׉?4ׁB! בCט ( (u׉׉	 7cassandra://Oo12alvESIjUcCYH7YlyvxntRaAgwPXilH3MDTRO3sU [`)׉	 7cassandra://UfakTSaYhM3gHlgz1LWh6P519MMrrAu8HkxG27_Pkqo͂O`J׉	 7cassandra://oSh9pXgeWik_9IhxxGST32WvSEuWV0qEWzbCiJwf0gg'`̰ ׉	 7cassandra://nrsxXtH0GmG6sjlKDQLJmMpb1wCv5aIq3OoHvMIEz6c B :͠c[KEbܔנc[KEbܜ Z9ׁH !http://www.messingerinsurance.comׁׁЈנc[KEbܛ ?/̡9ׁHhttp://BarnesAndNoble.comׁׁЈנc[KEbܚ 	2̌9ׁHhttp://www.Amazon.comׁׁЈנc[KEbܙ Z_9ׁHhttp://everettbank.comׁׁЈנc[KEbܘ āp9ׁHhttp://www.advocatenews.netׁׁЈנc[KEbܗ rB̲9ׁHhttp://www.advocatenews.netׁׁЈ׈Ec[JEbo׉EEV
Vol. 31, No.43
-FREEEVE
ER TT
Check out the NEW ADVOCATE ONLINE: www.advocatenews.net
DVOCD
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It costs to be the boss
A court filing filed by Mayor
Carlo DeMaria in Middlesex
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AUTHOR, AUTHOR!: Everett Kiwanis Club Immediate Past
President KathyAnn Dottin is shown presenting the Kiwanis
Club bell to Everett Kiwanian Steve Rocco during a recent
luncheon at the EHS’ Crimson Café. Rocco, a published author,
spoke about his former occupation working in his family’s
funeral home and how it inspired him to write two fi ctional
books, “The Ecstasy of Pupusas: Filled with Love” and “The
Girl Who Woke Up in the Morgue”. Steve, a past president of
the Kiwanis Club, is also an accomplished poet as well. His
books are available online at: www.Amazon.com and www.
BarnesAndNoble.com (Advocate photo)
Schnitzer Steel Commissions
Fully Electric Harbor Crane
* This account is available to all new customers and for existing customers with new monies of $50,000. Annual
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ATTE
617-387-2200
Friday, October 28, 2022
Carlo DeMaria, Jr. vs. Everett Leader Herald, Sergio Cornelio,
Joshua Resnek, Matthew Philbin and Andrew Philbin, Sr.
Philbin’s self-protection racket: Court fi ling details cash collection
scheme to prop up the Everett Leader Herald and drive mayor from offi ce
By James Mitchell
Court last week detailed how
Matthew Philbin – who pays approximately
80% of the costs of
the Everett Leader Herald out of
his own personal pocket in order
RESNEK | SEE PAGE 4
to keep what his former employee
described as a “dead business”
from going under – worked with
Kiwanis Club Welcomes
Author Steve Rocco
SINCE 1921
Messinger Insurance Agency
475 Broadway
Everett, MA 02149
Phone: 617-387-2700
Fax: 617-387-7753
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Check out our NEW website!
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THE FUTURE: The German-made LHM 550 Liebherr Harbor
Crane will load recycled metals sourced primarily from
individuals and businesses in the Northeast onto cargo ships.
Special to Th e Advocate
E
arl i er this month,
Schnitzer Steel, one of
North America’s largest
manufacturers and exporters
of recycled metals with operations
along the Mystic River
in Everett, commissioned
the company’s fi rst-ever fully
SCHNITZER | SEE PAGE 6
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`̰ ׉	 7cassandra://R3CHv3FisfmRKf9MAShqcXp-nfVjN-1-WhYu6YK4oA8 s P͠c[LEbܝט ( (u׉׉	 7cassandra://lk2kog6ziFQnlNIHGcgP8kGXAowwTwJm6w2n_FS0HKw |`)׉	 7cassandra://wCqJlmzcfyOTEjF8anjv8Yr4rj3Ptvfvb5KhJ5I0OG4͉Y`J׉	 7cassandra://yeETQoGsyNI5JMX6o1BrJJCPONqD5PzjvHG1xS5XM5M.`̰ ׉	 7cassandra://Cn8gVDviGKdy3mCX4sez979RM9BTJkpZ8_neu0Dzyyk 8̂͠c[LEbܞנc[LEbܢ n	T9ׁHhttp://WWW.SABATINO-INS.COMׁׁЈנc[LEbܡ ̷9ׁHmailto:Info@advocatenews.netׁׁЈ׉EPage 2
THE EVERETT ADVOCATE – FRiDAy, OCTObER 28, 2022
Everett father needs new kidney
55
3.15
5.47
By Container Only
5.15
DEF SALE!
$13.99/ 2.5 gals
E
verett resident José Miguel
Arellano Valdés, 38, needs
a kidney due to stage 4 kidney
failure from the onset of
an autoimmune disease and
COVID-19.
Arellano Valdés and his wife,
Erika, have lived in Everett
for more than two decades
and share a four-year-old son
named Miguel Ángel. Before
becoming ill, José worked as a
full-time welder to support his
family. He is currently undergoing
peritoneal dialysis for several
hours daily and is on the
kidney transplant list at Massachusetts
General Hospital. He
needs a donor with O negative
blood, but if a person who is eligible
to donate is not a match,
there is a kidney swap program
through Massachusetts General
Hospital which would aid him
in getting the kidney he needs.
The Kidney Transplant Evaluation
Program is at Massachusetts
General Hospital’s
location in Chelsea at 100 Everett
Ave.
Mayor DeMaria Announces Holiday Assistance Program
M
ayor Carlo DeMaria and
the offi ce of Human Services
invites low-income Everett
residents to apply for our
Holiday Assistance Program at
The Connolly Center located at
90 Chelsea St.
Applicants must show proof
of residency, provide income
verification and birth certificates
for children under the
age of 18.
Applications will be taken at
The Connolly Center beginning
Monday, October 31 and the
deadline to submit an application
is Friday, November 18.
The weekly schedule to visit the
Connolly Center and submit an
application will be as follows:
Mondays, Tuesdays, and
Thursdays from 9am until 3pm
Fridays from 9am until
11:30am.
For additional information,
please contact Andrea at 617394-2260.
OUR
OFFICE HAS MOVED TO
519 BROADWAY, EVERETT
SABATINO INSURANCE
AGENCY
For Advertising with Results,
call The Advocate Newspapers
at
617-387-2200
or Info@advocatenews.net
Rocco Longo, Owner
519 BROADWAY
EVERETT, MA 02149
PHONE: (617) 387-7466
FAX: (617) 381-9186
Visit us online at:
WWW.SABATINO-INS.COM
׉	 7cassandra://3Rb4h1HEvU-q3Qkms7JywXB-E88Ym-kJxQLDB1bDUNk1
`̰ c[JEbq׉E?THE EVERETT ADVOCATE – FRiDAy, OCTObER 28, 2022
Page 3
JOE MCGONAGLE
ALWAYS THERE FOR EVERETT
Representative McGonagle's Record
Transportation Bond Bill
$8,500,000 (H5151)
Amelia Earhart Dam infrastructure
protection from coastal flooding
Infrastructure Bill
$500,000 (H5065)
For a multi-use path connecting the
Northern Strand Bike Path to the Woods
Memorial Bridge pedestrian underpass
Fiscal Year '22 & '23 Budgets
$500,000
Creation & implementation of a first-time
home buyers program for Everett
Residents
$400,000
For expanding substance abuse counseling
and programs
$225,000
For the Malden River Boathouse
$100,000
For Police & Fire Communication Upgrades
ELECTION DAY IS TUESDAY, NOV 8
His Opponents Record
DUI - State Ethics - Drug Raid
JOE MCGONAGLE
GETS THE JOB DONE!
PAID FOR BY THE COMMITTEE TO ELECT JOE MCGONAGLE
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THE EVERETT ADVOCATE – FRiDAy, OCTObER 28, 2022
Mayor announces Community Bowl event Oct. 29
Special to The Advocate
M
ayor Carlo DeMaria is
pleased to announce
that the City of Everett, in
partnership with the Boston
Renegades, will be hosting
the Community Bowl
on Saturday, Oct. 29 from 1
p.m. to 5 p.m. at Everett Veterans
Memorial Stadium (located
on Cabot Street). As
part of Mayor DeMaria’s “Everett
For Everyone” initiative,
residents are invited to come
watch the Everett High School
(EHS) Alumni take on the Boston
Renegades Alumni in a
fun and competitive game
of flag football. The goal is to
bring the Everett community
together to enjoy some flag
football and help local resident
Brandon Conde with his
recovery from a spinal cord injury
he suffered in 2019.
The event will have free admission
for all who attend and
will feature concession stands
selling food, drinks and merchandise
from both teams.
All proceeds from the event
will go towards supporting
Conde’s recovery. The event
RESNEK| FROM PAGE 1
$4.95
GALLON
We accept: MasterCard * Visa *
& Discover
Price Subject to Change
without notice
100 Gal. Min.
24 Hr. Service
781-286-2602
his publisher, Josh Resnek, to collect
thousands of dollars in cash
from opponents of the Mayor to
fund a political campaign to defeat
DeMaria and elect his opponents
in the summer of 2021.
According to a court document
that is backed up by dozens
of pages of deposition transcripts
and copies of emails and a
“strategy memo” sent by Resnek,
Philbin – who bitterly disliked DeMaria
and wanted to drive him
out of office because the Maywill
begin with a pregame
“tailgate” from 1 p.m. to 2:30
p.m. for residents to come together,
play field games and
have fun. The matchup between
the EHS Alumni and
Renegades Alumni will kick
off at 3 p.m. and will feature a
halftime show for all to enjoy.
After the game, there will
also be a “Meet the Team Mixer”
at the Schiavo Club (located
at 71 Tileston St.) from 5
p.m. to 10 p.m. Attendees 21
and older only are invited to
attend to meet the players
from both participating teams
or did not use taxpayers’ dollars
to purchase insurance contracts
through the Philbin Insurance
Company and did not offer Philbin’s
Everett business interests favorable
treatment – approved a
campaign to collect thousands
of dollars in “cash infusion” from
wealthy individuals who wanted
DeMaria defeated. In the emails,
Resnek boasted of picking up
envelopes full of “C-Notes” from
the back of a car, receiving thousands
of dollars in cash from other
sources and picking up “commitments”
from wealthy individuals
to pay the Leader Herald so
that it could print over 10,000
copies of the Leader Herald filled
with derogatory articles about
the Mayor, and deliver them door
to door to 8,000 Everett residences
and 2,400 other locations each
week for seven weeks in August
and September 2021. That was
just before the primary election
for Mayor in Everett and would
culminate in what Resnek told his
boss would be an “atomic bomb”
that Philbin and Resnek would
“drop” on DeMaria and, hopefully
(from their perspective), result
in Mayor DeMaria’s defeat.
Time to worry
According to recent testimoand
support Brandon Conde
through donations. There will
be food, a cash bar and plenty
of fun.
The EHS Alumni team will be
comprised of football players
who played in the championship
seasons 2001, 2002 and
2003, which are known as the
“three-peat” years. This is the
time period when EHS football
won the championship
for three years in a row.
The Boston Renegades is a
professional women’s football
team that is part of the Women’s
Football Alliance (WFA).
ny from Philbin’s former Vice
President for Operations, Elena
Vega, excerpts of which were attached
to the filing, the SOLE purpose
of Philbin’s “newspaper” –
which Vega testified was “not a
real newspaper” – was driving
DeMaria out of office. Every issue
was filled with articles that
made accusations of one kind or
another about DeMaria. According
to Vega, when she asked Philbin
why he was keeping afloat a
purported newspaper that was
“dead” and which required Philbin
to pay virtually all of the costs
of keeping the paper alive out
of his own pocket, including by
handing her wads of cash, Philbin
replied, “Don’t worry about
it.” Philbin’s animus against DeMaria
was so crude, Vega testified,
that Philbin told her that he
had hired a private investigator
to “follow” the Mayor in hopes
of gathering dirt on him that he
could then publish.
Besides the various emails sent
by Resnek bragging to a third
party about all the cash he was
collecting from interested parties
to pay the Leader Herald to wage
a political campaign against the
Mayor, the court filing attaches
a “strategy memo” sent by Resnek
to Philbin on July 29, 2021,
about seven weeks before the
primary in which DeMaria was
running against Fred Capone
and Gerly Adrien, in which Resnek
lays out what the strategy
will be for using $5,000 from “Mr.
A”, $5,000 from “Mr. B” and $6,000
from “Mr. C” to deliver Philbin’s
and Resnek’s “messaging” against
the Mayor to every home in Everett
every week leading up to the
election. According to the filing,
Resnek admitted that Philbin had
previously paid Resnek $10,000
to provide “public relations” services
for an opponent of DeMaria.
The court filing raised the
issue of whether Philbin and Resnek
had violated Massachusetts’s
campaign finance laws.
Strategy for dummies
In the July 2021 “Strategy
Memo” by Resnek in which he
The WFA is a professional
full-contact women’s football
league that began in 2009 and
consists of 64 active teams
across the United States (as
of the 2022 season). The Renegades
won their seventh overall
and fourth consecutive
WFA Pro National Championship
this past season.
