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Vol. 25, No. 4
-FREETh
e Advocate – A household word in Saugus!
DVOD
Advocating For The Voke
www.advocatenews.net
CCATTEAT
Published Every Friday
781-233-4446
Friday, January 28, 2022
An election victory
for future Voke students
Saugus joins voters from a dozen
communities in landslide support of
a new Northeast Metro Tech School
By Mark E. Vogler
N
ortheast Metro Tech Principal
Carla Scuzzarella says
she wasn’t taking anything for
granted late Tuesday afternoon
as she stood on the sidewalk
in front of the Saugus Senior
Center with a cup of hot
coff ee in one hand and a campaign
sign in the other, seeking
support from town voters. The
sign read: “Northeast Needs
You. Please Vote Yes! Our Kids
Need A Future.”
“I’m cautiously optimistic that
the vote will be positive in all of
our communities,” Scuzzarella
told a reporter as she waved to
honking cars passing by toward
the end of her four-hour shift.
As far as Scuzzarella was concerned,
the voters in Saugus –
her hometown – and the other
11 communities that make
up the Northeast Metropolitan
VICTORY | SEE PAGE 6
A Show of Sachem Spirit
CAMPAIGNING FOR HER SCHOOL: Northeast Metro Tech School Principal Carla Scuzzarella stood
on the sidewalk outside the parking lot of the Saugus Senior Center during Tuesday’s Special
Election, urging residents to vote “Yes” on the question of whether to fund a new Northeast
Metro Tech. Residents in Saugus and the 11 other communities in the vocational school district
voted by an 83 percent margin in favor of the new school project. (Saugus Advocate photo by Mark E. Vogler)
Selectmen broach the height issue
Two taller buildings may be safer than three shorter ones
at Kowloon Restaurant site, according to a fi re chief
By Mark E. Vogler
T
wo selectmen have expressed
support for the
Wong family’s request for a
Special Permit (S-2) that would
allow the construction of two
six-story buildings on the Route
1 North property where their
popular Kowloon Restaurant is
currently located. The board’s
chair, Anthony Cogliano, and
Selectman Jeff rey Cicolini said
during a continued public hearing
on Tuesday (Jan. 25) night
that they believe a proposed
mixed-use project involving
two buildings reaching a height
of 67 feet and 8 inches is more
SELECTMEN | SEE PAGE 7
Co-Captain Maryemma LeBlanc and her teammates are
shown performing last Friday (Jan. 21) in the gymnasium.
See page 11 for photo highlights. (Advocate photo by Tara Vocino)
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THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FRIDAY, JANUARY 28, 2022
The Brotherhood of All Mankind
“The Four Chaplains” will be remembered on Thursday, Feb. 3, 2022
Special to the
Saugus Advocate
By Jay Pinette
W
Lawrence A. Simeone Jr.
Attorney-at-Law
~ Since 1989 ~
* Corporate Litigation
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Lsimeonejr@simeonelaw.net
FOR ADVERTISING WITH RESULTS,
CALL THE ADVOCATE NEWSPAPERS AT
781-233-4446 OR INFO@ADVOCATENEWS.NET
hen one sees the coverage
of natural and
manmade disasters in the
media, I can’t help but wonder
if many of us consider
how we might react if we
were faced with a true life
or death decision. “Valor is a
gift,” Carl Sandburg once said.
“Those having it never know
for sure whether they have it
until the test comes.”
I have had the opportunity
to speak with recipients of
the Medal of Honor, our nation’s
highest award for valor
in action against an enemy
force. To a man, none
of them considers himself
a hero. They generally said
that they were doing their
job and that the true heroes
were their buddies who
didn’t come home. At a time
when we seem to have trivialized
the notion of what it
takes to be a hero, there is a
small memorial in Wakefield
to four men that exemplifies
the true meaning of the word.
In the early morning hours
of February 3, 1943, US Army
Transport Ship (U.S.A.T.)
Dorchester, a conver ted
cruise ship, was torpedoed
by a German submarine in
the icy seas off Labrador in
the North Atlantic. Heavily
damaged by the torpedo, it
is believed that the Dorchester
took on water and sank
within 20 minutes of the torpedo
strike.
Survivors of the sinking reported
that during the ensuing
pandemonium four
men were seen offering encouragement,
support and
even their own life jackets to
those in need. The four men
were Reverend George Lansing
Fox, a Methodist Minister
from Gilman, Vt.; Doctor Alexander
David Goode, a Rabbi
from Washington, D.C.; Reverend
Clarke Vandersall Poling,
a Minister of the First Reformed
Church from Schenectady,
N.Y.; and the Reverend
John Patrick Washington,
a Catholic Priest from Arlington,
N.J.. They are known to
this day as “The Four Chaplains.”
Immediately
after the
Dorchester was hit, witnesses
reported that The Four Chaplains
were moving among
their fellow passengers ministering
to the injured, offering
direction and support
for those clambering for lifeboats
and ultimately removing
their own life jackets and
offering them to others when
the supply of lifejackets was
exhausted. “It was the finest
thing I have seen or hope
to see this side of heaven,”
said John Ladd, a survivor
who saw the chaplains’ selfless
acts.
There were 902 men aboard
the U.S.A.T. Dorchester that
cold February night. Six
hundred seventy-two died
and there were 230 survivors.
When the news of the
Dorchester’s sinking reached
America, the public was
stunned by the magnitude
of the tragedy and by the
heroic conduct of The Four
Chaplains.
The Four Chaplains were
posthumously awarded the
Distinguished Service Cross
and Purple Heart on December
19, 1944. A Special Medal
for Heroism was authorized
by Congress and awarded
posthumously by President
Eisenhower on January
18, 1961.
Congress officially designated
Feb. 3 as Four Chaplains
Day in 1988. Observances
are held each year across
the nation.
It came as some surprise
to discover that Wakefield
has a memorial to The Four
Chaplains. On May 30, 1955,
a dedication ceremony took
place at Temple Emmanuel in
Wakefield. An Interfaith Memorial
Plaque was presented
to Temple Emmanuel by Dr.
and Mrs. Joseph S. Leavitt. According
to the records of the
Temple, the gifts of The Four
Chaplains Plaque and the Memorial
Marker were given “in
recognition of the Brotherhood
of all Mankind.”
The Temple record continues,
“The tablet at the entrance
to the Temple commemorates
the heroic sacrifice
in selfless devotion of the
Four Chaplains. It is an enduring
reminder of the love and
loyalty which is productive of
understanding among those
of all faiths and a respect of
the dignity of all men. It symbolizes
men’s best hope for
peace in his longing for World
Brotherhood.”
Temple Emmanuel is located
at 120 Chestnut Street in
Wakefield.
“The universal brotherhood
of man is our most precious
possession”—Mark Twain
(Editor’s Note: Jay Pinette is
the Saugus Veterans’ Services
Officer, and he can be reached
at 781-231-4010. He is also a
member of the Wakefield Veterans
Advisory Board.)
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Page 3
Rep. Wong supports $55M supplemental budget
to fund COVID-19 testing and school masks
B
OSTON – State Representative
Donald H. Wong
(R-Saugus) recently supported
a $55 million supplemental
budget that provides funding
for expanded COVID-19 testing
and the distribution of masks
for public school districts, while
also setting a date for the 2022
state primary election. House
Bill 4340, An Act relative to immediate
COVID recovery needs,
was engrossed on a vote of 1590
in the House of Representatives
on January 19, 2022. On
January 24 the Senate Committee
on Ways and Means recDonald
H. Wong
State Representative
ommended passage of the bill
with an amendment (S.2622).
Representative Wong said
the spending proposal earmarks
$25 million to help establish
and expand COVID-19
testing sites across Massachusetts
and to purchase tests.
Funding will be made available
for on-site testing locations
– such as community health
centers, urgent care centers
and nonprofit organizations –
which will be required to provide
walk-up appointments. An
additional $25 million will be
used to acquire N95 and KN95
Supt. McMahon makes her budget case
“Based on Saugus’ Strategic Plan, ‘Connecting our Past, Defining
Our Future 2035,’ high-quality schools are its missing piece,”
superintendent says as School Committee backs her proposed budget
By Mark E. Vogler
in our community for the longterm
success of this generation
S
uperintendent Erin McMahon
considers strong classroom
instruction, programs
based on student and family
needs and high expectations
as key components of her fiveyear
plan to transform Saugus
Public Schools from the bottom
10 percent of education districts
into the top 10. “The budget
that I have presented to the
School Committee directly aligns
with that vision,” McMahon told
School Committee members last
Thursday (Jan. 20) night as she explained
the need for the budget
she had crafted for the 2023 fiscal
year that begins July 1.
