpose of foreclosing the same will be sold at Public Auction,
at 1:00 P.M. on the 2nd day of June 2026, at 126 Central Avenue, Everett, MA 02149, all and singular the premises described in
said mortgage,
To wit:
126 Central Avenue, Everett, Massachusetts
The land in Everett, Massachusetts with the buildings thereon known and numbered 126 Central Avenue, bounded and
described as follows:
Beginning at a point on the Northerly side of Central Avenue at land now or formerly of Goodwin and running Southwesterly
by said Avenue 42 feet;
Thence turning and running Northwesterly in a straight line by land now or formerly of McDonald 157 feet;
Thence turning and running Northeasterly by land now or formerly of August E. Scott 42 feet to said Goodwin’s land;
Thence turning and running Southeasterly by said Goodwin’s land about 157 feet to the point of beginning.
Containing 6,594 square feet more or less.
For title, see Deed of Stephen P. Merrill and Diane T. Merrill of even delivery and duly recorded in the Middlesex South
District Registry of Deeds.
Premises to be sold and conveyed subject to and with the benefit of all rights, rights of way, restrictions, easements, covenants,
liens or claims in the nature of liens, improvements, public assessments, any and all unpaid taxes, tax titles, tax liens, water
and sewer liens and any other municipal assessments or liens or existing encumbrances of record which are in force and are
applicable, having priority over said mortgage, whether or not reference to such restrictions, easements, improvements, liens or
encumbrances is made in the deed.
Terms of sale: A deposit of twenty thousand dollars ($20,000.00) by certified or bank check will be required to be paid by
the purchaser at the time and place of sale. The balance is to be paid by wire transfer to Ligris + Associates, PC, 1188 Centre
Street, 2nd Floor, Newton, MA 02459 on or before thirty (30) days from the date of sale. Deed will be provided to purchaser for
recording upon receipt in full of the purchase price. In the event of an error in this publication, the description of the premises
contained in said mortgage shall control.
Other terms, if any, to be announced at the sale.
Raymond C. Green Funding, LLC, and RCG Companies, LLC,
Present holder of said mortgage,
By its Attorneys,
Ligris + Associates, PC
1188 Centre Street
Newton Center, MA 02459
(617) 274-1500
FC – 126 Central Ave LLC – Notice of Sale
May 08, 15, 22, 2026
the State Senate which opposes
the measure.
The high court’s justices wrote
last week that the proposal is unconstitutional
because it is in fact
a Senate rules change, not a law
change, seeking to impose reforms
to the Legislature’s internal
proceedings.
“As you know, in August 2025,
the Attorney General’s Office certified
the petition as being in proper
form for submission to the people
according to the process set forth
in the Constitution,” read the letter
BEACON | SEE PAGE 18
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9ׁH !http://eriehome.com/erielicenses/ׁׁЈנj*\^D^ 1w
9ׁH !http://homeservicescompliance.comׁׁЈנj*\^D^ 	L̒9ׁH !mailto:bob@beaconhillrollcall.comׁׁЈנj*\^D^ ̙̰9ׁHhttp://www.thewarrengroup.comׁׁЈ׉ESPage 18
THE EVERETT ADVOCATE – FRiDAy, MAy 15, 2026
BEACON | FROM PAGE 17
from Sterman. “But that certification
was proper only to the extent
the petition proposed a law, rather
than a legislative rule.”
The Legislative Effectiveness
and Accountability Partnership,
the sponsor of the possible ballot
question, had filed 96,797 signatures
(only 74,754 are needed) as a
step in getting the question on the
2026 ballot for voters to decide. It
contends that the legislative leadership
uses stipends to deliver millions
of dollars to favored legislators
and calls the money “loyalty
pay” intended to bind lawmakers
to the wishes of leadership.
All 40 senators and 108 of 160
representatives receive an additional
stipend, above their $82,046
base salary, for their positions
in the Democratic and Republican
leadership, as committee
chairs, vice chairs and the ranking
Republican on some committees.
The current Senate stipends
range from $30,207 to $119,631
while the House ones range from
$7,776. to $119,631. All of the positions
are appointed by either the
Senate President, House Speaker,
Senate Minority Leader or House
Minority Leader.