Mayor DeMaria invites residents
to enjoy a day of community
and celebrating Everett’s
charitable nature
through a friendly game of
flag football. All are welcome
and encouraged to attend.
lays out his plan via email to
Philbin, he states, “Just a few
thoughts and scribbles about
$$$$$,” describing his plan to
blanket the city with his anti-DeMaria
campaign. In what he labels
“For Internal Use Only –
Seven Weeks Until the Primary,”
Resnek provides cost and estimates
for 10,000 newspapers to
be printed door to door and to
stores and locations: $7,000 for
delivery and $8,400 for printing
for a total of $15,500. “Mr. A and
Mr. B will pay $5,000; and Mr. C
will pay $6,000 – Explanation –
These three payments to us will
pay almost entirely for all our
printing and distribution costs
for the 7 weeks. Whatever comes
in from advertising will also add
into our bottom line. For the next
7 weeks, you get a free ride from
cash infusions. There will be more
than several thousand for our use
in addition. Then comes the ten
weeks until the ELECTION in first
week of November.”
Resnek continues: “STRATEGY
- We should remain vigorous
creating the news windows
for Adrien and Capone. They will
play into this. It makes messaging
and campaigning easier for
them and more beneficial. With
our citywide circulation door to
door their messaging more than
anything else is crucial. Also crucial
are the Carlo bits and pieces
we have for publication. Our
question is how to best maximize
what we have before the
September 21 Primary and when
exactly to publish those bits and
pieces. I would suggest we print
all of what we have in an insert
to the Leader Herald with big images
of Adrien, Capone and DeMaria
on the front cover like a
Globe Magazine insert into the
Sunday paper. This achieves several
of our ambitions to look, feel
and sound real to the people of
the city receiving our publication
on their door steps.
“An atomic attack on Wednesday,
September 15, with an insert
of say 8 tab pages including
RESNEK | SEE PAGE 24
׉	 7cassandra://A5-iLd21RjAjqpRLXWfvtqsxw4DzK3IqvEVj_YIiIAg,X`̰ c[JEbs׉ETHE EVERETT ADVOCATE – FRiDAy, OCTObER 28, 2022
Page 5
~ Guest Commentary ~
The Great Pretender
M
y opponent pretends
he is leading the way
to provide housing for our
most vulnerable residents,
yet he wants to take away
much-needed affordable
senior and veteran housing.
The city purchased Pope
John High School with the
support of the City Council
for senior and veteran
housing for Everett residents.
I spent six years on
the Housing Committee in
the Massachusetts House
with four years as the Vice
Chairman, working to understand
and address housing
problems statewide. I
have witnessed hundreds of
residents around the Commonwealth
testify on all
aspects of housing. One of
the biggest issues we faced
during my tenure on the
committee was affordable
senior housing for the “Baby
Boomer” Generation, the
largest and fastest-growing
population in our country.
Similarly, our brave veterans
are facing a serious
lack of affordable housing.
Nationwide, 22 veterans a
day are committing suicide,
many of them due to homelessness.
We must do what
we can. The St. Therese project
is the perfect example
of the senior and veteran
housing shortage in Everett.
There were 540 applicants
for 77 units and the
demand for more housing
like this is clear. My opponent
wants to stop the Pope
John Housing Development
and waste $140 million of
taxpayers’ money to rehab
an old school that will do
nothing to solve the overcrowding
issue at Everett
High School. While overcrowding
is a district-wide
concern, the Mayor and his
administration have an alternative
plan to build a
new High School and after
state reimbursement would
be a comparable cost. My
opponent has no plan for
our seniors or veterans. My
opponent spews vitriol and
his vindictiveness clouds his
~ Letter-to-the-Editor ~
School Committee
Hypocrisy Continues
Dear Editor,
I watched the October 17 Everett
School Committee meeting
and was struck again by
the hypocrisy of committee
member Samantha Lambert
regarding children who do not
reside in Everett but are, nevertheless,
attending Everett
public schools.
It was reported that Ms.
Lambert’s landlord, a wellknown
former chairman of
the Everett School Committee,
has three grandchildren
who do not reside in Everett
and are, nevertheless, attending
an Everett public elementary
school.
Instead of addressing and
trying to rectify this particular
objectionable situation,
HYPOCRISY | SEE PAGE 6
~ OP-ED ~
T
here’s been a lot of talk
lately from the School
Superintendent and some
School Committee members
about overcrowding in the Everett
Public Schools. This has
the feel of an intentional distraction
from a much bigger
issue: a steady decline in student
learning, as evidenced by
lower MCAS scores again. This
is despite having an additional
71 teachers since Oct. 1, 2018,
according to the Department
of Elementary & Secondary Education
(DESE).
A review of fi gures on the
DESE website shows that student
enrollment in the Everett
Public Schools over the last 10
to 15 years, as recorded yearly
on October 1, has remained remarkably
steady. (While overall
enrollment remains high,
there was an actual decrease
of 315 students when the October
1 fi gure in 2015 is compared
to the 2021 fi gure.)
While it is true, as the Superintendent
has stated, that the
schools are now operating beyond
their capacity to the tune
OP-ED | SEE PAGE 7
his family and friends
Halloween Night
Oct. 31 from 5 to 8 p.m.
Halloween Treats
and fun
125 Clarence St.
617-387-3327
judgment for any of the administration’s
plans, regardless
of the cost. He does
not understand that being
a public servant is about
compromise and collaboration.
Now, after two failed
attempts to become State
Representative as a democrat,
my opponent is running
on an anti-leadership
platform to be one of two
independents in the MA
House of Representatives.
This would be disastrous for
the people of Everett. He is
a voice of obstruction that
will deliver nothing for Everett.
His slogan is “It’s time
for a change”. I agree, my
opponent’s behavior has
no place in City Hall, Beacon
Hill, or anywhere in our
community. My opponent’s
career as a State Legislator
would be much like his as a
City Councilor – unaccomplished.
Regards,
Joe
McGonagle
Middlesex
State Representative
28th
Join Senator
Sal DiDomenico
Check out the NEW Advocate Online at:
www.advocatenews.net
Happy
Halloween!
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THE EVERETT ADVOCATE – FRiDAy, OCTObER 28, 2022
SCHNITZER| FROM PAGE 1
electric harbor crane.
With an operating arm extending
nearly 180 feet wide,
the German-made LHM 550
Liebherr Harbor Crane will
load recycled metals sourced
primarily from individuals
and businesses in the Northeast
onto cargo ships to be
delivered to smelters and
foundries across the globe.
Once deployed, the Liebherr
crane will replace the company’s
existing diesel-powered
crane with a zero emissions
alternative. The project
builds on recent investments
at Schnitzer’s Oakland, California
location, including the
purchase of four all-electric
support vehicles that replace
diesel-fueled tractors, and installation
of a 1,600-kilowatt
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HYPOCRISY | FROM PAGE 5
Ms. Lambert recommended
that strict address enforcement
begin in Grade 9. She
said nothing about address
enforcement in the elementary
grades, where her landlord’s
grandchildren seem to
be in obvious violation.
School Superintendent Tahiliani
added to the hypocrisy,
in my opinion, when she
put on a slideshow on how she
and her team are going to stiff -
en student residency requirements
and the enforcement
thereof. Under her plan, there
are supposed to be more visits
by attendance offi cers to the
addresses provided by parents
to verify that students actually
reside where they say they do.
Interestingly, the Superintendent
made this presentation
in the apparent knowledge
that, one, she has hired
two school attendance offi cers
who are non-residents of Everett,
and, two, one of these two
non-resident attendance offi -
cers has enrolled his children
in the Everett public schools.
(Isn’t this something like having
a member of the Everett
police force who burglarizes
local homes during his off -duand
lower our operational
carbon footprint.”
“Schnitzer immediately
gravitated to the LHM 550
Liebherr Harbor Crane, which
boasts zero emissions and utilizes
local power supply,” said
Liebherr’s Head of Sales, Maritime
Cranes, Winston Ziegler.
“We are thrilled to partner
with Schnitzer to implement
this technology that delivers
important environmental
benefi ts to its operation.”
The steel, copper, aluminum,
and dozens of other
critical metals recycled at
Schnitzer facilities represent
essential manufacturing inputs
for low-carbon technologies
like solar panels,
wind turbines, electric vehicles
and battery storage systems.
Beyond the inherent
environmental benefits of
using recycled materials to
produce these technologies,
Schnitzer is making signifi -
cant investments to reduce
emissions from its own recycling
operations.
“Reaching our sustainability
goal of net zero emissions
by 2050 is a driving force behind
the investment,” said
Schnitzer’s Vice President of
Government & Public Aff airs,
Colin Kelly. “We look forward
to exploring more opportunities
to deploy electric
equipment and advance
our environmental commitments
in Everett and our surrounding
communities.”
ty hours?)
One can’t help but wonder if
the Superintendent is ignoring
this situation because of her
friendship with the father of
this non-resident attendance
offi cer, who is none other than
the aforementioned, wellknown,
former chairman of
the Everett School Committee?
During the October 17
committee meeting, no one
brought up this former chairman’s
other son, an Everett
School Department employee
who had been investigated
by the law fi rm of Cliff ord
and Kenny, LLP at the behest
of a former school committee
member. Cliff ord and Kenny
recommended that this son’s
school-issued work computer
be turned over to the Middlesex
County District Attorney
for further investigation and
that the son be suspended
without pay pending the outcome
of the investigation. Ultimately,
the committee did not
take any action against this individual.
Signed,
A
concerned parent of
children attending the
English School,
Name withheld due to fear
of retaliation against them.
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Page 7
DiDomenico, McGonagle,
and Ryan Celebrate Major Progress
on Coastal Climate Resilience
Senator DiDomenico and Representatives McGonagle and Ryan
helped deliver funding in partnership with congressional offi ces,
colleagues in the state house, municipalities, and non-profi ts
SOMERVILLE – On October
12th, Mayor Katjana Ballantyne
hosted Senator DiDomenico,
Representatives McGonagle
and Ryan, along with dozens
of elected offi cials and agency
staff to celebrate collective
eff orts to protect coastal cities
along Greater Boston’s Mystic
River from sea level rise and
extreme coastal storms. Senator
DiDomenico worked with
Representatives McGonagle
and Ryan, along with other
state legislators from the Mystic
Watershed communities to
secure millions of dollars in
bonding authority to support
the development of these critical
coastal resilience projects.
The press conference featured
spokespeople from every
level of government who
were critical to the success of
this regional eff ort:
Congresswomen Clark and
Pressley’s offi ces,
Massachusetts Executive
Offi ce of Energy and Environmental
Affairs and Department
of Conservation and
OP-ED | FROM PAGE 5
of 1,204 students, that has roughly been the
case for well over 10 years. Overcrowding is
not news; worsening student performance is.
During most of the past 10 to 15 years, Everett
students outperformed their peers in all
neighboring communities, as comparisons of
MCAS scores indicate. Our students used to
get rave reviews while doing conspicuously
better on MCAS than students in comparable,
nearby communities. Even though it has
been reported MCAS scores have declined
across the state, Everett has seen a sharper
decrease in comparison to their peers, even
dropping below the Boston Public Schools for
the past three years.
Besides overcrowding, the current school
administration likes to highlight situations
where there may be as many as 30 kids in a
classroom. This is nothing new. And it usually
results from students who are not fl uent in
English being assigned to classes with students
who are fl uent and do not need extra
attention.
However, local school principals will tell
you that such classes have two teachers, as
well as various assisting paraprofessionals, assigned
to them. Those principals will also tell
you that schools with 30-student classrooms
have classes at the same grade levels with 20
students or fewer.
Enough, Madame Superintendent, with the
overcrowding talk! Please start telling us how
you’re going to improve MCAS scores.
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The press conference celebrates major progress made on the
fi rst three major fl ood pathways.
Recreation,
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with other state legislators
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senior staff from Boston,
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THE EVERETT ADVOCATE – FRiDAy, OCTObER 28, 2022
CHA releases Community Health Needs Assessment for Metro-North Boston
Advocate Staff Report
R
ecently community health
system Cambridge Health
Alliance (CHA) released the 2022
Regional Wellbeing Report: A
Community Health Needs Assessment.
The report examines
the health of the communities
in CHA’s service area, including
their strengths and challenges,
to improve individual and
community health. This is the
fi rst time CHA has conducted a
Community Health Needs Assessment
(CHNA) across its entire
service area. CHA prioritized
lifting up the voices and experiences
of community members
closest to the impact of inequities,
aligning resources and
working toward developing
strategies to address root causes
of health disparities.
Over the course of the yearlong
assessment process, thousands
of community members
were engaged to share their
experiences on topics including
behavioral health, medical
health and social determinants
of health, such as stable, aff ordable
housing, access to healthy
foods and safe transportation.
This feedback was complemented
by other data from a variety
of sources. Together, they provided
a deeper understanding
of the community conditions
that aff ect well-being and established
the foundation that
will inform future collaborative
CHA Logo
health improvement eff orts.
“Improving the health of our
communities is core to CHA’s
mission, and we are excited to
be part of this critical initiative
to inform and inspire action in
our region,” said CHA CEO Assaad
Sayah, MD. “We look forward
to learning together from
the report about what factors
are impacting the well-being of
our residents. CHA is committed
to working collaboratively on
the next steps of this community
health improvement process.”
The next step is Implementation
Strategy planning which
will focus on developing or supporting
policies, programs and
practices that foster and promote
three equity principles
in four focus areas to improve
the conditions that impact the
health of the communities that
CHA serves:
Equity principles:
· Language justice
· Inclusion of under-represented
voices in leadership and decision-making
·
Environments that acknowledge
unique stressors of diverse
communities to promote collective
care
Focus areas:
· Housing: aff ordability, stability,
safety.
· Equitable economies: food
systems, good local jobs and
working conditions, caregiving.
· Equity and access to care,
services and information within
and across various institutions
· Climate health and justice: air
and water quality and climate
change preparedness.
“I am grateful for all the members
of our community who
took the time and shared their
thoughtful perspectives on the
issues that impact health and
well-being,” said Everett Mayor
Carlo DeMaria. “The equity principles
and the priorities identifi
ed by this assessment process
align with other important
work underway in Everett and
we look forward to our continued
partnership with CHA to improve
the health of all our residents.”