The superintendent made her
case, using a PowerPoint presentation
that cited a preliminary
Master Plan goal of Saugus being
“a model to the region, emof
students,” McMahon said.
“The kids who are right now
in pre-K, in 2035 will be sophomores
in college or potentially
juniors,” she said.
School Committee members
Erin McMahon
phasizing its commitment to fiscal
responsibility, sustainability
and high-quality schools.”
“Based on Saugus’ Strategic
Plan, “Connecting our Past, Defining
Our Future 2035,” high-quality
schools are its missing piece,”
she said, referring to the Master
Plan document.
“It is essential for us to have that
long-term vision of what a town is
planning for 2035, to invest now
voted 5-0 in support of McMahon’s
$31.3 million budget, which
includes an increase of close to
$1.5 million, or 4.87 percent, over
the current budget.
School Committee Member
Joseph “Dennis” Gould stressed
it is important for the School Department
to develop “a collaborative
plan prior to getting to the
Finance Committee and Town
Meeting.” “As we all know, once it
hits Town Meeting, it’s too late to
make any changes. So, I’m hoping
there’s a lot of dialogue to nail
McMAHON | SEE PAGE 13
masks for distribution to students,
staff and faculty at elementary
and secondary public
schools no later than February
28. The remaining $5 million is
being set aside to help increase
WONG | SEE PAGE 4
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THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FRIDAY, JANUARY 28, 2022
This week on Saugus TV The COVID-19 Update
• Sunday, Jan. 30 from 9–11 p.m. on Channel 8 – “Sunday
Night Stooges” (The Three Stooges).
• Monday, Jan. 31 all day on Channel 8 – “Movie Monday”
(classic movies).
• Tuesday, Feb. 1 at 8:30 p.m. on Channel 9 – Board of Selectmen
Meeting from Jan. 25.
• Wednesday, Feb. 2 at 8:30 p.m. on Channel 9 – Board of
Appeals Meeting from Jan. 27.
• Thursday, Feb. 3 at 6 p.m. on Channel 9 – School Committee
Meeting ***live***.
• Friday, Feb. 4 at 8:30 p.m. on Channel 8 – Know Your
Town with Andrew Whitcomb.
• Saturday, Feb. 5 at 5:30 p.m. on Channel 8 – What’s
Cookin’? With Mona Ahmad.
Saugus TV can be seen on Comcast Channels 8, 9 & 22. For
complete schedules, please visit www.saugustv.org. ***programming
may be subject to change without notice***
Town reports 214 newly confirmed cases
over the past seven days, five new deaths
By Mark E. Vogler
T
he number of newly confirmed
COVID-19 cases
continued to drop dramatically
in Saugus after the month
began with two consecutive
weeks of more than 600 cases.
Town Manager Scott C. Crabtree
announced that the state
Department of Public Health
(DPH) has notified the town
of 214 new cases over the past
seven days through yesterday
(Thursday, Jan. 27), bringing
the overall total to 8,344 cases
since the outbreak of the
Coronavirus in March of 2020.
WONG | FROM PAGE 3
vaccination rates for children
between the ages of five and
11 living in communities that
have been disproportionately
impacted by COVID-19. Representative
Wong noted that the
bill requires the Baker-Polito
Crabtree also noted that the
DPH confirmed five additional
COVID-19-related deaths,
bringing the overall total to 99.
“Our hearts and prayers go
out to those families affected
by this health pandemic,”
Crabtree said.
Last week, the town reported
336 COVID-19 cases,
which followed its record
highs of 623 and 668 cases
from the previous two weeks.
The town has reported 3.004
new COVID-19 cases since
Nov. 22. The ongoing surge
prompted the Board of Health
to adopt an indoor mask manAdministration
to seek federal
reimbursement at the highest
allowable rate for all eligible expenditures
contained in the bill.
The supplemental budget
also establishes the 2022 state
primary date for Tuesday, September
6. This authorization is
needed to ensure that Massachusetts
is following the federal
Uniformed and Overseas
Citizens Absentee Voting Act,
which requires absentee ballots
to be mailed to qualifying
military and overseas voters
who apply for a ballot at least
45 days before the November
8 state election.
House Bill 4340 also temporarily
extends certain pandemic
emergency provisions
that had expired in December.
According to Representative
Wong, municipalities will be
allowed to continue holding
remote public meetings until
July 15, 2022, to help mitigate
the transmission of COVID-19,
and remote notarization using
electronic video conferencing
will continue to be authorized
through the same date.
House Bill 4340 contains an
additional provision allowing
certain retired state, county and
municipal employees to continue
working during the pandemic
as a consultant or an independent
contractor without
impacting their pension. This
provision does not apply to individuals
who were retired undate
three weeks ago.
Meanwhile, Saugus Public
Schools also experienced a
reduction of cases in its four
buildings, going from 101
cases (Jan. 13-19) to 65 cases
(Jan. 20-26). This week, there
were 12 cases reported in Saugus
High, 11 in Saugus Middle
School, 25 in the Belmonte
STEAM Academy and 17 in
the Veterans Early Learning
Center. A week ago, there were
39 cases in the High School,
20 in the Middle School, 25 in
the Belmonte STEAM Academy
and 17 in the Veterans Early
Learning Center.
der a general or special disability
law.
Before the final vote on the
bill, additional language was
adopted via a consolidated
amendment that would:
· allow funding to be used
for the COVID-19 Vaccine Equity
Initiative to increase booster
shot rates in disproportionately
impacted communities
• allow for Town Meetings to
meet remotely until July 15,
2022, and to be conducted with
a reduced quorum requirement
equal to not less than 10 percent
of the normal quorum requirement
•
provide health care professionals
and health care facilities
with immunity from liability
while providing health care
services during the COVID-19
emergency – retroactive to November
22, 2021, and effective
until February 28, 2022 – provided
they acted in good faith
and in accordance with emergency
rules and applicable laws
• extend the period for which
a public corporation may conduct
an annual or special meeting
of the shareholders from
December 15, 2021, to July 15,
2022
• extend the period for which
directors of charitable corporations
may hold remote meetings
and other modifications
from December 15, 2021, to
July 15, 2022
Saugonians named to Dean’s List
at University of New England
augus residents Amanda
Castle, Sarah McGonigle
and Olivia Rando were
named to the Dean’s List at
the University of New EnS
gland
for the 2021 fall semester.
To be eligible for the
Dean’s List, students must attain
a grade point average of
3.3 or better.
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Page 5
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THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FRIDAY, JANUARY 28, 2022
VICTORY | FROM PAGE 1
Regional Vocational School District
didn’t disappoint her. Saugus
was among the 11 communities
that voted overwhelmingly
in support of a proposed
new Northeast Metro Tech
School.
Seven percent of the town’s
20,509 registered voters turned
out, and about 63 percent of
them voted “Yes” on the question
of whether to authorize
the borrowing of about $317.4
million to pay costs of designing,
constructing and originally
equipping a new Northeast
Metropolitan Regional Vocational
School and related athletic
facilities, located at 100
Hemlock Rd. in Wakefield.
A lopsided vote for
The Voke school
Overall, the question prevailed
on a lopsided vote –
about 83 percent of voters
supporting the school project
– which has already received
an award of $140.8 million
from the Massachusetts School
Building Authority (MSBA). The
school project needed to win
by just a simple majority. Only
voters in Chelsea – which has
the second-highest enrollment
(238) of the district’s 1,281 students
– opposed the project.
Of the 283 residents in that city
who voted, only 109 (39 percent)
voted “Yes.”
Saugus, which has 170 students
enrolled at Northeast
Metro Tech – the third-highest
enrollment (13 percent) in
the district, had the most voters
(1,468) turning out of all of
the communities. Wakefield,
where the school is based, drew
1,069 voters. Revere, which has
the highest enrollment (248,
19 percent) of Northeast Metro
Tech students, had a turnout
of only 417 voters.
Construction of the school is
not expected to begin until the
spring of 2023, with a targeted
completion in early 2026.
Superintendent David DiBarri
issued the following statement
on Wednesday, on behalf of the
Northeast Metropolitan Vocational
Technical School Committee:
“We
are deeply grateful to the
voters in our 12 sending communities
for their participation
in today’s vote, their collective
support of a new school building,
and for securing a vision
for a 21st-century career technical
education that will position
our students for success
after graduation.
“Input from the Northeast
community has been an integral
part of this process. School
officials, construction experts,
and School Committee and
Building Committee members
from all 12 communities
worked diligently to create a
proposal that reflects that community
feedback, and respects
the cost to taxpayers.