The proposal first went to the
Legislature which had until May 6
to act on it but obviously did not
do so. Under state law, if the Legislature
takes no action, proponents
~ LEGAL NOTICE ~
NOTICE OF MORTGAGEE’S SALE OF REAL ESTATE
Premises: 24 Corey Street, Unit 201, Everett, Massachusetts
By virtue and in execution of the Power of Sale contained in a certain mortgage given by Abdirahman Gulled to Mortgage Electronic
Registration Systems, Inc. (“MERS”), as mortgagee, as nominee for Residential Mortgage Services, Inc its successors and assigns
and now held by Rocket Mortgage LLC s/b/m Nationstar Mortgage LLC, said mortgage dated June 2, 2021, and recorded in the
Middlesex County (Southern District) Registry of Deeds in Book 77921, Page 389, as affected by an Assignment of Mortgage dated
February 2, 2024, and recorded in the Middlesex County (Southern District) Registry of Deeds in Book 82480, Page 9, of which
mortgage the undersigned is the present holder, for breach of the conditions in said mortgage and for the purpose of foreclosing
the same will be sold at Public Auction on June 5, 2026 at 10:00 AM Local Time upon the premises, all and singular the premises
described in said mortgage, to wit:
The “Unit” known as Unit No. 201, having a post office address of 24 Corey Street, Unit 201, Everett, Massachusetts, in a
condominium known as the Seville Place Condominium and established pursuant to Massachusetts General Laws, Chapter 183A, as
amended, by Master Deed dated 6/22/1988 and recorded with Middlesex South Registry of Deeds in Book 19141 Page 88.
Together with an undivided interest in the common areas and facilities of said Condominium and together with the rights, if any,
to exclusive use of the common areas and facilities of said Condominium as more fully set forth in the aforesaid Master Deed and
the Unit Deed. Together with the benefit of, and subject to, the easements, restrictions, conditions, rights and obligations set forth
or referred to in said Master Deed, Unit Deed and provisions of the Seville Place Condominium Declaration of Trust, its by-laws
and Rules and Regulations, recorded with said Registry of Deeds, as the same may from time to time be amended by instruments of
record.
The description of the property contained in the mortgage shall control in the event of a typographical error in this publication.
For Mortgagor’s Title see deed dated June 2, 2021, and recorded in the Middlesex County (Southern District) Registry of Deeds
in Book 77921, Page 386.
Said Unit will be conveyed together with an undivided percentage interest in the Common Elements of said Condominium appurtenant
to said Unit and together with all rights, easements, covenants and agreements as contained and referred to in the Declaration of
Condominium, as amended.
TERMS OF SALE: Said premises will be sold and conveyed subject to all liens, encumbrances, unpaid taxes, tax titles, municipal
liens and assessments, if any, which take precedence over the said mortgage above described.
TEN THOUSAND ($10,000.00) Dollars of the purchase price must be paid by a certified check, bank treasurer’s or cashier’s
check at the time and place of the sale by the purchaser. The balance of the purchase price shall be paid by a certified check, bank
treasurer’s or cashier’s check within forty-five (45) days after the date of sale.
Other terms to be announced at the sale.
Marinosci Law Group, P.C.
275 West Natick Road, Suite 500
Warwick, RI 02886
Attorney for Rocket Mortgage LLC s/b/m
Nationstar Mortgage LLC
Present Holder of the Mortgage
Telephone: (401) 234-9200
MLG File No.: 24-06656
May 08, 15, 22, 2026
must gather another 12,429 signatures
by July 1, in order for the
question to appear on the November
2026 ballot. The group
was ready to collect the additional
signatures but Secretary of State
Bill Galvin’s office said it can only
provide petitions if an initiative is
certified by the attorney general.
“Given this letter, and [the attorney
general’s] view that the petition
is not properly certified, we have
notified the petitioners that we
will not be able to provide them
with additional petitions,” Galvin
spokesperson Deb O’Malley said.