“We
are truly appreciative to
CHA for implementing this crucial
effort which will benefit
so many of our residents,” said
Malden Mayor Gary Christenson.
“Our continued partnership
in advancing the health and
well-being of those in our community
is a top priority.”
“Thanks to CHA for working
alongside city staff , local organizations,
and residents to improve
the health and well-being
of our communities,” said
Medford Mayor Breanna Lungo-Koehn.
“We are excited to
address what emerged from this
collaborative process together.”
“The nuanced and thoughtful
Community Health Needs
Assessment Survey by CHA
demonstrates how thoroughly
the health of our neighborhood
is interconnected with issues
like housing stability and
economic equality,” said Somerville
Mayor Katjana Ballantyne.
“We value the deep partnership
with CHA that creates spaces
for Somerville residents to
share their lived experiences
and health needs.”
For more information about
CHA’s Community Health
Needs Assessment process,
contact Renee Cammarata
Hamilton (rcammaratahamilton@challiance.org)
or Laura
McNulty (lmcnulty@challiance.org).
To see the report
online, please access it on the
CHA website: https://challiance.
org/community-health/community-health-data-and-reports/community-health-data-and-reports
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Page 9
Updated COVID-19 booster and $75 incentive: two more reasons to get vaccinated now
Free, family-friendly vaccination clinics planned for Everett residents
T
he Massachusetts Depar
tmen t
of
Pub -
lic Health (DPH) is providing
free, family-friendly
COVID-19 vaccination clinics
across the Commonwealth
this fall where its residents
can get vaccinated or
boosted against COVID-19
and receive a $75 gift card
for each dose administered.
Staying up to date on vaccines,
including boosters,
is the most eff ective way to
prevent getting seriously ill
from COVID-19.
The following vaccination
clinics off ering the incentive
are especially for residents of
Everett:
Thursday, Oct. 27 – 1 p.m.
to 5 p.m.
Eliot Family Resource Center,
548 Broadway
Friday, Oct. 28 – 11 a.m.
to 3 p.m.
Parlin Memorial Library,
410 Broadway
Saturday, Oct. 29 – 10
a.m. to 2 p.m.
Pope John building, 888
Broadway (rear entrance)
Saturday, Oct. 29 – 1 p.m.
to 5 p.m.
Everett Haitian Community
Center, 427A Broadway
Monday, Oct. 31 – 2 p.m.
to 4 p.m.
Parlin Memorial Library,
410 Broadway
Thursday, Nov. 3 – 1 p.m.
to 5 p.m.
Eliot Family Resource Center,
548 Broadway
Saturday, Nov. 5 – 10 a.m.
to 2 p.m.
Pope John building, 888
Broadway (rear entrance)
Thursday, Nov. 10 – 1
p.m. to 5 p.m.
Eliot Family Resource Center,
548 Broadway
Saturday, Nov. 12 – 10
a.m. to 2 p.m.
Pope John building, 888
Broadway (rear entrance)
Saturday, Nov. 12 – 9 a.m.
to 12 p.m.
Eliot Family Resource Center,
548 Broadway
Thursday, Nov. 17 – 1
p.m. to 5 p.m.
Eliot Family Resource Center,
548 Broadway
Saturday, Nov. 19 – 10
a.m. to 2 p.m.
Pope John building, 888
Broadway (rear entrance)
Saturday, Nov. 26 – 1 p.m.
to 5 p.m.
Everett Haitian Community
Center, 427A Broadway
Saturday, Nov. 26 – 10
a.m. to 2 p.m.
Pope John building, 888
Broadway (rear entrance)
All the clinics will off er the
updated “bivalent” COVID-19
boosters, including those
just recently authorized for
children ages fi ve and older.
These boosters provide
the best protection against
the Omicron variant and its
subvariants, which are currently
the most prevalent
strains of COVID-19 in the
United States.
“We’d like to see as many
people vaccinated as possible
and so we are offering
these community-based
COVID vaccination clinics –
including a $75 gift card in3.50
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THE EVERETT ADVOCATE – FRiDAy, OCTObER 28, 2022
Madeline English Fall Festival
425r Broadway, Saugus
Located adjacent to Kohls Plaza Route 1 South
in Saugus at the intersection of Walnut St.
We are on MBTA Bus Route 429
781-231-1111
We are a Skating Rink with
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12-8 p.m.
Sunday
Monday
Tuesday
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Rollerblades/inline skates $3.00 additional cost
Private Parties
7:30-11 p.m.
$10.00
Price includes Roller Skates
Adult Night 18+ Only
Wednesday
Thursday
Friday Everyone must pay admission after 6 p.m.
Private Parties
Private Parties
4-11 p.m.
Saturday
12-11 p.m.
$9.00
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$9.00
Everyone must pay admission after 6 p.m.
Sorry No Checks - ATM on site
Roller skate rentals included in all prices
Inline Skate Rentals $3.00 additional
BIRTHDAY & PRIVATE PARTIES AVAILABLE
www.roller-world.com
worked with my colleagues to
secure funding to ensure that
communities across our region
are preparing for the effects of
what that will look like for our
area,” said Senator DiDomenico,
Assistant Majority Leader
of the Massachusetts Senate.
“This investment is critical
for the well-being of our coastal
communities, and it benefits
the environment, workforce,
our businesses, and residents.
The importance of these resilience
projects led by the Mystic
River Watershed Association
and the Resilient Mystic Collaborative
is without question and
I am heartened to see so many
community partners and elected
officials coming together to
put a plan in place to address
these impacts on our cities and
towns.”
“I want to thank The Mystic
River Watershed Association
for bringing us all together
to acknowledge the work being
done on the Mystic and Island
End Rivers, Amelia Earhart
Dam, Chelsea Creek, and into
Boston Harbor,” said Representative
Dan Ryan. Collectively,
we have put a stake in
the ground on where our climate
resiliency efforts in the
Mystic River region should
head. As we take a few minutes
to celebrate the major
first steps we have taken on
this journey, we also reflect
on the awesome amount of
work that lies ahead. With our
community stakeholders leading
the charge, I am confident
the Mystic River state delegation
and our federal partners
in Congress, are quite adept
at seeing this necessary vision
become a reality!”
“Among the many victories
these projects have achieved,
I believe collaboration is chief
among them,” said Representative
Joseph McGonagle.
“For all these offices, community
groups and other entities to
rally around this cause is truly
incredible. I am grateful to my
legislative colleagues but esRESILIENCE
| SEE PAGE 26
Brian Grant.
Leah and Cameron Cushing.
Shown left to right, Manny
Teixeira and Lorenzo Teixeira.
Shown left to right: Danield Harr, Dimitri Kotsiopoulos, Nico Kotsiopoulos, Marco Kotsiopoulas,
and Adam Harr.
׉	 7cassandra://xNBzC4L7SxFtvKRxueLIRBxZ8kU4pfUsCgsRG5DXKqo/0`̰ c[JEby׉ETHE EVERETT ADVOCATE – FRiDAy, OCTObER 28, 2022
Page 11
Mystic River Watershed Association adds two new experts to its Board
T
he Mystic River Watershed
Association (MyRWA) is
pleased to announce the addition
of Stephanie Carvalho and
Victor Castro to the Board of Directors
on October 12, 2022.
Stephanie Carvalho (she/ella)
grew up in and is a resident of
Revere, Mass. Her background
is in the nonprofi t and education
sectors, and she currently
works in labor/workforce development
at Women Encouraging
Empowerment (WEE), a
local social services nonprofi t,
where she helps build regional
partnerships and technological
infrastructure to help local people
secure their basic needs and
good jobs. In addition to her day
job, she is a volunteer Program
Coordinator for Latino Outdoors
Boston, a member of the Revere
Public Library Board of Trustees
and the founder of the Revere
Free Store. Stephanie is also an
AmeriCorps alumna and has a
deep passion and commitment
to public service, workers’ rights
and equitable community development.
In her spare time,
she enjoys reading, photography,
being outdoors, and biking
to Revere Beach to see the
sunrise.
“I was introduced to the Mystic
River and the work that
MyRWA does through some
amazing collaborative projects
with Latino Outdoors over the
past few months! I’ve been introduced
to and inspired by
MyRWA’s community-centered
methods that drive their climate
resilience research and recreation
opportunities in neighborhoods
along the Mystic and
am excited to learn more,” said
Stephanie. “As a board member,
I’m excited to highlight and advocate
for the creation of new
bicycle path infrastructure and
public transit accessible greenspaces,
as well as work on language
access initiatives, support
workers, and help expand
access to the waterfront, especially
within the Lower Mystic
Watershed!”
Victor Castro (he/him) is a resident
of Charlestown and a ReWoods
Hole Group Senior Climate
Resiliency Specialist Nasser
Brahim, Wynn Resorts Chief
Sustainability Offi cer Erik Hansen
and Paddle Boston Co-Owner
Mark Jacobson were reelected
to second terms on the Board
of Directors. (Paddle Boston
has two locations on the Mystic.)
The board, which is now
Stephanie Carvalho
Newly elected MyRWA Board
of Directors Member
13 members strong, is charged
with organizational oversight,
leadership in strategic planning
and connecting to the wider
community. MyRWA is led
by professional staff and organizes
thousands of volunteers
working together on a project-by-project
basis.
More about the Mystic River
Watershed Association: MyRWA
works to improve the lives of the
more than 600,000 residents of
Mystic River watershed communities
through its eff orts to protect
and restore water quality,
natural habitat and open space
throughout the 76 square mile
watershed. For more information
see www.MysticRiver.org.
Victor Castro
Newly elected MyRWA Board
of Directors Member
search Data Scientist at Mass
General Brigham, where he
works on developing methods
for analyzing large real-world
datasets and understanding
and addressing the impact of
health disparities on underserved
populations. He is currently
pursuing a Ph.D. in Population
Health from Northeastern
University. Victor serves on the
Charlestown Little Mystic Steering
Committee – working to engage
the Charlestown community
in revitalizing and activating
the Little Mystic Channel.
Victor can often be found paddling
and fi shing on the Mystic
River with one of his three kids.
“I live and work within a mile
of the Mystic River in Charlestown,
yet I only recently discovered
the incredible beauty
of the river and its wildlife,” said
Victor. “As a board member I’m
excited to be a part of helping
to preserve the river and expand
opportunities for people to access,
connect, and engage with
the beautiful Mystic.”
At MyRWA’s annual meeting,
Mayor announces
Halloween Bash on Oct. 31
Special to Th e Advocate
M
ayor Carlo DeMaria is
pleased to announce
that the City of Everett will be
hosting the annual Halloween
Bash on Monday, October 31
at the Everett Recreation Center
(47 Elm St.) from 3:30 p.m.
to 6 p.m. Residents and their
families are invited to attend
the spookiest celebration of
the year – attendees will enjoy
an array of activities, arts
& crafts, children’s entertainers
and giveaways full of candy.
The event will also include
a train ride and bouncy castle
outside the Recreation Center.
Residents are encouraged
to attend in their Halloween
costumes.
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THE EVERETT ADVOCATE – FRiDAy, OCTObER 28, 2022
Team DiDomenico with Team Healey in Everett Square
A large crowd of supporters gathered to stump for Sen. Sal DiDomenico and Maura Healey for Governor recently in Everett Square.
State Senator Sal DiDomenico is shown with supporters.
SKATING CENTER
www.Roller-World.com
781-231-1111
HELP WANTED
Earn $16. Per Hour
Skate Guards • Snack Bar
& Office Help
Must be 17 years or older - Hours Can Be Arranged
Open 7 Days Per Week
Call Jerry at 617-620-9201
Located at 425R Broadway (Route 1 South), Saugus
MBTA Bus Route 429
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Page 13
Two Police Offi cers Promoted at City Hall Ceremony
By Tara Vocino
T
wo Everett police offi cers
were promoted during the
City Council meeting at City
Hall on Monday. Council President
John Hanlon put forth an
order recommending the confi
rmation of the promotion of
Everett Police Sgt. Sean Bagley
to Lieutenant, and Offi cer Brian
Herbert to Sergeant.
(Advocate photos by Tara Vocino)
City Clerk Sergio Cornelio swore in Sgt. Brian Herbert as police
sergeant.
City Clerk Sergio Cornelio swore in and promoted Lt. Sean
Bagley during Monday’s city council meeting at City Hall.
Herbert with members of his extended family. Kneeling, pictured from left to right: nephew
Anthony Herbert Jr., aunt Gail Sabella, niece Adrianna Keefe, and friend Valarie Marchese.
Middle row, pictured from left to right: uncle Alfred Sabella, cousin Stephen Sabella, wife
Stephanie Herbert and daughter Gianna Herbert. Back row, pictured from left to right: brother
Anthony Herbert Sr., son Jenarro, Sgt. Brian Herbert, mother-in-law Lucille Keefe, brother-inlaw
Joseph Keefe and father-in-law Patrick Keefe and friend Michael Marchese.
Lynn Police Offi cer Brendan Powicki, who is his son, pinned
Police Lt. Sean Bagley.
Mayor Carlo DeMaria and Police Chief Steven Mazzie, far left
and far right, congratulated Sgt. Brian Herbert and Lt. Sean
Bagley on their promotions.
Proud wife Stephanie Herbert pinned her husband.
Pictured from left to right: their son Jenarro Herbert, Sgt.
Brian Herbert, his wife Stephanie Herbert and his daughter
Gianna Herbert.