“Our work is just beginning.
We welcome community feedback
as we refine this project,
and look forward to the day
we celebrate a new chapter for
Northeast Metro Tech.”
Northeast/Deputy Director
Scuzzarella, who is also a Precinct
10 Town Meeting member
in Saugus, echoed DiBarri’s sentiments
about the vote. “We are
grateful and ecstatic!” she said.
The next step for Saugus is
how the town will pay its share
for the new school. “The powers
that be have about three years
SEEKING SAUGUS SUPPORT: Left to right: Peter A. Rossetti, Jr.,
the longtime Saugus representative on the Northeast Metro
Tech School Committee, and Kevin Nigro of PMA Consultants,
LLC, the project director/senior project manager of the proposed
new Northeast Metro Tech School, are shown trying to
influence Saugus voters headed into the Senior Center parking
lot for Tuesday’s Special Election on the new Voke school
project. (Saugus Advocate photo by Mark E. Vogler)
to figure out how to pay for it,”
Scuzzarella said.
Another debt
excursion vote may be
coming
The district’s share of the project
is $176.6 million. Town officials
have already said the community
would have to hold another
special election to decide
on how to finance the project,
which has been estimated to
cost up to $40 million over a 30year
period.
At the end of Tuesday (Jan.
25) night’s Board of Selectmen’s
meeting, the board’s chair, Anthony
Cogliano, thanked Saugus
voters for approving the
new Voke school. He also alluded
to the upcoming challenge
of winning town-wide
support for financing the project.
“I think it’s the smart thing
to do to support education,”
Cogliano said.
“I know we’re going to have
our hands full to get the word
out there as to how we’re going
to fund that school – but that’s
a topic for another day. I’m sure
we’ll do our part to educate the
public on that,” he said.
Peter A. Rossetti, Jr., the longtime
Saugus representative
on the Northeast Metro Tech
School Committee and a Precinct
2 Town Meeting Member,
said he expects town officials
will begin work on crafting
a debt exclusion campaign
by year’s end.
Rossetti, who spent several
hours outside the Senior Center
parking lot on Tuesday holding
a sign campaigning for the
new school project, was in a celebratory
mood when an election
worker posted the unofficial
election results at the entrance
of the Senior Center.
“Excellent! Now it’s time to get
moving on the actual construction
and Saugus finances. The
sooner we start, the sooner we
finish,” Rossetti said.
“Thank you, Saugus! It’s
nice to see the support for
the school and the future kids
who will go there,” Rossetti said.
Rossetti credits the strong
support for the project in Saugus
from The Voke alumni and
tradespeople who hire Northeast
Metro Tech graduates. “I
noticed a lot of commercial vehicles
driving into the parking
VICTORY | SEE PAGE 7
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Page 7
SELECTMEN | FROM PAGE 1
desirable and safer than having
three four-story buildings built
on the same property.
But Selectman Michael Serino
and the board’s Vice-Chair,
Debra Panetta, said they have
some concerns about granting
a variance that would allow the
proposed buildings to exceed
the four stories and 55 feet in
height that town zoning currently
allows within the Route
One Business Highway Sustainable
Development Zoning District
(BHSD).
It requires a four-fifths vote for
the board to issue an S-2 permit.
“I’m worried about the precedent
that is going to be set
up and down Route 1,” Serino
told his colleagues at Tuesday
night’s meeting.
“When we’re talking about
this height variance, it should
be a last resort and not a first
option,” he said.
But Cicolini didn’t agree with
Serino’s position. To support his
case, he read a letter from Saugus
Fire Chief Michael Newbury,
who said that the two
taller buildings – made of steel
and concrete – are a better and
safer option than the shorter
four-story buildings made
VICTORY | FROM PAGE 6
lot today to vote,” Rossetti said.
“These are people who look like
they’re tradespeople, people
who would be big supporters
of the school.”
The new school will feature
21st-century learning environments,
improved Individualized
Education Program (IEP)
accommodations, state-ofthe-art
shop and technical lab
space, expanded program offerings,
a new primary access
roadway from Farm Street to
reduce traffic congestion, a
full-size gym, a 750-seat auditorium,
outdoor learning space
and a new cafeteria.
School officials say the current
enrollment of 1,280 students
will increase by approximately
320 students versus
the current enrollment. This
is a major benefit of the project,
as the District currently rejects
more freshman applicaof
wood. “I’m less concerned
about setting a precedent and
more concerned about public
safety,” Cicolini said.
Cogliano – who, along with
Cicolini, had attended a recent
informational meeting held
by the developer at Kowloon
Restaurant to get feedback
from neighbors who live near
the project – said he thinks the
three-building option “would
encroach the neighborhood
more than the two buildings.”
“My honest impression – it’s
less of an impact on the neighborhood
than the three buildings,”
Cogliano said.
Vice-Chair Panetta said she
felt uncomfortable reviewing
the S-2 Permit request without
having the same information
as Cogliano and Cicolini. “This
is a super important vote for
this board, and I want to make
sure I have all of the information
to make the right decision,”
Panetta said, suggesting that a
site visit to the property might
be helpful.
Other board members agreed
and voted to continue the hearing
to 11 a.m., Saturday, Feb. 5
for a site visit to the Kowloon
property. Neighbors are welcome
to attend the site visit
in which the project’s develtions
than they accept due to
space limitations. The construction
of a new Northeast Metro
Tech would allow for additional
programs for Marketing, Medical
Assisting and Biotechnology,
school officials say.
Northeast Metro Tech was
built 53 years ago in 1968, and
the facility has outlived its intended
lifespan. Classrooms
and shops are overcrowded, infrastructure
systems are outdated
and the building does not
comply with existing Americans
with Disabilities Act regulations,
according to school
officials. Northeast Metro Tech
has not had any significant renovations,
additions or improvements
since then. Students are
facing several issues that are reducing
the quality of the educational
experience the school
is able to provide. The school
is at capacity and more than
300 students are waitlisted every
year.
Special Election Results
Community ............... Yes .............. No ...............Percent for
Chelsea ............................109 ................. 174 ................. 39%
Malden ............................666 ................. 151 ................. 82%
Melrose ............................979 ................. 132 ................. 88%
North Reading ..............836 ................. 51 .................... 94%
Reading ...........................663 ................. 83 .................... 89%
Revere ..............................354 ................. 63 .................... 85%
Saugus ......................921 ............. 547 .............63%
Stoneham .......................334 ................. 34 .................... 91%
Wakefield ........................919 ................. 150 ................. 86%
Winchester .....................679 ................. 60 .................... 92%
Winthrop .........................267 ................. 43 .................... 86%
Woburn ...........................759 ................. 80 .................... 91%
Total .......................... 7,486.......... 1,568 ..........83%
oper will meet with selectmen
to answer questions about the
project.
Cogliano and Cicolini both
said they were impressed with
what they observed when the
Kowloon family and its project
representatives held a meeting
which allowed neighbors
to share their concerns.
Attorney Richard M. Magnan
said a number of changes
have been made on the project
based on the feedback from the
neighbors. Several of the neighbors
have written emails supporting
the project.
“We’re really trying to be respectful
of the neighborhood,”
said Michael McKeown, architect
of the Manchester, N.H.,
firm, Dennis Mires, P.A., The Architects.
“The
Wong family along with
their partners are envisioning
an elegant, desirable destination
for Saugus that will stand
the test of time in its design, aesthetic
and construction, paying
homage and respect to the history
of this site,” McKeown said.
The first floor of both buildings
would include commercial
tenant space. Floors
one through six would have
one-bedroom luxury apartments,
according to the architect.
The proposed project includes
220 apartment units in
the two buildings, he said, noting
that one building would
have 130 units and the smaller
building would have 90 units.
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The Sounds of Saugus
By Mark E. Vogler
I missed the Blizzard of ’78
I’m a Massachusetts native and have lived in the Bay State most of
my life except for an aggregate of about 10 years when I lived and
worked as a newspaperman in the states of Florida, Texas, Maine,
New York and Virginia. It will be 44 years ago next week that the
historic Blizzard of ’78 pounded New England, New Jersey, Pennsylvania
and the Metropolitan New York area. Had I been working
in Massachusetts at the time, I’m sure I would have been part of a
news reporting team dispatched to cover that epic nor’easter that
left hundreds of cars stuck on Massachusetts highways and basically
paralyzed the region.