The Legislative Effectiveness
and Accountability Partnership
said it is “committed to return
in 2028 with a ballot question
to eliminate stipends altogether,”
calling the events “the Legislature’s
backdoor maneuver” to
block voters from voting on stipend
reform. In a press release,
the group said that the infrequently
used step the Senate took to request
the advisory opinion from
the justices is a “short-circuit maneuver
[that] is only available to
the Legislature.”
“The opinion that came back is,
by the justices’ own description,
advisory and non-binding,” continued
the release. “It is not a ruling.
It is not a final decision. But it
is now being used as the legal cover
to silence the voices of the voters,”
continued the release.
The group’s treasurer Jennifer
Nassour said in the release that
this “backdoor maneuver should
alarm voters across the political
spectrum.”
“The Legislature has now
demonstrated, in real time and in
front of the entire commonwealth,
exactly why this reform is needed,”
said John Lippitt, the group’s chair.
“We are going to keep fighting until
this question reaches the voters
where it belongs. The next question
will not be how to reform the
stipend system, it will be to end it.
We would have preferred reform.
The Legislature has forced us to
move to eliminate it.”
“FOREIGN” SOCIAL SECURITY
(H 260) – The Revenue Committee
held a hearing on legislation
that would extend the state tax
treatment currently applied to Social
Security income to public retirement
income earned abroad.
Under current law, Social Security
benefits are exempt from state
taxation, but foreign public pensions
are not.
Co-sponsors Rep. Lindsay Sabadosa
(D-Northampton) and Sen.
Jo Comerford (D-Northampton)
said they filed this bill to correct
an inequity affecting a small but
distinct group of retirees. “Some
individuals spent a portion of their
careers working abroad, during
which time they contributed to a
foreign public retirement system
rather than U.S. Social Security,”
said the pair. “Upon retiring in Massachusetts,
they receive no Social
BEACON | SEE PAGE 19
׉	 7cassandra://-eNyl3zk8Ur0ae0nmzqBLK-UnaWyD4JkUP83-H8kG0w,` j"\^D^V׉ETHE EVERETT ADVOCATE – FRiDAy, MAy 15, 2026
Page 19
REAL ESTATE TRANSAC TIONS
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
Fedor, Jean Claude
BUYER2
Boesch-Angel, Jordan A Munoz, Elisa
Campos, Oscar G
Curtin, Adrian
BEACON | FROM PAGE 18
Security credit for those years and
must rely on their foreign pension
to fill that gap. Taxing this income
at the state level diminishes what
retirees need to live with dignity
and peace.”
SAFETY IN SCHOOLS (H
5157) – The Education Committee
held a hearing on a proposal
that supporters said would
provide support for school districts
that want to develop more
holistic safety practices that do
not rely on school-based policing
and clarify the parameters for
appropriate use of police powers
in schools. The bill would create
grants for school safety models
like Oakland’s “peacekeeper” program;
clarify boundaries on what
conduct should be addressed by
school resource officers; promote
de-escalation and anti-bias techniques;
and establish data-driven
accountability measures.
Rep. Lindsay Sabadosa said she
filed the bill because every student
deserves to feel safe and supported
in their school. She said
that too often, students of color
bear the brunt of school policing,
facing disciplinary interventions
that their peers do not. She noted
the bill creates accountability, clarifies
the role of law enforcement
in schools and sets up a mechanism
to invest in proven alternatives
that ensure that all students
will be treated with dignity.
THE “ENOUGH” FUND (S
3022) – The Committee on Community
Development and Small
Businesses held a hearing on legislation
that would establish the
ENOUGH Fund, a statewide initiative
to support comprehensive,
community driven strategies
that reduce poverty in distressed
neighborhoods. The program
aligns housing, education,
health, workforce and social services
to improve long term outcomes
for children and families.
The fund would be administered
Campos, Andres G
Vasquez, Eli
Fedor, Dontornia
SELLER1
S T &T Realty LLC
Oscar & Sophia Campos Inter Campos, Oscar
Curtin, Jared G
Hercules, Mauricio A
by the Executive Office of Housing
and Livable Communities
and could receive state and private
funds.
“The Harlem Children’s Zone [in
New York City] is a striking example
of community, government
and philanthropy working in unison
to radically improve thousands
of people’s lives for the better and
it was inspiring to visit and learn
about this seminal project with my
Chelsea colleagues,” said sponsor
Sen. Sal DiDomenico (D-Everett).