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THE EVERETT ADVOCATE – FRiDAy, OCTObER 28, 2022
EXCELLENCE IN THE EPS
Community partnerships at work
KIWANIS LUNCHEON: Shown from left to right: Standing: Everett Director of Veterans
Affairs Antoine Coleman, Malden Superintendent of Schools Ligia Noriega-Murphy, Everett
Superintendent of Schools Priya Tahiliani and EHS Principal Dennis Lynch; seated: Malden
High School Principal Christopher Mastrangelo, Malden High School Athletic Director Charlie
Conefrey and Everett High School Athletic Director Tammy Turner.
MPCU DONATION EVENT: Shown from left to right: Front row: Parlin School students Adiel
Lima, Jazmin Mejia Lemus, Tamara Novoa Aguilar, Enzo Lima, Christopher Portillo Sanchez,
Wendley Bonhomme and Helyka Hoinaski Santos; back row: MPCU VP & Chief Operating
Officer Janis Caines, MPCU Marketing Administrator Leo Lemos, Parlin School teacher Stacy
Schiavo, MPCU President & CEO John Murphy, Superintendent of Schools Priya Tahiliani, MPCU
Assistant Branch Manager in Everett Paulette Goodreau, Parlin School Principal Nancy Sutera
and Parlin School Assistant Principal Paolo Lambresa.
MPCU makes a
generous donation to
the Parlin School
In its latest show of support
and dedication to the Everett
Public Schools, the Everett
branch of Members Plus Credit
Union (MPCU) recently made
a generous donation to the Albert
N. Parlin School.
A group of MPCU execuLATINO
EDUCATORS OF THE YEAR: From left: School Committee Members Millie Cardello and
Cynthia Sarnie, Superintendent of Schools Priya Tahiliani, Mayor Carlo DeMaria, teacher Lauren
Ingoldsby, School Committee Student Representative Riley Avelar, Administrative Assistant
Rixy Reyes-Oseguera, School Committee Members Samantha Lambert and Marcony Almeida
Barros, School Committee Chairperson Jeanne Cristiano and School Committee Members Mike
Mangan and Jason Marcus.
tives, led by SVP & Chief Operating
Officer Janis Caines, delivered
100 backpacks of varying
styles filled with school supplies
for Parlin administrators
and teachers to distribute to
students. MPCU organized the
2022 Backpack Drive over the
summer as part of a community
outreach project with significant
help from Everett High
School (EHS) summer interns
Suzanne Maharjan, Luis Santana,
Alyssa Parziale, Kaesta Sandy
and Xiomara Perez Puerta.
“So many students in the
MULTI-CHAMBER HEALTH FORUM: Shown from left to right: Back row: Christopher Mumbi,
Taneja Elie, Giacobbe Ward, Karmarri Ellerbe and Rocco Navarrette Ortiz; front row: State
Representative Joe McGonagle, Julia Curran, Geralisha Jacquet, Diana Flores, Camilla Benitez
Escobar, Salma Abderazzak and Mariaisabel Rojas Quiceno, Everett Chamber of Commerce
President Dan Cameron and Executive Director Cheryl Smith.
communities we serve are in
need and without the necessary
school supplies,” stated
MPCU President & CEO John
Murphy. “We are happy we can
once again help make their
school year a better one.”
“The donation was amazing
in its own right, but the fact
that it was the culmination
of an effort that included our
students makes it all the more
meaningful,” said Superintendent
Priya Tahiliani. “Thanks
again to MPCU for its dedication
to our district.”
EHS students attend
regional health forum
Eleven EHS students enEXCELLENCE
| SEE PAGE 22
׉	 7cassandra://Y3Pzbkzj8Xyzvw0TFNS3YzcvChbwj5Q62FWpCPybJPI2W`̰ c[JEb}׉ETHE EVERETT ADVOCATE – FRiDAy, OCTObER 28, 2022
Page 15
George Keverian School celebrates fall with Annual Festival
L
ast week the George Keverian
School PTO on Nichols
Street hosted their annual
fall festival. The PTO and the
school staff combined to make
this event possible.
Josselin Lazo and Genesis
Zavaler Lazo.
Keverian School Principal Alex Naumann and Clara Naumann, PTO VP Christine Reno, Secretary
Michelle Cardinale, PTO President Shea Jackson, Vice Principal Keith Spencer and AJ Naumann,
Vice Principal Janet Taylor and James Taylor.
Abdu Sofia rode the pony.
The Army National Guard: Spec. Tom Marhoffer, PFC Tyler
Galvez, SFC Jamie Chambers, SPEC Liam Wright, PFC Dave
Laguerre.
Tonya Walton and Londyn
Harrell.
Coming off the slide: Chris
Roberts with Noah Garcia.
Journee Wallace is shown at
the Keverian Fall Festival.
Carla Flores got a surprise
hello from the llama.
Sofia Soares, Marcela Paulo and Khavka Paiva enjoyed the
petting zoo.
Some kids posed with the donkey at the Keverian School Fall
Festival.
Azhanty Marte decorates her
pumpkin.
“HAPPY FALL Y’ALL”: Isabelle
Ramos, Sophia Fonseca and
Jessica Ramos.
Keverian School sixth grade
teachers Ashley Mulligan and
Allie Creighton.
SFC Jamie Chambers with Keverian School Principal Alex
Naumann and his children, AJ and Clara.
Lucas Olevera is shown with a
new goat friend.
Marcia Isabelly enjoyed the
afternoon festival.
ENJOYING PIZZA: Tairine
Alves Freitas and Arthur.
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THE EVERETT ADVOCATE – FRiDAy, OCTObER 28, 2022
Advocate Halloween Safety Ti
• Children should carry a flashlight and their costumes should be bright-colored or have reflective tape to highlight
• Be sure all parts of the costume are labeled flame retardant.
• Costumes should not have trailing materials or tails long enough to cause falls.
• Pointed objects such as swords and devils forks should be made of soft material.
• If your children wear a mask instead of makeup on their face, double check that the eye holes are large enough to
• Children should wear sturdy shoes and temperature appropriate clothing underneath their costumes.
• Instruct children to use sidewalks, cross only at corners, never dart out between parked cars, never go inside som
Child hld
flhliht d thi t hld b bihtld h flti t t hihliht
accept a ride in a car, only approach houses where the outside lights are on, and to bring their bags home to be ch
a single treat.
• Throw out anything that appears tampered with, homeade food or homepackaged food unless you are certain of t
EVERETT TAXI &
MALDEN TRANS
(617) 389-8100 (617) 389-1000
419 Broadway, Everett, MA 02149
617-387-1110
Member FDIC
Member SIF
SABATINO
INSURANCE AGENCY
564 Broadway, Everett
617-387-7466 * www.sabatino-ins.com
Councillor
at-Large
Richard
Dell Isola
& Family
650 Broadway, Everett
(617) 389-9000
“COMPLETE GLASS SERVICE CENTER”
Storefronts & Entrance Doors
Custom Mirrors • Table Tops • Auto Glass
Insulated Glass • Window & Screen Repairs
2034 Revere Beach Parkway, Everett
617-389-GLAS
4
24 Hr. AIRPORT SERVICE
PACKAGE DELIVERY
BUSINESS ACCOUNTS
WELCOME
LESTER, PEGGY
& DAVID MOROVITZ
Messinger Insurance Agency
SINCE
1921
S
475 Broadway, Everett, 617-387-2700
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Page 17
ips
t th
t them.
o see through clearly.*
meone’s home, never
checked before eating
the source.
Happy & Safe Halloween
• Inspect fruit closely and take away treats that may not be age appropriate. Young children may choke
on things like hard candy or peanuts.
• Smaller children should always be with an adult. It’s best to take the little ones out early.
• If older children are going out without you, go over the ground rules first.
• Know what neighborhoods they will be in.
• Have children stay in a group.
• Let them know what time to be home.
Mayor Carlo DeMaria
and family
Mayor DeMaria, wife Stacy, Carlo III, Caroline & Alexandra
State Senator
Sal DiDomenico
& Family
School Committee Member
Marcony Almeida Barros
F.J. LaRovere
Insurance
Agency
492 Broadway, Everett * 617-387-9700
Check out our new website: www.larovere.com
State Representative
Joseph McGonagle
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THE EVERETT ADVOCATE – FRiDAy, OCTObER 28, 2022
Crimson Tide Football Honors Seniors
Senior Nick Raymond, of
Everett’s Crimson Tide football
celebrates senior night Friday
before their game and win
over Malden.
Everett’s Crimson Tide football and cheer team celebrate senior night Friday before their game and win over Malden.
Everett’s Crimson Tide senior football cheerleaders pose for
a picture during senior night Friday night. Shown front row,
left to right, are; Bianca De Lima, Jessica DeSouza, and Kristi
Skane. Shown standing, same order; Karyana Ellerbe, Captain
Makayla Freni, Captain Riley Avelar, Captain Aaliyah Desdunes,
and Olivia McCann.
Senior cheer captain Aaliyah
Desdunes of Everett’s Crimson
Tide football cheer team
poses for a picture during
Friday’s senior night.
Cheer captain and senior Riley
Avelar of Everett’s Crimson
Tide football cheerleading
team poses for a picture
during Friday’s senior night.
Senior Kevin Ruiz, of Everett’s
Crimson Tide football
celebrates senior night Friday
before their game and win
over Malden.
Senior Chandler Timoleon, of Everett’s Crimson Tide football
celebrates senior night Friday before their game and win over
Malden.
Senior Giacobbe Ward, of Everett’s Crimson Tides football
celebrates senior night Friday before their game and win over
Malden.
Seniors Jessica DeSouza and
Nick Raymond pose for a
photo during the Crimson
Tide’s senior night Friday.
Members of Everett’s Crimson Tide football team are shown on
the field for the coin toss with Malden Friday night.
Senior Percussionists Kim Herrera (l) + Thalyta Andrade (r) of
Everett’s Crimson Tide marching band celebrate senior night
prior to their performance during Everett’s football game with
Malden Friday night.
Senior Olivia McCann of
Everett’s Crimson Tide senior
football cheerleader makes
her way down senior row and
celebration during Friday’s
senior night.
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Page 19
Crimson Tide Football Honors Seniors
Pictured in the center and waving senior Ryan Medeiros is
surrounded by band members and fellow seniors, left to right:
Kathleen De Souza, Johnny Pham, Karla Zorzal McKensi, Sicari
Shand, Liam Nee, and Rocco Navarrete Ortiz.
Everett’s Pedro Rodriguez grabs a brownie from a booster
parent after Everett’s 42-6 win over Malden Friday night.
Senior Kristi Skane of
Everett’s Crimson Tide senior
football cheerleader makes
her way down senior row and
celebration during Friday’s
senior night.
Senior Khari Garcia and Crimson Tide football coach, Robert
DiLoreto watch over warm-up before Everett’s game with
Malden Friday night.
Seniors Kathleen De Souza, Thalyta Andrade, Kim Herrera of
Everett’s Crimson Tide marching band looks at celebration
signage of Everett’s seniors during their football game with
Malden Friday night.
Senior Bianca De Lima of
Everett’s Crimson Tide senior
football cheerleader makes
her way down senior row and
celebration during Friday’s
senior night.
Fans stand at attention during the national anthem at the
Crimson Tide of Everett’s football game Friday night with
Malden.
Ryan Medeiros of Everett’s Crimson Tide marching band play
the national anthem before Friday night’s football game with
Malden.
Senior Drum Major Sicari
Shand of Everett’s Crimson
Tide marching band perform
during Friday night’s football
game with Malden.
Tori Short on flute Everett’s Crimson Tide marching band play
the national anthem before Friday night’s football game with
Malden.
Senior Johnny Pham of
Everett ’s Crimson Tide
marching band perform
during Friday night’s football
game with Malden.
Fans celebrate the Crimson Tide’s win Friday night over Malden.
(Advocate photos by Emily Harney)
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THE EVERETT ADVOCATE – FRiDAy, OCTObER 28, 2022
Tide remains undefeated in the GBL with another blowout win
Everett football takes on host Lynn Classical Friday night with the postseason right around the corner
Crimson Tide RB Christian Zamor carried the ball through the
Malden defensive line on Friday.
By Joe McConnell
W
ith the playoffs just one
week away, the Everett
DOUBLE-TEAMED: Jason Stark (#87) of Everett jumps in on a
tackle of a Malden running back as his teammate Brian Lamour
(#6) wraps him up.
High School football team (5-0
in the Greater Boston League
[GBL] and 6-1 overall) appears
to be playing on all cylinders
after another dominating performance
over a league rival
at Everett Memorial Stadium
last Friday night. The Crimson
Tide didn’t waste any time to
beat neighboring Malden,
FOOTBALL | SEE PAGE 23
Tide volleyball shuts down
Pioneer Charter School for sixth win
Everett girls perfect their game with successful
results as they head down the home stretch
By Joe McConnell
T
he Everett High School
volleyball team (6-11) won
its sixth match of the year last
Friday, Oct. 21, when they defeated
visiting Pioneer Charter
School out of Saugus, 3-0.
It was the team’s lone encounter
outside of the Greater Boston
League.
The Crimson Tide, led by senior
setter Julie Miranda, was
able to shut down its nonleague
counterparts. Miranda
led the way with 19 service
points, and senior outside hitter
Sophia Sousa accounted
for three aces and four kills.
Junior middle hitter Nicole
Brandao collected 11 kills, and
sophomore defensive specialist
Kayleigh McMahon made
her varsity debut and did quite
well as a starter, according to
coach Michael Fineran.
“Our focus all week long
was on making better passes
to the setter and taking more
swings at the net, and we did
both,” said Fineran. “We saw
the results on what could happen
while concentrating on
those aspects of the game,
and now we want to keep it up
as we head into the final week
of the season with two matches
remaining on the regular
season schedule.”
Crimson Tide Captain Samela
DeSouza Drumond starts
the set up for one of her
teammates. (Advocate file photo)
Crimson Tide QB Karmarri Ellerbe carried the ball in for an
Everett touchdown.