Other than from what I’ve gleaned from newspaper stories and
photographs chronicling the blizzard, I can’t relate to the blizzard at
all, because I was working as a reporter at the time in West Texas for
the San Angelo Standard-Times. And while friends and family were
dealing with the blizzard, I was out in the Davis Mountains area covering
a range fi re. It was an usual assignment in that the fi refi ghters
and public safety crews who were trying to contain the fi re did enjoy
some good barbecue and beer and were willing to share that
and some good stories with reporters who were covering the event.
What’s amazing is that during the three days I was out in the wilderness
covering the spot news event, I was able to fi nd a telephone
and fi le several front-page stories in the San Angelo-Standard-Times.
And when it got dark, I slept in my Renault, which was parked in a
wooded area far from the fi re scene.
After a few days out in the woods, I returned to Midland, Texas,
where I remember reading and watching TV news with great interest
about the great blizzard that hit my home state and New England.
Law Offices of
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Kennedy
512 Broadway, Everett
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twkennedylaw@gmail.com
THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FRIDAY, JANUARY 28, 2022
We have a winner!
Congratulations to Laura
Eisener for making the right
identification in last week’s
“Guess Who Got Sketched!”
contest. She was the only reader
answering correctly, so she won
without having to have his name
selected from the green Boston
Red Sox cap.
Here’s the correct answer, offered
by the person who goes
by the name of The Sketch Artist:
“The answer to last week’s
sketch is one of our three Saugus
Firefi ghter recipients of the
Meritorious medal, Firefighter
Greg Cinelli!!
“I tried to capture in his sketch
the ability of his on the job ready
for anything and very focused
essence.
“Firefighter Greg Cinelli has
been with our Saugus Fire Dept.
since 1999.
“As our Saugus Firefi ghter, he
has received several Commonwealth
achievement awards
for his service. In 2015 he received
an ‘Excellence in Leadership’
Award.
“Governor Baker, Lieutenant
Governor Karyn Polito and Public
Safety Security Secretary Terrence
M. Reid and Fire Marshal
Peter J. Ostroskey for the Massachusetts
Firefighter Awards
Ceremony honored Greg Cinelli
with the distinguished Individual
Medal of Valor Award which
is hard to achieve against an already
high expectations standard
for Commonwealth Firefi
ghters! What an Achievement!
“At the same 2021 Awards
Ceremony Firefi ghter Greg Cinelli
was also awarded a Group
Award of Meritorious Conduct
for acts of bravery and dedication
along with Captain Vinard
and Sean Bohannon!
“Firefighter Cinelli is a United
States Navy Veteran. He then
went above and beyond any
duty and rejoined the Navy. As
a Navy reserve, he spent half
a dozen years in combat duty.
During these six years, he was away from his family so in all due respect
to his family (who served as well) keeping the home fi res burning;
thank you for serving alongside our servicemen.
“It’s great what Lt. Governor Karyn Polito had said as quoted in The
Saugus Advocate Nov. 24th page 2. Lt. Governor Polito had said at
the awards Ceremony: ‘It’s a privilege to recognize this year’s award
winners and thank fi re services personnel across the Commonwealth
for doing such a diffi cult, dangerous job so well every day.’
“Thank you for your service and
congratulations on your well deSOUNDS
| SEE PAGE 9
CONTEST SKETCH OF THE WEEK
GUESS WHO GOT SKETCHED! If you know the right answer,
you might win the contest. In this week’s edition, we
continue our weekly feature where a local artist sketches
people, places and things in Saugus. Got an idea who was
sketched this week? If you do, please email me at mvoge@
comcast.net or leave a phone message at 978-683-7773.
Anyone who between now and Tuesday at noon correctly
identifi es the Saugonian being sketched qualifi es to have
their name put in a green Boston Red Sox hat with a chance
to be selected as the winner of a $10 gift certifi cate to J&M
Italian American Cuisine (340 Central St., Saugus). But you
have to enter to win! Look for the winner and identifi cation
in next week’s “The Sounds of Saugus.” Please leave
your mailing address in case you are a winner. (Courtesy illustration
to The Saugus Advocate by a Saugonian who goes by the name of “The Sketch Artist”)
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Page 9
SOUNDS | FROM PAGE 8
serving awards!
“Yours truly,
“The Sketch Artist”
Saugus author/poet pens another book
A pair of “Shout-Outs”
for the week
We received two nominations
this week for people deserving
of “Shout-Outs.” The first recognition
comes from Sue Fleming:
“This is a little delayed but I
would like to give a Shout Out to
the Saugus Public Library Foundation
for the fun evening of Virtual
Bingo on January 13. It was
well organized by Kristen Tozza
and John Smolinsky called the
numbers and made it very entertaining.
It was great to be able to
support the Foundation virtually
and hopeful that next year we
can do it in person.”
Eugene Decareau offers this
“Shout-Out”:
“Please give a ‘Shout Out’ to all
of the volunteers of the Saugus
Food Pantry, because they all do
such a magnificent job.”
Food pantry seeking
driver volunteers
The Saugus United Parish
Food Pantry seeks volunteers to
make food and bread pickups
on Thursdays and Fridays from
7:30 to 9 a.m. Anyone who has
the time and interest to help out
should contact Jeff Hirtle at 781922-0661.
The food pantry operates
out of the basement at Cliftondale
Congregational Church
at 50 Essex St. in Saugus.
Want to “Shout-Out” a
fellow Saugonian?
This is an opportunity for our
paper’s readers to single out –
in a brief mention – remarkable
acts or achievements by Saugus
residents or an act of kindness or
a nice gesture. Just send an email
(mvoge@comcast.net) with a
mention in the subject line of
“An Extra Shout-Out.” No more
than a paragraph; anything longer
might lend itself to a story
and/or a photo.
A Feb. 4 concert at the
MEG
Tonal Chaos, the Saugus High
School a cappella group formerly
known as “The Sachimes,” will
be performing their International
Championship of High School
A Cappella (ICHSA) competition
pieces, with a few special guests
and performances, in a preview
concert on Friday, February 4 at
6 p.m. at the MEG Building at 58
Essex St. in Saugus. A suggested
donation of $5 per person can
be made to the Venmo account
@tonal-chaos (please note your
name and how many seats you
will need), or in cash at the door.
There will also be a raffle and
bake sale at the event.
Tickets to the ICHSA performance
on Sunday, February 13,
Saugus author and poet Thomas Sheehan, in his 94th year (Saugus
High School Class of 1947 and Boston College Class of 1956), in
the grip of macular degeneration, with four Boston Globe Ideas to
date, has just received word that Pocol Press has released with incredible
honor their ninth and 10th collections of his Western books,
“The Townsman” and “The Horseman Cometh and Other Stories.” The
release says readers can ride shotgun with this prolific author as he
blazes new Western tales across the prairie in Amazon and Kindle
versions. The Saugonian pens moralistic short stories brimming with
frothy beverages imbibed at local saloons, passionate revenge, romantic
sequences and plenty of gunplay. His understanding of the
mythic West in America remains as strong as a cowboy’s rope. And
somewhere, Tom Mix is smiling.
A more recent release from Winning Writers editor Adam Cohen
says: “It gives me great pleasure to announce that Tom Sheehan’s
The Saugus Book won First Prize in our 2021 poetry competition.
He will receive $1,000; a free marketing consultation with Carolyn
Howard-Johnson; a $300 credit at Book Baby; a free ad in our email
newsletter (a $175 value); publication of an excerpt from his book
at Winning Writers; and a certificate of award.”
Sheehan has now written 56 books, of which 34 have been by
publishers and 22 have been self-published.
Friday breakfasts at Legion Hall still on hold
Concerns about COVID-19 have led to a temporary shutdown of
the popular Friday morning breakfasts at the Saugus American Legion
Cpl Scott J. Procopio Post 210 Legion Hall located at 44 Taylor
St. Legion Hall was supposed to reopen recently for the breakfasts.
But the reopening has been delayed again. Debra Dion Faust, Building
Manager of American Legion Post 210, has said the American Legion
membership voted to delay the re-opening until Friday, Feb. 4.
Looking for book donations
The New Friends of the Saugus Public Library are asking for donations
of gently used adult hardcover and softcover fiction for the
ongoing book sale in the Community Room. They would also appreciate
donations of gently used children’s books. Please limit donations
at this time to only fiction and children’s books; the library
does not have storage space for other genres or media. Please....
clean and newer books only. No tattered pages, bad odors, stains or
dirty covers!
Books may be dropped off at the Main Circulation Desk during
business hours. Please do not place donations in the outdoor book
drops.
A special memorial service for veterans
Saugus Veterans Council Commander
Stephen L. Castinetti, reSOUNDS
| SEE PAGE 14
2022, at 3 p.m., can also be purchased:
Venue: Galvin Middle School, 525 Main St., Wakefield.