“I am proud and excited to bring
this innovative framework here to
help combat poverty in my district
and all over the commonwealth.
The reason an initiative like this
works is because they include holistic
and community-driven programs
that address the root causes
of poverty and offer wrap-around
high-quality services across every
aspect of life from education to
health care to childcare to community
building and so much more.”
OFFICIAL STATE CRUSTACEAN
(H 5335) – The Committee on
State Administration and Regulatory
Oversight will hold a hearing
on May 20th on a bill that would
make the American lobster the official
state crustacean.
“I filed this bill with Sen. Patrick
O’Connor to celebrate a significant
sector of the state’s blue economy,
our historic maritime culture and
uplift a sustainable fishery,” said
co-sponsor Rep. Joan Meschino
(D-Hull). “We were happy to file the
bill in partnership with the Massachusetts
Lobstermen Association.”
“[The bill] recognizes the maritime
heritage of Massachusetts
and the hardworking fishing
communities that have shaped
our coastal economy for generations,”
said co-sponsor Sen. Patrick
O’Connor (R-Weymouth). “Specifically
in the district that I represent
on the South Shore, I have
long worked with members of
the lobstering industry, and experienced
first-hand the vital role
Hercules, Rosa I Tejada De
lobstermen/women have in supporting
local jobs, small businesses
and our broader seafood economy.
Recognizing the lobster here
is about honoring our own history,
our fishermen and the dynamic
cultural and economic impact of
this species here.”
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 Senate
chambers. They note that their
jobs also involve committee work,
research, constituent work and
other matters that are important
to their districts.
Critics say that the Legislature
does not meet regularly or long
enough to debate and vote in
public view on the thousands of
pieces of legislation that have
been 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 of May 4-8, the
House met for a total of 43 minutes
and the Senate met for a total
of ten hours and 32 minutes.
Mon. May 4
House11:00 a.m. to 11:23 a.m.
Senate 11:12 a.m. to 1:59 p.m.
Tues. May 5
SELLER2
ADDRESS
15-17 Jones St
65 Nichols St
74 Everett St
44 Walnut St
No House session.
No Senate session.
Wed. May 6
No House session.
No Senate session.
Thurs. May 7
House11:01 a.m. to 11:21 a.m.
Senate 11:07 a.m. to 6:52 p.m.
Fri. May 8
No House session.
No Senate session.
CITY
Everett
Everett
Everett
Everett
DATE
04.23.26
04.23.26
04.22.26
04.21.26
PRICE
450000
735000
650000
765000
Bob Katzen welcomes feedback
at bob@beaconhillrollcall.com
Bob founded Beacon Hill Roll Call in 975
and was inducted into the
New England Newspaper
and Press Association (NENPA)
Hall of Fame in 2019.
Copyright © 2026 Beacon Hill Roll Call.
All Rights Reserved.
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THE EVERETT ADVOCATE – FRiDAy, MAy 15, 2026
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617.699.9383
Senior Citizen Discount
~ School Bus Drivers Wanted ~
7D Licensed School Bus Drivers
ADVOCATE
Call now!
617-387-2200
ADVERTISE ON THE WEB AT
WWW.ADVOCATENEWS.NET
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.
CLASSIFIEDS
׉	 7cassandra://qYfzyoylBupjEMZsZG_JDpGG0_u6QN6LXBvrHTOcICQ?` j"\^D^X׉ETHE EVERETT ADVOCATE – FRiDAy, MAy 15, 2026
Page 21
FURNISHED ROOM FOR RENT
EVERETT
APARTMENTS FOR RENT
www.mastrocola.com
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
1 bedroom, 1 bath furnished room for rent.
$275. per week rent. Two week deposit
plus 1 week rent required.
Call: 617-435-9047 - NO TEXT
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
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.
Humane Removal Service
COMMONWEALTH
WILDLIFE CONTROL
ANIMAL & BIRD REMOVAL
INCLUDING RODENTS
CALL 617-285-0023
• HELP WANTED • HELP WANTED • HELP WANTED
Route Driver/Technician
Action Jackson Amusements is growing and seeking a Route
Driver/Technician for the greater Boston area. This role involves
servicing and maintaining amusement equipment, with daily travel
between locations. Must have a valid Massachusetts driver’s license
and meet company driving requirements.