Crimson Tide running back Damien Lackland (left) led the
blocking for quarterback Karmarri Ellerbe for a Crimson Tide
touchdown on Friday night.
Everett’s Jayden Prophete is shown on the carry for the
Crimson Tide as defenders from Malden move in.
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Page 21
Everett High School Varsity Boys’ Soccer Crimson Tide
honors its seniors after Senior Night game
By Tara Vocino
E
verett High School Varsity
Boys’ Soccer Crimson Tide
honored their seniors after
their game on Tuesday night at
Rivergreen Park against Lynn
Classical High School. Head
Coach Pedro Blas recognized
the seniors during half-time,
and players took photos with
their friends after the game.
(Advocate photos by Tara Vocino)
Striker/Right Forward Tysenger Alcin with his friend, Ralph
Pierre during Tuesday’s Everett High School Boys’ Varsity
Soccer Senior Night against Lynn Classical High School at
Rivergreen Park. Not present: his cousin Widmac Laterion. He
plans to play soccer in college.
Center Midfielder Yariel Santos with his
friend, Ralph Pierre.
Left Center Owen Beauvil with his friend, Ralph Pierre. Not
present were: his father Guy, his mother Viergelie, his uncle
Arold Guillaume, his aunt Nadine Guillaume, his cousin
Mahalia Guillaume, his cousin Rejeana Guillaume, and his
cousin Jossycah Emmanuel.
tribution of $73,500.
In 2023, the allowable de2023
401(K) Contribution Limits
F
or calendar year 2023,
the IRS is increasing the
amount employees participating
in a company-sponsored
401(k) plan can contribute
to $22,500. Approximately
60million Americans
are participating in such plans
in order to help provide for a
comfortable retirement. The
catch-up contribution for
2023 will rise to $7,500 which
allows for anyone 50 years of
age or older to then max out
on a 401(k) plan 2023 total
contribution of $30,000. This is
a substantial amount of money
being contributed to your
retirement while at the same
time allowing for an income
tax deduction as your taxable
W-2 wages are reduced
by the amount of the contribution.
If your company offers
a Roth 401(K) component
to the company-sponsored
401(k) plan, then you can decide
how much to contribute
to the deductible 401(k)
portion and the non-deductible
Roth 401(k) portion. Although
you do not receive a
current income tax deduction
for Roth 401(k) contributions,
you don’t have to worry about
paying income taxes on the
earnings when you ultimately
withdraw those monies
during your retirement years.
Taxpayers can now contribute
$6,500 in 2023 to a Traditional
or Roth IRA. If 50 years
of age or older, the catchup
contribution remains at
$1,000 allowing someone
who is 50 years of age or older
to contribute $7,500 to a Traditional
IRA or Roth IRA.
For taxpayers that are in
their own business, a Solo
401(k) plan contribution limit
for calendar year 2023 is now
up to $66,000. If 50 years or
older, the catchup contribution
for 2023 is $7,500 allowing
for a maximum 2023 conduction
for taxpayers making
contributions to a Traditional
IRA is phased out for single
taxpayers and heads of households
who are active participants
in a company-sponsored
retirement plan with
modified adjusted gross income
between $73,000 and
$83,000. For a married couple
filing a joint return, in which
the spouse who makes the IRA
contribution is an active participant
in a company-sponsored
retirement plan, the deduction
is phased out with income
between $116,000 and
$136,000. For a spouse not
covered by such a plan but
is married to someone that
is, the deduction for a Traditional
IRA contribution is
phased out if the couple’s income
is between $218,000
and $228,000.
For 2023, depending upon
your income, your ability to
contribute to a Roth IRA is
phased out for a married couple
with income between
$218,000 and $228,000 and
for single taxpayers and heads
of household, with income between
$138,000 and $153,000.
If you earn too much to contribute
to a Roth IRA, you
can contribute to a non-deductible
IRA and then several
years later convert it to a
Roth IRA. They refer to this as
a “back-door” Roth IRA. This
way, down the line you do not
have to worry about paying
taxes on the earnings when
you make withdrawals.
Joseph D. Cataldo is an estate
planning/elder law attorney,
Certified Public Accountant,
Certified Financial
Planner, AICPA Personal Financial
Specialist and holds a
master’s degree in taxation.
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THE EVERETT ADVOCATE – FRiDAy, OCTObER 28, 2022
EXCELLENCE | FROM PAGE 14
rolled in the Health Science
Pathway (HSP) were invited
to attend a Multi-Chamber
of Commerce Healthcare
Forum at Anthony’s of
Malden that featured a distinguished
group of speakers
and guests. Leaders from
Cambridge Health Alliance,
MelroseWakefield Healthcare,
Beth Israel Deaconess
Medical Center, the East Boston
Neighborhood Health
Center, and the MGH Chelsea
HealthCare Center discussed
a variety of pressing topics,
including access to care, community-based
clinics and inter-agency
collaboration.
HSP students are exposed
to a multitude of aspects of
the healthcare sector in a variety
of methods. Through research-based
projects, handson
and skills-based activities,
internships, classroom lectures,
and field trips/guest
speakers, the students acquire
a strong grasp on what
it takes to be successful in the
allied health fi eld. The 11 HPS
seniors who attended the fi eld
- LEGAL NOTICE -
City of Everett, Massachusetts
CITY COUNCIL
WHITTIER SCHOOL VOLUNTEERS: Shown from left to right:
Cristian Lopez Martinez, Vitoria Dini, Isabelle Maia, City Year
AmeriCorps member Dylan Clark and Lilirose Mahan.
CITY COUNCIL ………….....…………. No. C0437-22
IN THE YEAR TWO THOUSAND AND TWENTY -TWO
An Order Calling for the Designating and Fitting of the Polls for the State Election
/s/John F. Hanlon, as President
Be it Ordered: By the City Council of the City of Everett, Massachusetts, as follows:
That the polls be opened from 7 o’clock in the morning to 8 o’clock in the evening and
the City Clerk and Elections Commission to cause all voting places to be properly fitted
up for the STATE ELECTION, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 8, 2022, and
That the following places are designated as polling places for the above-mentioned
STATE ELECTION, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 8, 2022 and that the Chief of Police
employ an officer at each of the 18 precincts:
WARD 1
Precinct 1
Precinct 2
Precinct 3
Precinct 3A
WARD 2
Precinct 1
Precinct 2
Precinct 2A
Precinct 3
WARD 3
Precinct 1
Precinct 2
Precinct 3
WARD 4
Precinct 1
Precinct 2
Precinct 3
WARD 5
Precinct 1
Precinct 2
Precinct 3
WARD 6
Precinct 1
Precinct 2
Precinct 3
Connolly Center, 90 Chelsea St
Connolly Center, 90 Chelsea St
Whittier School, 337 Broadway
Whittier School, 337 Broadway
Keverian School, 20 Nichols St
Keverian School, 20 Nichols St
Keverian School, 20 Nichols St
Parlin School, 587 Broadway,
Broadway Entrance front doors
Community Center, 21 Whittier Dr
Rec Center, 47 Elm St
Rec Center, 47 Elm St
Lafayette School, 117 Edith St
Glendale Towers, 381 Ferry St
Lafayette School, 117 Edith St
Maddie English, 105 Woodville St
City Hall, 484 Broadway, Keverian Room
Parlin School, 587 Broadway,
Broadway Entrance front doors
Maddie English, 105 Woodville St
Parlin Library, 410 Broadway
City Services, 19 Norman St
A true copy attest
the October 17 School Committee
meeting. Ingoldsby is
a fi rst-year sixth-grade teacher
at the Whittier School who
previously served as an Endicott
College Fellow at the Lafayette
School. Reyes-Oseguera,
a veteran EPS staff member,
is an Administrative Assistant
at EHS. Both excel in the
areas of parent engagement
and outreach.
“I was thrilled that Latinos
for Education honored two of
our team members,” said Superintendent
Tahiliani. “Ms. Ingoldsby
and Ms. Reyes-Oseguera
are ideal representatives
of the type of leaders Latinos
for Education want to promote
and support.”
Hope’s Room included
in PTO conferences at
EHS
EHS parents who attended
the fi rst teacher conferences
of 2022-2023 had access to
information that extends far
beyond the classroom and
grades. Hope’s Room, a mock
child’s bedroom designed to
show signs of substance abuse
that might go unnoticed in
daily life, was set up in the EHS
Auditorium. It was open to parents,
guardians and caregivers
the night of October 13. Hope’s
Room is usually set up outside
in a trailer, but it was quickly
moved inside due to the rainy
weather that evening.
Hope’s Room was brought to
Sergio Cornelio, City Clerk
October 28, 2022
EHS by Team Sharing Inc., a national
organization of parents
who have lost a child to Substance
Use Disorder. Dozens of
parents visited Hope’s Room,
where they were given tips on
what to look for at home. Spanish
and Portuguese translators
were on hand to help make the
event as accessible as possible.
“I had the pleasure of
meeting the advocates from
Team Sharing Inc. when they
brought Hope’s Room to City
Hall earlier this year, and I very
much wanted the opportunity
to be extended to our EHS
families,” said Superintendent
Tahiliani. “Thanks to everyone
at EHS who included this as
part of our parent teacher conferences.”
Topsfield
Fair – putting
the Top in “Topsfield”
Congratulations to the students
in Jennifer Cuthbert’s
fi fth-grade class at the Webster
School for winning fi rst-place
honors in the Topsfi eld Fair’s
Decorative Pumpkin Contest!
The creative fi fth graders designed
their pumpkins around
the theme of Fun Fair Food.
Yes, all the delicious items pictured
are actually pumpkins.
Great job!
Whittier School
student volunteers
Recently, an enterprising
group of students volunteered
to help assemble new chairs
and white boards for Whittier
School classrooms. They used
directions, collaboration and
communication to fl awlessly
complete the work. And they
loved the learning experience!
Kiwanis Club
Luncheon
The Everett and Malden Kiwanis
Clubs held their annual
joint luncheon for the senior
football players and cheerleaders
from Everett and Malden
High Schools on Thursday,
October 20 at Anthony’s. The
event is held annually as part
of one of the oldest and continuous
high school football rivalries
in the Commonwealth.
Everett Director of Veterans Affairs
Antoine Coleman delivered
the keynote address and
implored the student-athletes
to play for their teammates.
trip are currently participating
in coursework and experiences
in several areas, including
clinical care, athletic training,
public health and medical interpretation.
Two
EPS employees
recognized by Latinos
for Education
The organization Latinos for
Education has named EPS employees
Rixy Reyes-Oseguera
and Lauren Ingoldsby as Educators
of the Year, an honor
that was recognized during
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THE EVERETT ADVOCATE – FRiDAy, OCTObER 28, 2022
PUBLIC HEARING
scoring early and often to win
going away, 42-6. The home
team scored all 42 points before
halftime and was able to
cruise the rest of the way.
The Golden Tornadoes are
3-4 overall, and 2-3 in the
league. Everett is currently
12th
1 power rankings, while Malden
is ranked 26th
overall in
Division 3.
“Our team played very
fast and physical on Friday
against Malden,” said coach
Rob DiLoreto after the game.
“We are hoping to build on
that performance as we prepare
for Lynn Classical this
week.”
The Tide will take on the
Rams (5-1) Friday night (Oct.
28) at Lynn’s Manning Field,
beginning at 6 p.m.
But first things first, let’s
wrap up another offensive
explosion by the Everett boys
last Friday night against the
aforementioned Malden. Everett
quarterback Karmarri
Ellerbe sent an immediate
message to the visiting Golden
Tornadoes with an electrifying
85-yard touchdown
run. Adoni Santos completed
the scoring play with another
successful extra point boot
through the uprights.
The Everett defense then
joined the fun when Jayden
Prophete picked off a pass
and proceeded to run it back
45-yards for six more points.
Santos once again tacked
on the extra point to put his
teammates up by 14 very early
in the opening stanza. Ellerbe
followed with a 21-yard
run to the endzone to close
out the fi rst quarter scoring,
and then Santos did his thing
once again to account for the
21st
point.
At the start of the second
quarter, Prophete came up
with his second interception
of the game and also ran that
one back for six more points.
The entire scoring play went
for 35 yards.
The defense disrupted the
Malden offense again; that
resulted in the team’s fifth
touchdown of the game. This
time it was Jaiden Williams
who recovered a fumble and
dashed seven yards for the
score. Damien Lackland was
credited with Everett’s final
touchdown of the game late
in the second quarter with a
three-yard run to paydirt. Santos
also nailed the fi nal four
extra points to help account
for six of the team’s 42 points
in the game.
The Golden Tornadoes were
able to avoid the shutout with
FOOTBALL | SEE PAGE 24
This amendment does not change the underlying zoning districts for the aforementioned parcels.
Amendment No. 2
The City of Everett Zoning Ordinance is hereby amended by modifying the first row of the Table of Dimensional
Standards contained in Section 30(F)(1) of the Ordinance by deleting “30%” under the Min. Open Space column and
inserting in its place “25%”, as demonstrated below [in which text shown with strikethrough is to be deleted and text
shown with bold/underline is to be added]:
1.
Table of Dimensional Standards
Min. Open
Space
Zoning Sub-Districts
Resort Casino Overlay
District
Gaming
Establishment
30%
25%
This ordinance shall take effect upon passage by the City Council and subsequent approval by
His Honor the Mayor
A true copy attest
in the latest Division
Hearing to be held with the Everett City Council, held on Monday November 28th, 2022
at 7:00PM, in the Everett City Council Chambers, 3rd Floor, Everett City Hall.