Phone: 781-246-6410.
Website: http://wakefieldpublicschools.org/WPS/galvin/.
Gerry
D’Ambrosio
Attorney-at-Law
Is Your Estate in Order?
Do you have an update Will, Health
Care Proxy or Power of Attorney?
If Not, Please Call for a Free Consultation.
14 Proctor Avenue, Revere
(781) 284-5657
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THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FRIDAY, JANUARY 28, 2022
Saugus gardens in the winter
Here’s what’s blooming in town this week to make your walks more enjoyable
By Laura Eisener
W
inter is surely set in, as
the ponds have all become
frozen over and most
now support a thin layer of
snow.
There aren’t a lot of flowers
blooming outdoors in Saugus
in late January, but there
are a few. My pink heath mentioned
in my last column is still
blooming and seems quite
able to stand up to the freezing
temperatures, wind chill
and anything else the winter
may throw at it. Flower buds
are coming up on the Lenten
rose (Helleborus orientalis) near
my front porch as well, and I
hope to see it in full bloom in
a week or so. Indoors, there are
plenty of flowers – we have a
few pots of tete-a-tete daffodils
blooming and a few amaryllis
(Hippeastrum spp.), not
to mention a fresh bouquet
of mixed carnations (Dianthus
caryophyllus), roses (Rosa spp.)
and Peruvian lily (Alstroemeria
sp.). If we consider all the
houseplants the windows can
hold and some dried flowers
here and there, what we may
lack in blossoms outdoors can
be compensated for indoors.
The amaryllis may be the
most dramatic flowering bulb
RED AMARYLLIS: This has had
flowers blooming for a week on
its 14” tall stem, but a new, shorter
stalk bloomed just a few inches
from the bulb. (Courtesy photo to The Saugus
Advocate by Laura Eisener)
you can find for winter bloom
indoors but also one of the
easiest, since the bulbs almost
always bloom without much
attention, at least the first
time! While they are popular
gifts and decorations at Christmas,
in January you can often
find discounted bulbs and can
easily turn your countertop
into a tropical paradise! Bulbs
you buy from a garden center,
florist, or even supermarket,
will soon send up a budded
stalk which will open to
four individual flowers. There
A LOVE-LY SIGHT: Hearts have appeared on the library windows! (Courtesy photo to The Saugus Advocate by Laura Eisener)
are quite a few hybrid forms
with flowers that may be red,
pink, salmon or white, sometimes
bicolor, and there are a
few less common varieties that
may have greenish petals and
sepals with stripes of several
colors. The flower stalk can
be over a foot tall, or the flowers
may open just a few inches
from the top of the bulb.
Very tall stalks may need to be
staked to keep them from tipping
over – if they do tip and
break, you can usually still enjoy
the blossoms if you cut
the stem and put the flowers
in a vase.
Bulbs are usually sold in a
pot with the bulbs in soil, or
as kits where you can plant
the bulb yourself, but a fairly
recent phenomenon is the
waxed bulb, where the entire
bulb except the growing
tip is encased in colorful wax.
They can bloom without water
and are amazing for windowsills
or tabletops where
you might not want the nuisance
of dealing with dirt or
spilling water. Once they’ve
flowered, you can usually remove
the wax and pot them
up to allow their leaves to develop
normally, if you wish. A
few people have told me they
actually got their waxed amaryllis
to bloom a second year
without removing the wax or
watering them! I was very, very
skeptical.
Two bulbs from last year did
A WINTER SCENE: The old pumping station on Hawkes Pond stands out
on the snow-covered reservoir in North Saugus, looking from Route 1
toward Lynnfield. (Courtesy photo to The Saugus Advocate by Laura Eisener)
develop leaves, but they did
not last as long as the bulbs
I had in soil and a traditional
pot. After the leaves turned
brown and faded, I stuck them
on a shelf in the garage and
wished I had removed the
BONUS FLOWERS COMING: This
double white amaryllis has four
frilly flowers in bloom now, and
three more stalks are on their
way! (Courtesy photo to The Saugus Advocate
by Laura Eisener)
wax and given them a fighting
chance. Once planting
season was done, I was getting
ready to throw them out
when I glimpsed a tiny bit of
green and thought I’d at least
put them on the windowsill for
a few weeks just in case, and I
did dribble a little water into
the tops. Both of them got the
beginnings of leaves and now
have buds! So I will report in
the next few weeks if the flowers
actually do materialize.
Around the same time the
amaryllis flowers or soon
thereafter, the bud will send
up some long, strap-like
leaves. The bulbs are often
able to produce flowers again
the following year, and often
for many years to come, with
a little care and not much fussing.
The leaves need to get
enough water and sunlight
through the summer to encourage
flower buds to form
inside the bulb, and then the
TWO WAXED BULBS: These
bloomed last year and are getting
ready to flower again. (Courtesy photo to
The Saugus Advocate by Laura Eisener)
leaves turn brown and go dormant
for a few months before
sending up shoots again for
the next season. The plants
we usually call amaryllis, also
known as Barbados lilies, are
considered by botanists to be
among the 90 species now
recognized in the genus Hippeastrum,
generally from
South America. The genus
Amaryllis currently belongs
to a few species originating
in Africa.
Editor’s Note: Laura Eisener is
a landscape design consultant
who helps homeowners with
landscape design, plant selection
and placement of trees
and shrubs, as well as perennials.
She is a member of the Saugus
Garden Club and offered to
write a series of articles about
“what’s blooming in town”
shortly after the outbreak of the
COVID-19 pandemic. She was
inspired after seeing so many
people taking up walking.
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Page 11
Meet the 2022 SHS Sachems Varsity
Basketball Cheerleaders
SHS Sachems Varsity Basketball Cheering Team, pictured from left to right: Kneeling: Emily Lima, Noelle LoConte, Maryemma LeBlanc, Maia Castle, Maria Ferraro and Maxxine
Stephens; second row: Brooke Diaz, Layla Guarino, Cassidy Cheney, Anna Felicio, Aly Mabee, Sophia Manuppelli, McKenna Zell and Katie Barletta; third row: Assistant Coach
Hannah Phelan, Alexandra Couseillant, Mara Faiella, Lanyelis Guadalupe Perez, Mariana Zeferino, Savannah Carreiro, Gabi Mund, Rhianna Rodriguez and Head Coach Courtney
Whitaker. (Advocate photos by Tara Vocino)
Eighth-graders, pictured from left to right:
Kneeling: Brooke Diaz, Aly Mabee and
Sophia Manuppelli; back row: Lanyelis
Guadalupe Perez, Cassidy Cheney and
Mara Faiella.
Freshmen, pictured from left to right: Kneeling:
Anna Felicio and Gabi Mund; standing:
Savannah Carreiro, Katie Barletta and Rhianna
Rodriguez.
Sophia Manuppelli, an
eighth-grader on the Saugus
High School Sachems Varsity
Basketball Cheerleading
Team, is shown performing a
heel stretch last Friday (Jan.
21) in the gymnasium.
Co-Captain Maryemma LeBlanc does an
arabesque.
Juniors, kneeling, pictured from left to
right: Co-Captains Maryemma LeBlanc,
Noelle LoConte, Maia Castle and Maria
Ferraro. Back row, pictured from left to
right: Alexandra Couseillant, Mariana
Zeferino and Mckenna Zell.
Shown from left to right are Assistant Coach
Hannah Phelan, the lone senior on the tam,
Maxxine Stephens, and Head Coach Courtney
Whittaker last Friday night in the high school
gymnasium.
Sophomores, shown from left to
right: Layla Guarino and Emily
Lima.
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THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FRIDAY, JANUARY 28, 2022
Saugus girls go 5-1 after slow start
By Greg Phipps
T
he Saugus High School
girls’ basketball team
seems to have found its footing
at the midway point of
the season. The Sachems finished
off a stretch of five wins
in six games with a 42-34 victory
over the Danvers Falcons
on Tuesday night at the Middle-High
School gym. Saugus
was coming off an impressive
51-40 home triumph
over the Lynn Classical Rams
the night before. The Sachems
appeared a bit out of sorts
with their execution through
portions of Tuesday’s contest
against Danvers but managed
to execute when needed to
notch the win.
The Sachems held the visitors
to just eight points in the
Saugus guard Peyton DiBiasio is shown driving around two Danvers
defenders on Tuesday.
first half and owned a comfortable
22-8 lead at halftime. The
Falcons proved to be a tougher
foe during the next 16 minutes,
outscoring Saugus 2620
over the final two quarters.