Schedule: Monday through Friday 8:00 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. with overtime
based on business needs.
Hourly Pay: $18.00 - $28.00 per hour, based on experience and
qualifications.
Be eager to train and advance into further company roles, such as
performing on-site equipment service calls.
Send resume to jmagee@actionjacksonusa.com or call 781-324-1000
1. On the Ides of May, a Roman birthday
feast was held for the god Mercury; what
date is the Ides?
2. What person with a name like weather
was known as the “Mother of the Blues”?
3. What is the Clowns International Egg
Registry?
4. What Italian city is the setting for a 1953
movie with Gregory Peck, Audrey Hepburn
and the Mouth of Truth?
5. On May 16, 1929, was the first Academy
Awards ceremony. Was it broadcast?
6. What is the world’s most isolated inhabited
island: Azores, Tristan da Cunha or
Wake?
7. In Portland, Maine, is the International
Cryptozoology Museum; what is cryptozoology?
8.
In what year was the first-known use of
“carpetbagger”: 1830, 1867 or 1917?
9. On May 17, 1967, a 1925 state law was
repealed that involved a trial known by
what animal’s name?
10. What is the official folk song of Massachusetts
(on the 1976 album “Amigo”)?
11. What is a double eagle?
12. In 1981 the bestselling book was about
what: Rubik’s cube, food or becoming
wealthy?
13. On May 18, 1980, what USA volcano
erupted?
14. What is “Mother May I”?
15. How are the governments of France, Taiwan
and Ukraine similar?
16. On May 19, 1883, the first Buffalo Bill’s
Wild West show opened; it later included
what horseback riders?
17. Where in Massachusetts would you find
a cemetery with Author’s Ridge?
18. What city has The Neon Museum: Las Vegas,
Los Angeles or Reno?
19. At what known as “The Run for the Roses”
is the winning horse covered with a
blanket of 554 red roses?
20. May 20 is World Metrology Day; what is
metrology?
ANSWERS
Steps Stoops Rebuilt or Repaired
Chimney Rebuilt or Repaired
House Foundation Leaks Repaired
All Basement Repairs
Walkways, Driveways & Patios Installed
Chimney Inspection
Roofing & Siding Installed
Masonry Repairs
Window Installation & Repairs
Carpentry & Waterproofing
617-955-5164
toughbuildmasonryandconstuction.com
toughbuildjohn@gmail.com
1. The 15th
2. Gertrude “Ma Rainey” Pridgett
3. Their faces get painted on eggs,
preserving their identity so their look
cannot be copied.
4. Rome (“Roman Holiday”)
5. It was the only one not broadcast on
radio or TV.
6. Tristan da Cunha
7. Search for and study of animals to see if
they exist, such as legendary animals
8. 1867
9. “Scopes Monkey Trial” (State of
Tennessee v. John T. Scopes)
10. “Massachusetts” by Arlo Guthrie
11. On a golf hole, three strokes under par
12. “The Simple Solution to Rubik’s Cube”
13. Mount St. Helens in Washington State
14. A playground game where the
“Mother” instructs others to take
various lengths of steps
15. They have both a prime minister and
president.
16. The Congress of Rough Riders of the
World (Teddy Roosevelt commanded
volunteer cavalry nicknamed Rough
Riders.)
17. Concord (in Sleepy Hollow Cemetery)
18. Las Vegas
19. Kentucky Derby
20. The science of measurement
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THE EVERETT ADVOCATE – FRiDAy, MAy 15, 2026
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TRINITY REAL ESTATE
321 MAIN STREET | SAUGUS, MA | VILLAGE PARK
TrinityHomesRE.com
TrinityHomesRE.com
581 Proctor Ave, Revere, MA 02151
List Price: $1,415,000
Listed by: Annemarie Torcivia Cell: 781.983.5266
Solid brick 4-unit mixed-use investment at 581 Proctor Ave
& 233 Washington St featuring 3 residential units and a
2000+ sq ft commercial dance studio with long-term tenant
of 39 years. Residential units include two 4-room/2bedroom/1-bath
apartments and one 6-room/3-bedroom unit
with office or den. Common laundry room. Property
currently operating at a strong 9% cap rate. All tenants are
Section 8 with reliable income stream. All Delead
Certificates in hand. Excellent cash flow, durable
construction, and exceptional tenant stability make this a
true investor opportunity. Dance studio leased till 2029.