Page 23
CITY COUNCIL ………….....…………. No. C0442-22
IN THE YEAR TWO THOUSAND AND TWENTY -TWO
AN ORDINANCE AMENDING SECTION 30 OF THE REVISED
ZONING ORDINANCES
Councilor /s/ John F. Hanlon, as President
Whereas: The City of Everett Zoning Ordinance, Section 30 (“Lower Broadway Economic Development District”)
allows for the use of “Gaming Establishment” in the Resort Casino Overlay District,
Now, therefore, by the authority granted to the City Council of the City of Everett, Massachusetts to make ordinances:
Be it Ordained by the City Council of the City of Everett, Massachusetts that the Revised Ordinances of the City of
Everett be amended as follows:
Be it Ordained:
BY THE CITY COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF EVERETT, under the authority of G.L. c. 40A, as amended, that, for the
purposes set forth in Section 2A of Chapter 808 of the Acts of 1975 and to promote the general welfare of the city,
protect the health and safety of its inhabitants, encourage the most appropriate use of land within the city, retain the
natural resources, and protect, conserve and increase the value of property, the Everett Zoning Map be amended to
modify certain subdistrict boundaries within the Lower Broadway Economic Development District, and that Section
30 of the Zoning Ordinance of the City of Everett be amended to modify certain dimensional requirements within the
Lower Broadway Economic Development District, as set forth below:
Amendment No. 1:
The City of Everett Zoning Ordinance and the Zoning Map are hereby amended to modify the boundary of the Resort
Casino Overlay District so as to extend over and across Broadway (Route 99) to encompass and include all of the
land within the City of Everett bounded by Dexter Street, Robin Street, Mystic Street, Bow Street, and Broadway, as
shown on the attached updated Zoning Map. As a result of this amendment, the following parcels will be located
within the Resort Casino Overlay District (as well as within the underlying zoning district as shown on the Zoning Map):
Address
12 Dexter Street
3-5 Bow Street
2 Thompson Place
23 Mystic Street
33 Mystic Street
35 Mystic Street
39-43 Mystic Street
51 Mystic Street
14-16 Robin Street
15 Broadway
City of Everett Assessor’s
Parcel ID
H0-07-000024
H0-07-000082
H0-07-000072
H0-07-000071
H0-07-000069
H0-07-000067
H0-07-000063
H0-07-000060
H0-07-000056
H0-07-000017
Sergio Cornelio, City Clerk
October 28, 2022
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THE EVERETT ADVOCATE – FRiDAy, OCTObER 28, 2022
FOOTBALL | FROM PAGE 23
a late score in the fourth quarter.
El
lerbe was DiLoreto’s
choice for off ensive player of
the game. He called his own
number twice in the game,
and each time it resulted in
touchdowns for the home
team. Prophete (two interceptions
for touchdowns) and
Christian Zamor (one interception)
were DiLoreto’s defensive
player of the game selections.
But
despite another Everett
beatdown, they can still play
better, according to DiLoreto.
“We still have areas to improve
on in each phase of the game,”
the Everett coach said. “Our
off ensive, defensive and special
team units are all working
hard, but we have identifi
ed areas of concern for each
of them, and we are working
hard to correct our mistakes.”
But the good news is that
the team is healthy with no
injuries for the trip to Lynn
on Friday night. As far as the
Rams are concerned, “They
are extremely well-coached,”
said DiLoreto, and they play
a physical brand of off ensive
football, and their defense is
fast and furious.
“We know that we have our
hands full on Friday night,
and we need to play our best
game of the year to beat
them,” he added.
Meanwhile, the Golden Tornadoes
will be hosting Revere
on Friday night. Both teams
come into this game with
identical 3-4 overall records.
- LEGAL NOTICE -
City of Everett, Massachusetts
CITY COUNCIL
RESNEK| FROM PAGE 4
CITY COUNCIL ………….....…………. No. C0436-22
IN THE YEAR TWO THOUSAND AND TWENTY -TWO
An Order Calling for a State Election
/s/John F. Hanlon, as President
Be It Ordered: BY THE CITY COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF
EVERETT, and by the authority of the same as follows:
That in accordance with the provisions of the General
Law of Massachusetts, the City Clerk and Elections
Commission be and is hereby authorized and directed
to notify and warn the inhabitants of the City of Everett,
qualified to vote as the law requires, to assemble at the
several polling places, for and within the several
precincts, where they are duly registered voters on
TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 8, 2022 for the STATE
ELECTION, then and there to give in their votes for
the election of candidates of political parties for the
following offices:
GOVERNOR & LIEUTENANT GOVERNOR
ATTORNEY GENERAL
SECRETARY OF STATE
TREASURER AND RECEIVER GENERAL
AUDITOR
REPRESENTATIVE IN CONGRESS
COUNCILLOR
SENATOR IN GENERAL COURT
REPRESENTATIVE IN GENERAL COURT
DISTRICT ATTORNEY
SHERIFF
QUESTION 1
QUESTION 2
QUESTION 3
QUESTION 4
A true copy attest
Globe articles, Proff er agreement
and explanation, and Revere Police
Report will be the guts of the
insert. What I am proposing is to
write a 3,000 - 5,000 word, ‘Looking
at Carlo DeMaria’ as the backbone
of the insert. A Resnek-style
well written narrative of Carlo DeMaria’s
life and times, and of his
administration, as I see it through
the eyes of a publisher who has
his ear to the ground in this city. It
will be a tell all. Unvarnished Carlo
up close in real time. No eff ort
will be spared to describe him as
he is from fi rst-hand experience
(him threatening to put me out
of business coming into the business
place, swaggering just a bit,
trying to exert his power and to
be a bully at the same time ... or
telling about our fi rst meeting
face to face and me at Everett
Stadium sensing rather strongly
just by the empty and disinterested
look in his eye that he didn’t
like me, that we would never be
friends, that this is a guy who has
no friends. That’s the kind of piece
I would write as the cover of the
insert. One big blast seven days
before the primary. He can’t and
won’t answer it. It is wiser to do
this than to release incrementally
the information we have. One
big blast: “Did you hear? Did you
see? The Leader Herald?” is what
the city that will come out to
vote will be repeating over and
over. “Did you read that police report
about Carlo?” “Did you know
what he’s done?”
Panic takes over
Sergio Cornelio, City Clerk
October 28, 2022
A recent court fi ling was in opposition
to an “emergency motion”
filed by Philbin’s lawyers
the day after Vega testifi ed two
weeks ago, asking the court to
order that all of his fi nancial information
be kept “confi dential.”
RESNEK | SEE PAGE 25
LEGAL NOTICE
Quarterback Karmarri Ellerbe celebrated with his teammate Damien Lackland after scoring a
touchdown on Friday night against Malden.
CITY OF EVERETT, MASSACHUSETTS
PLANNING BOARD
PUBLIC HEARING NOTICE
Public Hearing on an application by
Red Spade Development
Property located at: 260 Elm Street
Site Plan Review & Inclusionary Zoning
Special Permit
In accordance with the provisions of M.G.L Chapter 40A and
with Sections 6, 19, and 32 of the Everett Zoning Ordinance,
the Everett Planning Board will conduct a public hearing on
Monday, November 7, 2022 at 6:00PM in the Speaker George
Keverian Room (Room 37, Everett City Hall) to consider the
above-listed application for Site Plan Review and Inclusionary
Zoning Special Permit. This proposal calls for the razing of
an existing single-family dwelling on a 9,196 sq. ft. lot and
construction of a three-story, residential structure containing
twelve (12) residential units, two (2) of which are proposed
to be designated as deed-restricted affordable, and seven (7)
parking spaces located on the ground level. The proposed
building would have an approximate size of 12,830 square
feet. 260 Elm Street is a parcel of land referenced by Assessors
Department as N0-03-000318.
A copy of the application and plans are 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
or by request during regular City Hall business hours by
contacting The Planning and Development Office at 617-3942334.
All
persons interested in or wishing to be heard on the
applications may attend and participate in person. This project,
along with all other projects to be discussed at the meeting, can
be found on the posted Agenda at the following link: http://
www.cityofeverett.com/AgendaCenter.
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
Everett Planning Board
October 21, 28, 2022
and/
Questions and
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Page 25
LEGAL NOTICE
RESNEK| FROM PAGE 24
CITY OF EVERETT, MASSACHUSETTS
PLANNING BOARD
PUBLIC HEARING NOTICE
Public Hearing on a Proposed Zoning Amendment
Section 30 “Lower Broadway Economic
Development District” – of the City of Everett
Zoning Ordinance
The Everett Planning Board will conduct a public hearing on
Monday, November 7, 2022 at 6:00PM in the Speaker George
Keverian Room (Room 37, Everett City Hall) to consider two
proposed Amendments to Section 30 of the City of Everett
Zoning Ordinance. This proposed amendment is as follows:
1. Section 30, Subsection C (“Establishment of District
and Sub-District Boundaries”) – To amend the Zoning
Map, modifying the boundary of the Resort Casino Overlay
District so as to extend over and across Broadway (Route
99) to encompass and include all of the land within the
City of Everett bounded by Dexter Street, Robin Street,
Mystic Street, Bow Street, and Broadway, as shown on the
attached updated Zoning Map. As a result of this amendment,
the following parcels will be located within the Resort Casino
Overlay District (as well as within the underlying zoning
district as shown on the Zoning Map):
City of Everett
Address
12 Dexter Street
3-5 Bow Street
2 Thompson Place
23 Mystic Street
33 Mystic Street
35 Mystic Street
39-43 Mystic Street
51 Mystic Street
14-16 Robin Street
15 Broadway
Assessor’s Parcel ID
H0-07-000024
H0-07-000082
H0-07-000072
H0-07-000071
H0-07-000069
H0-07-000067
H0-07-000063
H0-07-000060
H0-07-000056
H0-07-000017
This amendment does not change the underlying zoning
districts for the aforementioned parcels.
2. Section 30, Subsection F (“Dimensional Regulations”),
Sub-Subsection 1 (“Table of Dimensional Standards”) –
To amend the Table of Dimensional Standards by striking
the “30%” Minimum Open Space Requirement pertaining
to the Resort Casino Overlay District and replacing it with
“25%”, as demonstrated below [in which text shown with
strikethrough is to be deleted and text shown with
bold/underline is to be added]:
Table of Dimensional Standards
Min. Open
Space
Zoning Sub-Districts
Resort Casino Overlay
District
Gaming
Establishment
30%
25%
All persons interested in or wishing to be heard on the
proposals may attend and participate in person. This proposed
amendment, along with all other projects to be discussed at
the meeting, can be found on the posted Agenda at the following
link: 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
Everett Planning Board
October 21, 28, 2022
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DeMaria’s lawyers argued that
there was no basis to keep any
of the testimony given by Vega
confidential. They pointed out
that she had no confi dentiality
agreement with Philbin, that she
was free to testify truthfully about
what she knew and that the evidence
was relevant to Philbin’s fi -
nancial control of the Leader Herald,
which he personally keeps
alive, and to the evidence of the
apparent scheme, according to
Resnek’s emails, to collect thousands
of dollars of cash from unnamed
opponents of Mayor DeMaria,
apparently unreported as
campaign contributions, to drive
DeMaria out of offi ce at all costs.
This, DeMaria’s lawyers argued,
was more evidence of Philbin’s
“actual malice” to defame DeMaria
by fabricating false accusations
of wrongful conduct by
DeMaria.
Resnek has already admitted
under oath that he fabricated articles
making all manner of accusations
against the Mayor, that he
had no basis for them and that
he invented derogatory “quotes”
from individuals about the Mayor
which were actually never given.
He has also admitted under oath
that after he, Philbin and the paper
were sued for defamation
and received a demand for their
notes of any interviews supporting
the articles, Resnek manufactured
the notes, then altered
the manufactured notes, before
passing them off as actual notes
– and then lied about having actual
notes in his deposition.
According to Vega, Philbin not
only funded the Everett Leader
Herald out of his own pocket
because the advertising revenue
generated by the “dead business”
barely covered 20% of its costs,
but he personally reviewed and
approved each and every article
that the paper published before
it was published. This fact, DeMaria’s
lawyers argued, is more
evidence that Philbin is personally
liable for defaming DeMaria.
If a jury agrees, then Philbin will
be personally responsible for any
verdict in DeMaria’s favor that a
jury reaches.
The court has not yet ruled on
Philbin’s emergency motion to
shield evidence regarding his fi -
nancial information from public
view as of press time.
LEGAL NOTICE
CITY OF EVERETT, MASSACHUSETTS
PLANNING BOARD
PUBLIC HEARING NOTICE
Public Hearing on an application
by Anthony Rossi
Property located at: 126 Ferry Street
Site Plan Review
In accordance with the provisions of M.G.L Chapter 40A
and with Sections 6 and 19 of the Everett Zoning Ordinance,
the Everett Planning Board will conduct a public hearing
on Monday, November 7, 2022 at 6:00PM in the Speaker
George Keverian Room (Room 37, Everett City Hall) to
consider the above-listed application for Site Plan Review.
This proposal calls for the razing of an existing single-family
dwelling on a 2,503 sq. ft. lot and construction of a three-story,
residential structure containing six (6) residential units and
zero (0) parking spaces. The proposed building would have
an approximate size of 3,754 square feet. 126 Ferry Street is a
parcel of land referenced by Assessors Department as L0-03000276.
A
copy of the application and plans are 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
or by request during regular City Hall business hours by
contacting The Planning and Development Office at 617-3942334.
All
persons interested in or wishing to be heard on the
applications may attend and participate in person. This project,
along with all other projects to be discussed at the meeting, can
be found on the posted Agenda at the following link: http://
www.cityofeverett.com/AgendaCenter.