The Falcons beat the Sachems
earlier this season at
Danvers. Key fourth-quarter
three-pointers from Ella Castle
Sachems tie Beverly,
lose to Matignon in overtime
By Greg
Phipps
T
he Sau -
gus High
School hockey
team earned
a 4-3 win over
Revere/Everett
last week
to get back in
the win column
after being
outscored
by a wide margin
in its previous
two games
– both losses.
The Sachems then took on Northeastern
Conference (NEC) South opponent
Beverly last Saturday at Kasabuski Arena,
and the result was not a bad one,
but it was probably not what Saugus
was looking for. The Sachems ended
up playing to a 1-1 deadlock against
the visiting Panthers.
The highlight of the contest was not
T
Saugus senior Fallon Millerick
is shown trying to muscle past a
Danvers defender in Tuesday’s
home win. (Advocate photos by Greg Phipps)
and April Aldred helped quiet
a Danvers resurgence and
preserve the Saugus win. Castle
ended up as leading scorer
with 10 points, followed by
Saugus’s Ashleen Escobar looks
to power to the basket against
Danvers.
eighth-grader Peyton DiBiasio
with eight, Fallon Millerick
with seven and Aldred and
BASKETBALL | SEE PAGE 13
Basketball: Sachem boys
back on winning track
By Greg Phipps
he Saugus High School boys’ basketball
team lost its first two contests
when the season resumed after
a three-week layoff due to the recent
COVID-19 surge. It appears the Sachems
have gotten themselves back
on track after scoring three straight
wins beginning with a 54-49 home
win over Essex Tech last Thursday.
Against Essex, Ryan Mabee explodSaugus
goalie Matt Smith stopped 39 of 40 shots in last Saturday’s
1-1 tie against NEC South foe Beverly. (Advocate photo by Greg Phipps)
ference play.
On Wednesday, the Sachems went
necessarily what Head Coach Jeff Natalucci
wanted to see from his team
defensively either. Goalie Matt Smith
was peppered with 40 shots by the
Panthers and came up big, making
39 saves, to help the Sachems escape
with the tie.
Saugus’s only goal came off the stick
of Massey Ventre. Neither team was
able to dent the net in overtime. The
Sachems are still tied with Beverly for
the top spot in the NEC South. As of
this week, both teams have four wins
overall and one win and a tie in conto
overtime again in a non-league
contest against Matignon at Kasabuski.
The visitors scored in the extra session
to break a 3-3 deadlock and earn
a 4-3 victory. Chris Regnetta scored
twice for Saugus while Ryan Jones
contributed a single tally.
The Sachems, now 4-7-1 overall, are
back on the road after a lengthy home
stand. They are scheduled to travel to
Haverhill Valley Forum on Saturday
afternoon to take on Masconomet.
However, with the forecast for significant
snow Saturday, the game could
get called.
The Sachems are 1-3-1 in their last
five games and have been outscored
53-32 overall in their 12 contests to
date this season. Saugus is back home
at Kasabuski next Wednesday to face
Somerville.
ed for 25 points and teammate Tyrone
Manderson reached double figures
with 15. Jeury Barbosa added nine in
the win. Saugus went on to score an
even bigger 63-60 home victory over
Marblehead last Friday.
Manderson had a monster outing
against the visiting Magicians by producing
a double-double effort of 22
points and 14 rebounds. He wasn’t the
only Sachems player to come away
with a double-double performance
on the night. Two others achieved the
feat. Guard Ben Tapia-Gately poured
in 10 points and dished out 10 assists
while Jeury Barbosa collected
an identical 10 points and 10 assists
to go along with six boards. Also getting
into the scoring act was Mabee:
He netted 15 points and grabbed seven
rebounds.
The Sachems put on their defensive
shoes on Tuesday when they
traveled to take on the Danvers Falcons.
Manderson was the driving force
once again on offense, producing 18
points in a low-scoring 47-39 victory.
Tapia-Gately aided the cause by scoring
14, and Mabee was the other SaOn
Tuesday at Danvers, Saugus guard Ben
Tapia-Gately poured in 14 points to help
the Sachems to their third straight win. He
also produced a double-double effort in
a win over Marblehead last week. (Advocate
photo by Greg Phipps)
chem in double figures with 11. The
threesome combined for all but four
of Saugus’s points for the night. Still,
it was enough to fend off the host Falcons,
who were unable to reach the
40-point plateau, as Saugus put forth
perhaps its best defensive effort of
the season.
The 6-2 Sachems hosted Masconomet
on Thursday (after press
deadline) and play Peabody at home
on Friday. The Sachems continue a
busy stretch of games when they travel
to Manchester-Essex next Monday
and Gloucester next Tuesday.
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Page 13
Meet the 2022 SHS Sachems Varsity Boys’ Basketball Team
SHS Sachems Varsity Boys’ Basketball Team, pictured from left to right: Jeury Barbosa, Ben Tapia-Gately, Mark MacEachern,
Ryan Anderson and Max Anajjar; back row: Assistant Coach William Cahill, Isaiah Garcia, Tyrone Manderson, Kevin
Jolicoeur, Ryan Mabee and Head Coach Joseph Bertrand, Class of 2014. Not pictured: Brendan Kelleher and Daniel Shea.
(Advocate photos by Tara Vocino)
Co-Captains, pictured from left to right: Tyrone
Manderson and Ryan Mabee.
Juniors, pictured from left to right: kneeling: Ben Tapia Gately, Brendan Kelleher, Max Anajjar
– and the lone sophomore on the team, Isaiah Rodriguez; standing: Assistant Coach William
Cahill, Jeury Barbosa, Kevin Jolicoeur, Isaiah Garcia and Head Coach Joseph Bertrand.
BASKETBALL | FROM PAGE 12
Ashleen Escobar with six each.
In the previous night ’s
win over Classical, Millerick
poured in 14 points and Castle
contributed 12 to lead
Saugus, which pulled away
after holding a close 25-23
lead after two periods. AshMcMAHON
| FROM PAGE 3
down a budget that makes sense
for the schools,” he said.
Gould noted that the town
is facing some fiscal challenges.
“We have a lot going on,” he
said, noting various projects that
could impact local taxes.
“We have a third fire station
that people have been pressing
for,” Gould said. He also noted
that Saugus will have to pay its
fair share on the proposed new
Northeast Metro Tech school.
In recent years, Saugus school
superintendents have not been
successful in lobbying for large
increases in the School Departleigh
Moore added seven
points, DiBiasio and Aldred,
six each, and Cassandra Israelson,
three. Escobar hauled
down nine rebounds.
Head Coach Mark Schruender
praised the all-around
play of his squad after the
game. “I loved the way we
moved and distributed the
ment budget. School officials
have consistently argued that the
town’s public education has been
underfunded. Meanwhile, Town
Manager Scott C. Crabtree and Finance
Committee members have
argued that adequate funding
has been provided for schools.
Town and school officials have
often sparred at Finance Committee
meetings over the question
of whether Saugus Public
Schools are adequately funded
or underfunded.
“We’re not talking about the
schools in opposition to the
town,” McMahon said.
“We’re actually talking about
the schools in service to the town.
Assistant Coach William Cahill with seniors, pictured from left to right – Tyrone
Manderson, Ryan Anderson, Mark MacEachern and Ryan Mabee – and Head Coach
Joseph Bertrand.
ball out there,” he told the
press. “The girls were incredibly
unselfish, and we had a
ton of girls make shots for us.”
Last Friday night, the Sachems
rebounded from the
previous evening’s 58-43
loss at Masconomet with a
low-scoring, hard-fought 3028
victory at Marblehead, a
The investment we’re making
now is really 1 to 3 percent of the
overall town government budget,”
she said.
School Committee Member
Ryan Fisher noted that an important
question that often comes up
in conversation with people who
are considering moving here is
“Tell me about the schools in
Saugus.”
School Committee Member
John Hatch said he agreed with
Fisher’s observation. “The education
itself is the investment,”
Hatch said. “That is the Number
One thing that brings new families
to town, as Mr. Fisher says.”
In her PowerPoint presentateam
that had seven wins
entering the contest. Both
teams played stellar defense.
The Sachems came out on top
with the aid of a clutch threepoint
shot by Jessica Bremberg
with about a minute left
in the game. Castle led the Sachems
with eight points and
DiBiasio had six.
tion, the superintendent notes:
“In fact, we’ve heard clearly –
from both town residents and
MA DESE [state Department of
Elementary and Secondary Education]
– that schools are important
but new buildings are
not enough.”