23 Main Street, Unit 2, Topsfield, MA 01983
List Price: $450,000
Listed by: Lori Johnson Cell: 781.718.7409
781.231.9800
354 Broadway, Unit 3, Lynn, MA 01904
List Price: $259,900
Listed by: Lucia Ponte Cell: 781.883.8130
This unique, handicap accessible, pet friendly condo is ideally located and
offers convenient, easy living in a meticulously maintained first floor unit. Set
near Lynn Woods Reservation and close to Breed’s Pond and Walden Pond.
You’ll enjoy easy access to beautiful outdoor spaces for exploring, and
relaxing. The open layout provides comfortable living space with a spacious
living room and kitchen, along with a generously sized bedroom. Both the
bathroom and kitchen offer ample closet space and storage. Enjoy your
morning coffee or summer nights relaxing on your private patio. The unit also
includes additional storage, perfect for seasonal items. The reasonable condo
fee includes heat and hot water for added value. The well-maintained building
provides peace of mind for both homeowners and investors alike. Conveniently
located near restaurants, shops, public transportation, highway and more, this
unit is perfect for first time buyers, downsizers, or investors.
The Spring Market is in Full Force!
Contact us for your free market analysis and
find out your home’s worth!
Sun-splashed recently renovated 2-bedroom condo located on the second
floor of a charming two-family home. This bright and inviting unit features
an abundance of windows, hardwood flooring, LED recessed lighting, central
air and in-unit laundry. The updated kitchen offers quartz countertops, new
appliances, and durable laminate flooring, seamlessly opens to a spacious
living area—perfect for entertaining, versatile bonus space ideal for a home
office plus future expansion potential with access to a walk-up third level
waiting for your ideas. Additional highlights include two deeded off-street
parking spaces and a fenced backyard for added privacy and outdoor
enjoyment. Ideally situated in historic downtown Topsfield, this home offers
convenient access to local shops, dining, and all the charm the area has to
offer.ts include in-unit laundry in the basement & two-car parking
Providing Real Estate Services for Nearly Two Decades
Servicing Saugus, Melrose, Wakefield, Malden, all North Shore communities, Boston and Beyond.
FOR
SALE
FOR
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FOR
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Page 23
LYNN - $335,000 - 2 bedroom condo , 1 full bath, convenient 1st floor
unit, 2 parking spaces, peaceful views, Riverview Condos.
SAUGUS - $799,000
11 room Colonial offers 4 bdrms, 3 full baths, hardwood flooring, central
air, finished lower level, deck, garage – lots of room for the whole family!
SAUGUS - $364,900
AFFORDABLE Suntaug Estates offers this beautiful 3 room condo,
updated granite kitchen, large bedroom with walk-in closet, pool.
LYNN - NEW PRICE! $499,900
RARE opportunity to own mixed use building! Large store front on 1st floor,
spacious 3-4 bedroom residential unit on 2nd floor, garage, off st. parking.
LYNNFIELD - $739,900 - 1st AD
7 room, 3 bedroom Cottage/Bungelow style home situated on
large 15,000 sq. ft. lot, located just outside of Center of Town.
COMMONMOVES.COM
335 CENTRAL STREET, SAUGUS, MA / (781) 233-7300
SOMERVILLE - NEW PRICE! $799,000
Charming 8 room, 3 bedroom Cottage offers 1 ½ baths,
eat-in kitchen, detached garage.
SAUGUS - $729,900 - 1st AD
Iron Works Neighborhood offer this great 9 room, 4 bedroom
Raised Ranch with 3 room in-law, 2 laundry hook-ups, 1 car
garage Desirable neighborhood!!
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THE EVERETT ADVOCATE – FRiDAy, MAy 15, 2026
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