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
Everett Planning Board
October 21, 28, 2022
and/
Questions and
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Middlesex Sheriff’s Office warns
of expert witness scam
B
ILLERICA, Mass. – The Middlesex
Sheriff ’s Office
(MSO) is warning residents to
be aware of an active, ongoing
scam potentially targeting
medical professionals.
In three separate incidents reported
to the Middlesex Sheriff’s
Office, individuals working
in the medical field reported
receiving calls telling them
they had failed to appear as expert
witnesses in court matters.
The scammer, or scammers, utilized
a fake name and identified
themselves as a member of the
Middlesex Sheriff’s Office.
In one instance, a scammer
told one professional that they
may have to pay $10,000 in
fines and fees. Fortunately,
RESILIENCE | FROM PAGE 10
pecially to Julie Wormser and
Patrick Herren of MRWA and
Rep. Dan Ryan and Senator DiDomenico
who have worked
tirelessly to garner funds for
these projects. As we see the
effects of global warming and
extreme weather in other parts
of the country, it is absolutely
essential that we do what we
can to prevent such tragedies
and protect our communities.
We still have a lot of work to
be done but I look forward to
moving towards that end goal
with this group.”
To date, their collective efforts
have raised over $23 million
in grants and bonding authority
to support three critical
coastal resilience projects
underway in Somerville, Evernone
of those who reported
the calls to the MSO lost any
money.
“Often times these arrest
scams revolve around a failure
to appear for jury duty or pay
taxes, but these calls are the
first reported directly to the
MSO involving a failure to appear
as an expert witness,” said
Sheriff Peter J. Koutoujian. “For
any professional whose career
may be harmed – or license potentially
impacted – for failure
to comply with a court order,
this type of call can be particularly
frightening. We want people
to know this is a scam and
no member of law enforcement
will ever threaten arrest or demand
a fine be paid over the
ett, and Chelsea. The map below
shows the extent of saltwater
flooding from a projected
2070 “hundred-year” flood,
five feet higher than the record
flooding in January and
March 2018. The teal area is
the area that will be protected
through a multiyear regional
flood resilience effort led by
cities and towns in the Resilient
Mystic Collaborative.
They are:
The Amelia Earhart Dam,
which lies between Everett
and Somerville and separates
the salt water and fresh water
portions of the Mystic River.
Built in 1966 by the Metropolitan
District Commission and
now owned and managed by
Mass DCR, the dam currently
provides significant protection
from coastal flooding to
Your Hometown News Delivered!
EVERETT ADVOCATE
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One year subscription to
The Advocate of your choice:
$150 per paper in-town per year or
$200 per paper out-of-town per year.
Name_________________________________________
Address_______________________________________
City_______________ State_______ Zip ____________
CC# _______________________________ Exp. _____
Sec. code____ Advocate (City):___________________
Clip & Mail Coupon with Credit Card, Check or Money Order to:
Advocate Newspapers Inc.
PO Box 490407, Everett, MA 02149
THE EVERETT ADVOCATE – FRiDAy, OCTObER 28, 2022
BOOSTER | FROM PAGE 9
you’ve been thinking about
getting the vaccine, now is
the time.”
The $75 gift card incenphone
like this.”
Similar expert witness scams
have previously been reported
in other parts of the country.
Anyone who may have received
a similar call and either
lost money or provided personal
details is urged to immediately
contact local law enforcement.
If the caller claimed
to be a member of the Middlesex
Sheriff’s Office, we also ask
that you report the incident directly
to the MSO’s Inner Perimeter
Security (IPS) Unit at 978667-1711.
Residents
may learn more
about law enforcement impersonation
and arrest scams
by visiting our website at bit.
ly/3CD2s9p.
seven upstream communities.
In the coming 10 to 20 years,
the dam is expected to flank
and overtop in major coastal
storms. Storm hardening and
elevating the dam to manage
flooding to a projected 2070
1% storm is expected to cost
approximately $36 million and
will substantially reduce the
risk of coastal flooding to over
108,000 residents and $60 billion
in real estate value.
Congresswoman Clark secured
a $750,000 Community
Project grant to further regional
coastal flood resilience
planning and design, including
for the dam.
State Senators DiDomenico
and Jehlen and State Representatives
Ryan, McGonagle,
and Barber led the Mystic
state legislative delegation
in securing “no less than”
$8.5 million in state bonding
authorization to provide required
match for a future federal
grant proposal.
Draw 7 Park is a Mass DCR
nine-acre waterfront park located
between the Amelia
Earhart Dam and the Assembly
Square Orange Line MBTA
Station. It is one of 10 critical
coastal flood pathways
needing capital investment
to prevent significant damage
across ten communities.
tive will be offered at select
clinics to any Massachusetts
resident who receives
a vaccine or booster
at the clinic. No ID or
proof of health insurance
is required, and the incentives
will be available as
long as supplies last. For
an updated list of clinics,
access https://www.mass.
gov/info-details/free-family-friendly-covid-19-vaccination-clinics.
Through
the state’s Vaccine
Equity Initiative, DPH
is putting a particular focus
on communities where
booster rates are lowest,
aiming to encourage vaccination
of families ahead of
Beyond preventing coastal
storm surges from flanking the
Amelia Earhart Dam, this $13
million project will link public
transit to miles of bicycle/
pedestrian paths along and
across the Mystic River, restore
a living shoreline, and provide
other recreational amenities
for residents and visitors to Assembly
Square.
State Senators DiDomenico
and Jehlen and State Representatives
Ryan, McGonagle,
and Barber led the Mystic
state legislative delegation in
securing “no less than” $4 million
in state bonding authorization
to add to $1 million in
secured funds.
In addition, the Baker Administration
is seeking $30
million to connect a pedestrian
bridge across the Mystic
River between the Orange
Line and Everett’s Encore Casino.
The
Island End River is
home to the New England Produce
Center, responsible for
the distribution of virtually all
of the fresh fruits and vegetables
imported into New England
and the Canadian Maritimes.
Forming the boundary
between Everett and Chelsea,
this industrial district generates
an estimated $7 billion
annually in economic activithe
winter holidays, a time
when large groups gather
indoors. DPH is partnering
with local organizations
to encourage vaccinations
and boosters, with the goal
of mitigating the worst impacts
of the pandemic this
winter.
Massachusetts is a national
leader in vaccination
rates with over 84 percent
of eligible residents fully
vaccinated and over half of
adults boosted. COVID-19
vaccines and boosters have
been rigorously tested and
proven safe and effective by
the U.S. Food and Drug Administration,
providing protection
from the virus and
preventing serious illness.
Learn more about the
COVID-19 vaccination clinics
offering incentives and
find a clinic near you at
mass.gov/GetBoosted.
ty, and already floods during
coastal storms and king tides.
Over 15,000 low-income BIPOC
residents live within this
area; this $70 million project
will help protect their homes
from coastal storms and sea
level rise.
Congresswoman Pressley
secured a $750,000 Community
Project grant to further the
Island End River project.
The state MVP program has
invested $4.2 million across
three grants in this project.
State Senators DiDomenico
and Jehlen and State Representatives
Ryan, McGonagle,
and Barber led the Mystic
state legislative delegation in
securing “no less than” $5 million
in state bonding authorization
to provide required
match for a $50 million federal
grant proposal that Chelsea
and Everett are applying for.
These projects are the result
of years of analysis and design
by both individual communities
and multiple municipalities
working collectively.
Each of the municipalities that
championed these climate resilient
projects is a founding
member of the Resilient Mystic
Collaborative (RMC), a watershed-wide
voluntary partnership
focused on regional
climate resilience.
׉	 7cassandra://ZD10N_YcxNCkMA4INUaQIQDN47LS9_HCZTmP4crefwg*y`̰ c[JEb܌׉ETHE EVERETT ADVOCATE – FRiDAy, OCTObER 28, 2022
Page 27
OBITUARIES
Giovanni Leone
O
f Ev -
erett .
En t er ed
into eternal
rest on
Monda y ,
October 17 in the Massachusetts
General Hospital, after
being in failing health. He was
81 years old. Born in Bracigliano,
Italy, Giovanni had served
in the Italian Army before
coming to America. He settled
in Everett and worked as
a skilled construction mason
working for various contractors
and on his own, building
the beautiful home he lived in.
Beloved husband of Mafalda
(Liguori) Leone for over
57 years. Dear and devoted
father of Viola Torra and her
husband, John of Everett, Luigi
Leone and his wife, Cintia
of Stoneham and Giuseppina
Moreira and her husband, Rodrigo
of Everett. Brother of Giuseppe
Leone of Revere, Antonietta
DeCarlo of Revere,
Lucia Greco of Malden, Maria
Pezzi of West Newbury and
the late Emilio Leone. Loving
Nonno of Sabrina Firicano-LoBono
and her husband,
Salvatore, Victoria Carmen Leone,
Giovanni Carlo Leone, Lucas
Anthony Moreira, and Jake
Giuseppe Moreira and loving
great Nonno of Giavanna Viva
Santina Firicano-LoBono.
Relatives and friends were
invited to attend Giovanni’s
visiting hours in the Cafasso
& Sons Funeral Home, 65 Clark
St. (Corner of Main St.) Everett,
on Thursday, October 20. His
funeral will be from the funeral
home on Friday, at 9 a.m.
followed by a funeral Mass in
the Immaculate Conception
Church, 487 Broadway, Everett
at 10 a.m. Entombment will
follow at the Woodlawn Community
Mausoleum, Everett.
Contributions in Giovanni’
memory to the Alzheimer’s
Association, 309 Waverley
Oaks Road, Waltham, MA
02452 would be sincerely appreciated.
Margaret
“Patsy”
(Corcoran) O’Brien
A
lifelong
Everett
r esiden t ,
p a s s e d
a w a
y
peaceful -
ly on October
15th, 2022, at 94 years.
She was the beloved wife of
the late James F. O’Brien. Loving
mother of Barbara Ungaro
and her husband Fred, Eileen
McGlinchey and her husband
Rick, and the late James
O’Brien. Cherished grandmother
of John and Christine
Ungaro, Erin, Rick, and Andrew
McGlinchey and his wife
Shayla. Cherished great grandmother
of Caroline, Lauren,
and Cillian.
Patsy was a longtime former
teacher’s aide for the Everett
School Department and
a front desk receptionist for
Whidden Hospital. A graveside
service was held on Wednesday,
October 19th, in Glenwood
Cemetery, Washington
Ave, Everett. Arrangements
entrusted to JF Ward Funeral
Home, Everett.
Maria (Del Sonno)
Anzivino
O
f
E v -
erett .
P assed
aw ay a t
the Roy -
al Meadow
View Nursing
Home on October 17. She
is the wife of Giuseppe Anzivino.
Loving sister of Domenico
and his wife Maria DelSonno,
Vincenza and her husband Urbano
Lupoli & Carmelina and
her husband Gary Jordan & Lucia
(Paolo) Sasso. Sister-in-law
of Rosa Delsonno and Leonardo
Loffredo. Sister of the late
Pietro (Anna). Leonardo (Concetta),
Antonietta and Mario
Delsonno. Maria is also survived
by numerous nieces,
nephews and good friends.
Funeral was from the Salvatore
Rocco & Sons Funeral
Home, 331 Main Street, Everett
on Thursday, October 20th
followed by a Funeral Mass
in Saint Anthony Church. Interment
will be in Woodlawn
Cemetery in Everett.
Margaret “Peg” Mitton
O
f Melr
ose ,
long-time
r esiden t
of Ev er -
ett. Passed
away on October
23 at the age of 95. She
was predeceased by her devoted
husband of 60 years,
Robert “Bob” Mitton. Peg was
the loving mother of Margaret
Stanioski and her husband
John of Newbury, Kathleen
Larcano and her husband Joseph
of Medford, Robert Mitton
and his wife Susan of Beverly,
Stephen Mitton and his
wife Theresa of Ipswich, Maureen
Fielding and her husband
Brian of East Greenwich, RI
and John Mitton and his wife
Lynne of North Reading.
Peg was the proud grandmother
of Elizabeth and Andy
LaSpina, Jan and Tad Beagley,
Lauren and Andrew Nimmer,
Jenna and Eric Milman, Nathan
and Kasey Fielding, Rachel
Mitton, Jeremy and Meg
Mitton, Stephen and Amanda
Fielding, Kristen and Andrew
Gottlieb and John and Katie
Mitton.She was the adoring
OBITUARIES | SEE PAGE 30
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THE EVERETT ADVOCATE – FRiDAy, OCTObER 28, 2022
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Page 29
ince narrowly voted
not to become an independent
country?
1. October 28 is
National Chocolate
Day; from 1970-1994,
what was advertised
as “The Great American
Chocolate Bar”?
2. What is Allhallowtide?
3.
What TV series/
movie detective liked
Tootsie Roll pops?
4. On Oc t . 29,
2015, what country
changed its policy
from one to two children
per family?
5. Where in Eastern
Mass. is The Edward
Gorey House of
the famed author/illustrator?
6.
What Greek “Father
of Medicine”
said, “If you are in a
bad mood go for a
walk. If you are still
in a bad mood, go for
another walk”?
7. What American
wrote the poem titled
“Because I Could Not
Stop for Death”?
8. On Oct. 30, 1995,
what Canadian prov9.
According to
Guinness World Records,
to celebrate
Diwali eve in October
2022 in India, the
largest display of oil
lamps was lit; how
many: 500, 785,635
or 1,576,955?
10. What famous
French stage actress’s
dog was named Hamlet?
(She had played
male roles, including
Hamlet.)
11. “The Legend of
Sleepy Hollow” is a
short story in “The
Sketch Book of Geoffrey
Crayon, Gent” –
who authored it?
12. On Oct. 31, 1984,
what third prime minister
of India was honored
with a State Funeral?
13.
How are Cat -
woman, The Joker
and The Riddler similar?
14.