McMahon’s PowerPoint presentation
also includes a summary
of some of the most glaring
deficiencies cited in the District
Review published by DESE
in 2019: insufficient training for
staff and educators to administer
effective teaching in new facilities,
inconsistency in quality
of instruction districtwide, insufficient
feedback system for stuMillerick
produced a big offensive
effort with 17 points
in the loss at Masco. Also contributing
on the scoreboard
were DiBiasio with 12 and
Bremberg with four.
The 6-4 Sachems face a
huge test on Friday night
when they play at 10-1 Peabody.
dents,
lack of focus on the diverse
learning needs of all students,
lack of rigorous learning
opportunities, lack of focus on
the development of higher order
thinking skills, insufficient educator
evaluation systems, no sense
of urgency in the district office,
lack of transparency in budgeting
on the school level, incomplete
district improvement plans
or school improvement plans.
“The 2023 Proposed Budget
addresses the root causes of the
2019 DESE Report,” McMahon
concluded in her PowerPoint presentation.
“Further,
it works to close the
gaps caused by COVID,” she said.
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THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FRIDAY, JANUARY 28, 2022
SOUNDS | FROM PAGE 9
tired U.S. Navy captain, passes along this special invitation to all
the veterans of Saugus: The 79th Annual American Legion, District
8 Four Chaplains Memorial Service will be hosted this year by Augustus
P. Gardner Post 227, Middleton. The Memorial Service will be
Sunday, February 6, and will start at 2 p.m. at the Middleton Congregational
Church, (66 Maple St. [Rt 62]). The service will be followed
by a collation in the lower hall of the church.
All Veterans and their families are cordially invited to attend this
year’s commemorative service honoring the valiant sacrifice of Four
Chaplains of different faiths in the Atlantic on the sinking troop ship
Dorchester that February night in World War II.
Directions: From 128 North, take the Middleton exit (Rt 114) to
Middleton square. Take a right onto Rt. 62 (Maple Street). The Church
will be on your left just past the Senior Center. If you come from 128
South, you can also take Rt. 62 toward Danvers/Middleton, and the
church will be on your right after you pass Farmer Brown’s and Liberty
Street.
There is ample parking at the church (lower level parking lot),
and the church is handicapped
accessible (side entrance and elevator).
Saugus
Plaza sells for
$39.5 million
The Boston Real Estate Times reported
late last week that Grossman
Companies and North Colony
have acquired Saugus Plaza
for $39.5 million.
JLL Capital Markets, which represented
the seller, Federal Realty
Investment Trust, announced
it had closed the “sale of Saugus
Plaza, a 165,800-square-foot
neighborhood shopping center
anchored by Stop & Shop Supermarket
and Floor & Décor in the
close-in Boston suburb of Saugus,
Massachusetts.”
Stop & Shop, New England’s
largest grocer, has been located
in Saugus Plaza for more than
40 years. “The 97-percent-leased
center’s diverse tenant mix also
includes Floor & Décor, Buffalo
Wild Wings, North Shore Liquor
and King Crab.”
Saugus Plaza is situated about
eight miles from downtown
Boston and encompasses 16.58
acres at 180 Main St. along Route
1 South, the primary retail and
commuter corridor for more
than 110,000 vehicles per day.
The plaza “is adjacent to the Simon-owned
Square One Mall
and in a growing area with more
than 1,157 multi-housing units
being developed.”
“The JLL Capital Markets Investment
Sales Advisory team
representing the seller was led
by Managing Director Nat Heald,
Senior Managing Director Chris
Angelone and Associate Zach
Nitsche.”
“We are very pleased to have
been involved in the sale of Saugus
Plaza,” Heald said, according
to the Times. “Investor demand
for grocery anchored properties
in metro Boston far outstrips
supply, and we saw competitive
bidding from the full spectrum
of investor-types, including REITs,
funds and private groups.”
“JLL Capital Markets is a
full-service global provider of
capital solutions for real estate
investors and occupiers. The
firm’s in-depth local market and
global investor knowledge delivers
the best-in-class solutions
for clients – whether investment
sales and advisory, debt advisory,
equity advisory or a recapitalization.
The firm has more than
3,000 Capital Markets specialists
worldwide with offices in nearly
50 countries.”
Live Bingo at the
Kowloon
The Kowloon Restaurant
kicked off its Live Bingo this
week and will continue with Bingo
every Wednesday through
March 30, from 7 to 9 p.m. in
SOUNDS | SEE PAGE 16
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Page 15
Healthy Students-Healthy Saugus “Saugus Needs a Dog Park”
~ Letter to the Editor ~
recognizes Everett Grace Food Pantry
for ongoing support
Dear Editor:
Healthy Students-Healthy Saugus
(HS2) would like to express
our sincere gratitude to the Everett
Grace Food Pantry for contributing
food for our program.
Under the leadership of Irene
Cardillo, she and her amazing
team of volunteers have assisted
HS2 weekly with various nonperishable
food items.
This partnership allows HS2 to
continue to serve our students/
families in need.
Everett Grace Food
Pantry
Grace Food Pantry is a non-profit
organization serving the Everett
Community and North Shore
Area. Our mission is to help families
in need with food insecurities
with care and dignity; together
we can make a difference.
The pantry is located at 40
Church Street in Everett and is
open to the public on Saturdays
from 8:30am-10:00am.
Check out their Facebook page
for more details:
https://www.facebook.com/
gracefoodpantryeverett/
Healthy StudentsHealthy
Saugus
Healthy Saugus-Healthy StuLEADING
THE TEAM: Irene
Cardillo oversees volunteers
of the Everett Grace Food
Pantry, a group that has made
invaluable food contributions
to Healthy Students-Healthy
Saugus (HS2). (Courtesy photo to The
Saugus Advocate)
dents (HS2) is a non-profit group
that helps to offset food insecure
households. HS2 provides
a weekend supply of nutritious
food for weekends or school holidays
during the school year.
Check out their Facebook page
for more details:
https://www.facebook.com/
HealthyStudentsHealthy Saugus
Sincerely,
Julie Cicolini
That’s the name of a new Facebook page that is gathering
friends in Saugus – and support from Selectman Jeff Cicolini
By Mark E. Vogler
Rick Lavoie has begun
S
augus Selectman Jeffrey
Cicolini and a handful of
other elected town officials
who share a passion for creating
a dog park in Saugus
are off and running with
their dream.
“It’s definitely something
everybody is screaming for,”
Cicolini told colleagues of
the interest in such a project.
Cicolini,
who vowed late
last year to make it a personal
goal to help create a
place where town residents
can walk their dogs for exercise,
briefed selectmen on
his informal dog park committee
at Tuesday (Jan. 25)
night’s meeting. In a short
period of time, Cicolini and
the small group have developed
a plan that focuses on
Stocker Field as a possible
location. He said the group
has also discussed organizing
into a nonprofit organization
with intentions of
having a “zero impact” on
the town.
called champ?
10. On Jan. 31, 1940, Ida
1. On Jan. 28, 1985, 45 recording
artists met in Hollywood
to sing what charity
single?
2. In 1999 at the Pasadena
Rose Bowl, what U.S. women’s
team won an international
sporting event?
3. In what part of the world
is a Boston bun (also known
as Sally Lunn) traditional?
4. What is an affogato?
5. On Jan. 29, 1995, what
team became the first to win
the Super Bowl five times?
6. In what John Steinbeck
novel’s first chapter is the
word “dust” used 24 times?
7. What are lotus shoes?
8. On Jan. 30, 1995, a TV
Guide survey found that who
was the most trusted media
personality?
9. What country has a dish
May Fuller, of Brattleboro,
Vt., received the first of what
type of check after paying
only three years of payroll
taxes ($25)?
11. What culture has a traditional
red telephone box?
12. On Feb. 1, 2022, what
culture celebrates the New
Year?
13. In 2022 in Hawaii, Cameron
Smith won the golf
Tournament of Champions
with the lowest-ever score;
how many strokes under par
was it: 10, 21 or 34?
14. On Feb. 2, 1887, the
first Groundhog Day was observed
in the town of Punxsutawney
in what state?
15. The Vogue Doll Compaa
Facebook page called
“Saugus Needs a Dog Park,”
which he said has already attracted
many members.
Cicolini said he plans to
meet with Town Manager
Scott C. Crabtree to develop
a dog park strategy and
make a presentation to selectmen
in the near future.
“I think this is great,” Board
of Selectmen Vice-Chair
Debra Panetta told Cicolini.
“I’ve been 100 percent
supportive of a dog park for
a long time. I am really excited
about this dog park,”
she said.