On Nov. 1, 1920,
Eugene O’Neill’s “The
Emperor Jones,” a
tragedy about an African
American former
Pullman porter,
premiered at the
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Playwright ’s The -
atre where in Eastern
Mass.?
15. What color did
Johnny Cash wear to
perform?
16. On Nov. 2, 1889,
what two states were
admitted to the USA
that were named after
Native Americans?
17. Where did pumpkins
originate?
18. Quotes from
what 1800’s Massachusetts
writer open
the meetings of the
“Dead Poets Society”
in that fi lm?
19. The 1984 film
“Ghostbusters” is set
in what city?
20. On Nov. 3, 1956,
what 1939 film with
the line “I’ll get you
my pretty, and your
little dog, too!” aired
on TV for the first
time?
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1. Hershey’s Milk Chocolate
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(Halloween), All Saints’ Day
and All Souls’ Day
3. Theo Kojak
4. China
5. Yarmouth Port
6. Hippocrates
7. Emily Dickinson
8. Quebec
9. 1,576,955
10. Sarah Bernhardt
11. Washington Irving
12. Indira Gandhi
13. They are enemies in the TV
series “Batman.”
14. Provincetown
15. Black
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18. Henry David Thoreau
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THE EVERETT ADVOCATE – FRiDAy, OCTObER 28, 2022
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
BUYER2
Alvarenga, Nelson D
Qazafi, Muhammad
SELLER1
Broadway Everett Tnd LLC
34 Lewis Street RT
SELLER2
Russo, Richard A
ADDRESS
18 Gledhill Ave #E
34 Lewis St #1
OBITUARIES | FROM PAGE 27
great-grandmother of fourteen.
She
was the dear sister of Michael
O’Sullivan of NH, Cecilla
Hamilton of Vermont, and her
predeceased siblings Aileen
Murphy, Patricia Murray and
Bryan O’Sullivan. Peg leaves
behind many loving nieces
and nephews and dear friends.
Peg was born in Arlington
and lived in Everett most of
her life before moving to Melrose
six years ago. Although
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38 Main St. Saugus
(781) 558-1091
mangorealtyteam.com
20 Railroad Ave. Rockport
(978)-999-5408
SAUGUS
AMESBURY
Welcome home. This two family with large units
and an additional living space in the lower level. 5
Baths total. Unit 1 is New which holds a 4 Room 2
bedroom fireplace, washer and dryer. Unit 2
offers a 6 Room 3 Bedroom and 2 full baths with a
fireplace that leads to dining area with sliding
door overlooking deck where you could view
miles of flat land. Generous size rooms with
ceiling fans and plenty of storage space. 2 tier
decks, heated pool. 2 car drive way with space for
8-10 cars, cabana with a full bath and a kitchen.
Close to shopping malls, transportation, Airport,
and more .....$819,000
SAUGUS
WOULD YOU LIKE TO KNOW ABOUT
COMING SOON PROPERTIES?
CALL NOW 781-558-1091
Call Sue: (617) 877-4553 or Email
infowithmango@gmail.com for a
Free Market Analysis!
34 Beech St
Saugus, MA 01906
Sunday, 10/30 10:30 AM -12:30 PM
Saturday, 10/29 12-2 PM
CITY DATE
Everett
10.03.22
Everett
10.03.22
PRICE
460000
235000
she lived in Melrose of late, her
heart always resided in Everett;
the city she loved.
Peg was a long-time member
of the Everett School Committee,
past Chairwoman of
the Everett Library Board and
member of the Everett Art Association.
A
private service will be held.
In lieu of flowers, donations
may be made in Margaret’s
name to Mystic Valley Elder
Services, 300 Commercial
Street, Suite19, Malden, MA.
02148.
Would you like a compliment of wonderful
neighborhood, space, and many amenities nearby?
This private setting townhouse offers so much. The
main level boasts an eat in kitchen, along with living
room and 3 generous bedrooms on the second floor.
the lower level or could also be categorized as the
ground level offers a large family room or bedroom
with a full bath. Did I mention washer and dryer in the
units, 1 deeded parking, 1 car garage., transportation,
nearby shops, and churches? Make this nestled home
a win ...$369,000
SAUGUS
Turnkey awaits for new owner. Spectacular sunfilled
3 bedroom ranch that boasts gleaming
hardwood floors throughout, including central air.
The open concept kitchen offers stainless
appliances and plenty of granite counter tops,
stainless appliances, center island that flows into
the dining area and open concept of large living
room. If you want a home within a suburban feel
that offers a deck, shed, level fenced yard,
driveway, dead end and more! This lovely property
abutts Middle School and Bike Trail....$579,000
SAUGUS
Spectacular sun-filled Colonial with exceptional flow and robust
space. Details matter and this lovely home is brimming with
beautiful woodwork, trim and much character. The open concept
kitchen offers stainless appliances and plenty of granite tops which
flows to living room and inviting fireplace which leads to double
door going onto the deck. Balancing things off on the second floor
are 3 generous bedrooms. The main bedroom has a large sitting
room, main bath all leading to a spacious roof top balcony. Large
driveway, level yard, 1 car garage and more. Did I mention easy
access to public transportation, 20 minutes from Boston, and
proximity close to shopping malls and restaurants.....$668,000
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Would you like to get into the Saugus Real Estate Market
and into this cozy ranch which offers charm, location and
fabulous space? It hosts a great kitchen that extends to a
closed sunroom and extended deck. There is a washer and
dryer hookup on the first floor. Great height in the
basement that includes updated electrical circuits of
200amp. This home offers a 6-car driveway, beautiful
fenced in yard, shed and close to all major routes
...$499,000
stat
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Equity Seekers take note. Here is a great opportunity to
get into the Saugus Housing Market. Owned by the
same family for over 70 years and located on a nice level
lot. It could use a new kitchen, bath and new roof. Living
Room has a fireplace, 1 car garage, level yard. Desirable
neighborhood close to major routes and more...$449,000
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Page 31
#
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335 Central St., Saugus, MA
781-233-7300
SAUGUS - 8 room, 5-bedroom Colonial, 1½
baths, gourmet kit w/granite counters & double
ovens, dining room w/slider to deck, fireplace
lvrm 3 season porch, located in Lynnhurst
neighborhood.......................................$679,900.
WOBURN - Nicely renovated 7 room, 4-bedroom
cape cod style home, granite kitchen
open to sunken famrm/dnrm, NEW full bathroom,
NEW roof, nothing to do by move in! You
won’t be disappointed......................... $599,900.
SALEM - Two Family 6/5 rooms, 3/2 bedrooms,
updated kitchens, replacement windows, three
season porch, separate utilities, walk-up 3rd
level, two car garage, located near Downtown
Salem.....................................................$899,900.
DANVERS - 6 room Colonial, 3 bedrooms,
open concept, living room, dining room, hardwood
flooring, walk-up attic, enclosed porch,
corner, level lot, needs TLC................$459,900.
SAUGUS - 8 rm Col offers 3 bedrms, 4 baths,
master bdrm w/private bath & sitting room,
finished lower level, fenced yard with above
ground pool & patio, great location, close to
everything!............................................$735,000.
MALDEN - 6 rm, 3 bdrm Colonial, 1 ½ baths,
updated kit with granite counters, mini split
A/C systems, 2 heated sunrooms, large, deck,
shared 1 car garage, located on Medford line
…...........................................................$549,900.
LYNN - 6 Store Fronts (consisting of two condos),
ALL occupied – great income, minimal
expenses make this a great investment, 1031
tax exchange, etc, centrally located, close to
public transportation….....................$2,799,900.
SAUGUS - 7 rm, 3-bedroom Colonial offers 1
½ baths, family room with woodstove, kit w/
granite counters, convenient 2nd floor laundry,
walk-up attic for future expansion, finished
lower level, AG pool, cabana w/kitchenette,
side street…..........................................$599,900.
SAUGUS - DESIRABLE 2-bedroom Ranch,
fireplace living room, maple kitchen with
granite counters, finished lower level, inground
pool, screened porch, located on
dead-end street….............................$549,900.
SAUGUS - 7+ rm Great Family Colonial offers 4-5
bedrooms, 3 ½ baths, great open floor plan, finished
lower level with kitchenette and bath, 2 c
gar w/loft storage, heated inground pool, located
on cul-de-sac in desirable Indian Valley..$799,900.
SAUGUS - Spacious 7+ room Cape Cod
style home offers 4 bedrooms, 2 ½ baths,
1st floor family room, hardwood, updated
roof, alarm, level lot, located on great
dead-end street.............................$519,900.
REVERE - Wonderful New Construction offers
8 rm Center Entrance Colonial boasting
elegant, designer kitchen, 4 bedrms, 2 1/2
baths, spacious master suite, hardwood flooring
throughout, great mudroom when entering
from garage, level, fenced lot…..........$875,000.
WONDERING WHAT YOUR
HOME IS WORTH?
CALL US FOR A FREE
OPINION OF VALUE.
781-233-1401
38 MAIN STREET, SAUGUS
COMING SOON
FOR SALE
LET US SHOW YOU OUR
MARKETING PLAN TO
GET YOU TOP DOLLAR
FOR YOUR HOME!
LITTLEFIELDRE.COM
UNDER CONTRACT
FOR SALE - BEAUTIFUL VIEWS OF LAKE SUNTAUG
FROM THIS 3 BED HOME ON A DEAD END STREET.
LOTS OF UPGRADES. FRESH PAINT NEW HEAT.
LYNNFIELD $849,999 CALL JUSTIN 978-815-2610
UNDER CONTRACT
FOR SALE -METICULOUSLY MAINTAINED 2 BED 1 BATH
CAPE WITH EXPANSION POTENTIAL ON QUIET DEAD
END STREET. LYNNFIELD $599,900 DEBBIE 617-678-9710
COMING SOON - LOCATION LOCATION LOCATION!! THIS GREAT WEST PEABODY CAPE HAS A
LOT TO OFFER.THREE BEDROOMS, 2 FULL BATHS, UPDATED KITCHEN AND SPACIOUS ROOMS.
NEW VINYL SIDING, NEW CARPETING, AND FRESHLY PAINTED INTERIOR. PRIVATE YARD WITH
DECK. WEST PEABODY CALL KEITH FOR MORE DETAILS 781-389-0791
LOOKING TO BUY
OR SELL
CALL
JUSTIN
KLOACK
CALL HIM FOR
ALL YOUR REAL
ESTATE NEEDS!
(978) 815-2610
NEW CONSTRUCTION
COMING SOON
TO SAUGUS AVE 5 NEW HOMES FROM
HAMMERTIME CONSTRUCTION. GET IN
SOON TO PICK YOUR LOT AND YOUR
HOME.
SAUGUS STARTING AT $895,000
CALL ANTHONY FOR MORE PRICING
AND DETAILS 857-246-1305
FOR SALE - UPDATED MOBILE HOME 3 BED, 1 BATH.
NEWER KITCHEN, NEW BATH, FULL SIZE LAUNDRY
CORNER LOT PEABODY $185,900 CALL ERIC 781-223-0289
FOR SALE - BRAND NEW MANUFACTURED MOBILE
HOMES. TWO CUSTOM UNITS LEFT, ALL UNITS ARE 2 BED ,
1 BATH 12 X 52, DANVERS $199,900 CALL ERIC 781-223-0289
FOR SALE - 2 BED 2 BATH CONDO WITH OCEAN VIEWS FROM
EVERY ROOM ON REVERE BEACH. COMES WITH 1 DEEDED
PARKING SPACE. REVERE $395,000 ANTHONY 857-246-1305
FOR SALE
FOR SALE - 2 PLUS ACRES OF RESIDENTIAL LAND.
WATER AND SEWER AT SITE SAUGUS $850,000 CALL
RHONDA FOR DETAILS 781-706-0842
FOR SALE
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THE EVERETT ADVOCATE – FRiDAy, OCTObER 28, 2022
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COMMERCIAL & RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY SALES & RENTALS
WELCOME FALL!
Sandy Juliano
Broker/President
A wonderful season to buy
your dream home!
WE KNOW EVERETT!! Call TODAY to sell or buy with the best!
Condo
1 Riverview
Blvd, Methuen
Building 5,
Unit 204,
2 bed, 2.5 bath
$349,900.
OPEN
HOUSE
SUNDAY
10/30
FROM
1:00 -
2:30 PM
SINGLE FAMILY, 21 WALDEN TERRACE, SAUGUS. $849,900.
CALL SANDY FOR 617-448-0854
FOR SALE
SINGLE FAMILY
32 SAMMET ST.,
EVERETT
PLEASE CALL
NORMA FOR
DETAILS
617-590-9143
CALL NORMA FOR DETAILS
SOLD BY
NORMA!
NEW LISTING BY
SANDY
UNDER
AGREEMENT!
NEW LISTING BY SANDY, 3 FAMILY, 234 WILSON
AVE., NAHANT $1,600,000. PLEASE CALL SANDY
FOR DETAILS @ 617-448-0854
New Listing
by Sandy
Single
family,
81 Florence
Street,
Everett
NEW PRICE: $649,900
FOR RENT
EVERETT
2 BEDROOMS, $2100/
MONTH CALL
NORMA FOR DETAILS.
617-590-9143
________________
EVERETT, 2 BEDROOM,
HEAT & HOT WATER
INCL., $2300/MO
CALL JOE FOR DETAILS
617-680-7610
Open Daily From 10:00 A
Joe DiNuzzo
- Broker Associate
Norma Capuano Parziale
- Agent
Denise Matarazzo
- Agent
A.M. - 5:00 P.M.00 PM
433 Broadway, Suite B, Everett, MA 02149
www.jrs-properties.com
Follow Us On:
Rosemarie Ciampi
- Agent
Mark Sachetta
- Agent
617-294-1041
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