Cicolini said, “It’s been a
long time coming.”
Selectman Corinne Riley
wondered whether there
were laws covering the operation
of dog parks. Cicolini
said there would be various
logistics involving insurance,
leasing arrangements
and other matters that the
group’s organizers would
have to review in order to
proceed with the project.
“Some folks may think it is
ny, which had manufacturing
plants in Malden, Medford
and Melrose, started producing
the Ginny doll in what decade:
the 1920s, the 1940s or
the 1960s?
16. On Feb. 3, 1902, after an
NYC snowstorm, the Morning
Telegraph debuted the nickname
“the Great White Way”
for what?
17. In the 1934 movie “Here
is My Heart,” what actor/singer
with a nickname introduced
the song “June in January”?
18.
What instrument has
felt-covered hammers?
19. On Feb. 4, 1938, what
play by Thornton Wilder set
in Grover’s Corners, N.H.,
opened in NYC?
an easy task, throw up some
fence and lay down some
mulch and call it a dog park,”
Cicolini said in a posting on
the Facebook page “Saugus
Needs A Dog Park.”
“We will strive to do this
the right way, like Bob Davis
did at World Series. This
will keep the costs away
from the taxpayers and develop
a long term plan to
pay for maintenance as upkeep.
Trust me when I tell
you, we are moving forward
full steam ahead. We will
be expanding the committee
in the future to add additional
members for input
and assistance,” he said. “We
also need to determine the
use of other properties coming
offline and that will take
community input sessions
etc. as there are many factors
to identifying a site vs.
having the site become the
dog park location. For example,
there are some insurance
regulations we need to
consider based on the potential
location. I for one like
Stocker as a potential site.”
ANSWERS
1. “We Are the World”
2. Women’s World Cup for soccer
3. Australia and New Zealand (Reportedly,
the inventor of the Boston
bun came from Boston during
Australia’s gold rush in the 1850s.)
4. Espresso and vanilla ice cream
5. The San Francisco 49ers
6. “The Grapes of Wrath” (due to the
Dust Bowl setting)
7. The tiny shoes Chinese women
wore after their feet were bound.
8. Walter Cronkite
9. Ireland (a mashed potato/scallion
dish)
10. Social Security
11. British
12. Chinese (the Lunar New Year, or
Year of the Tiger)
13. 34
14. Pennsylvania
15. 1948
16. Broadway
17. Harry Lillis “Bing” Crosby Jr.
18. Piano
19. “Our Town”
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THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FRIDAY, JANUARY 28, 2022
SOUNDS | FROM PAGE 14
the Hong Kong Lounge. Prizes will be given away each week with
a grand prize set at the finale.
A full Chinese gourmet spread is available during Bingo – featuring
pupu platters, egg rolls, crab Rangoons, Saugus Wings, General
Gau’s chicken, lobster sauce, fried scallops, lo mein, moo shu pork,
salt and pepper calamari and sushi – along with a full bar menu including,
the signature mai tais.
Call the Kowloon Restaurant at 781-233-0077 to reserve your table.
Town posts Compost Site Winter Schedule
The Town of Saugus has announced that the community’s compost
site and recycling center will be open to residents the third Saturday
of the month during the winter months. The site will be open
Feb. 19 and March 19 from 8 a.m. to 2 p.m. The site is located behind
the Department of Public Works at 515 Main St.
Yard waste must be disposed of in brown compost bags or open
containers. The Town will accept grass clippings, leaves and brush.
As in years past, no branches or limbs larger than three inches in diameter
are permitted.
At this time residents will not need a compost site sticker to access
the site. The Town asks all residents to please wear a mask and maintain
and respect social distancing from others while visiting the site.
Residents may call Lorna Cerbone at the Solid Waste and Recycling
Department at 781-231-4036 with questions or for more information.
Want
to be a Knight?
The Knights of Columbus is looking for new members to join. If
you are interested in becoming a member of this local organization,
please call 781-233-9858.
Healthy Students-Healthy Saugus program
(Editor’s Note: The following info is from an announcement submitted
by Julie Cicolini, a member of the Board of Directors for Healthy Students-Healthy
Saugus.)
Who we are: Healthy Students-Healthy Saugus (HS2) is a nonprofit
group of volunteers that are helping to offset food insecurity
in households. HS2 provides students/families who enroll in the
program a supply of nutritious food for when school lunches and
breakfasts are unavailable to them on weekends.
How HS2 can help you: HS2 bags are distributed at school on Fridays
to take home. Bags include
such items as peanut butter, jelly,
a loaf of bread, canned meals/
soups/tuna/vegetables, pasta/
sauce, fruit cups, cereal, oatmeal,
goldfish, pretzels and granola
bars. To sign up go here to complete
online form: https://forms.
gle/gmMGguycSHBdziuE9.
Want to partner with us: HS2
relies on donations to create
take-home bags for a weekend
full of meals. All food is provided
to children free of charge. It
is our hope these resources will
support the health, behavior and
achievement of every student
who participates.
We would love to partner with
organizations, youth groups,
PTO’s, businesses and individuals
to assist in feeding students
of Saugus. To learn more about
how you can partner with us, visit
the Healthy Students-Healthy
Saugus Facebook page or email
us at HS2Saugus@gmail.com.
Checks can also be sent directly
to Salem Five C/O Healthy
Students-Healthy Saugus, 8555
Broadway, Saugus, MA 01906.
Online donations can also be
made at https://givebutter.com/
HealthySaugus.
Food Pantry still open
The Saugus United Parish
Food Pantry continues to remain
open between 9:30 a.m.
and 11:00 a.m. on Fridays despite
concerns over the Coronavirus.
They have made adjustments to
protect their core of volunteers
and the needy people who receive the food. For the protection of
volunteers & clients, and to limit personal contact and crowding/
gathering, the food pantry has been distributing pre-bagged groceries.Even
though clients may receive items they don’t want or need,
food pantry organizers feel this is the best course of action to mitigate
the potential spread of COVID-19. Those in need, even for shortterm
or one-time assistance, are encouraged to come.
The food pantry is in the basement of Cliftondale Congregational
Church at 50 Essex St. in Saugus.
Clarifying some veterans’ issues
Jay Pinette, the Veterans Service Officer for the Town of Saugus,
wanted to pass along a few words to promote a better understanding
of how his office works. “Veterans Service Officers (VSOs) are
not VA employees and do not have direct access to VA systems or
information,” Jay wrote in an email to us. “Local VSOs are employees
of their respective cities and towns. VSOs are generally able to
assist veterans and eligible dependents with VA-related claims and
benefits activities.
“One of the primary duties of the VSOs is to administer a program
for veterans and eligible dependents that is referred to as ‘Chapter
115’. Under Chapter 115 of Massachusetts General Laws (M.G.L. CH.
115), the Commonwealth provides a uniform program of financial
assistance for low income veterans and their dependents. Qualified
veterans and their dependents who meet the income and asset
eligibility criteria may receive monthly financial benefits that are
intended to assist the veteran with housing and living expenses.
“If local Veterans wish to enroll in VA healthcare and/or obtain a
VA ID card, representatives from the VA Bedford will be on-site at the
Lynn VA Clinic twice a month. The on-site enrollment will be held
on the 1 st
and 3 rd
Tuesday of each month from 9:00 am to 3:00 pm.
Appointments are advised and the dates and times are subject to
change. The Lynn VA Clinic is located at 225 Boston Street, Suite 107.
For more information or to schedule an appointment for enrollment,
call 781-687-3348 or e-mail vabedoutreach@va.gov.
“The Veterans Services Offices of Saugus and other surrounding
communities have partnered with the Greater Boston Food Bank
to hold monthly mobile food markets for veterans. With the closure
of the Saugus Senior Center during the pandemic, the food market
was moved to Melrose. We have now moved the food market
back to the Saugus Senior Center. The veterans mobile food market
is held on the third Wednesday
of each month. Veterans and eligiSOUNDS
| SEE PAGE 17
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Page 17
SOUNDS | FROM PAGE 16
ble dependents must sign up with the Saugus Veterans Service Office
to determine eligibility. VSO Jay Pinette can be reached at 781231-4010
or at jpinette@saugus-ma.gov. Or on the first floor of Saugus
Town Hall at 298 Central Street, Saugus MA 01906.”
A smoke alarm alert for seniors
The state Fire Marshal’s Office has launched a new public service
announcement campaign that is geared toward encouraging smoke
alarm awareness among senior citizens – the people who are at
greater risk of dying in a fire. And this should be of particular interest
to Saugus residents who may recall the house fire that killed two
elderly people on Richard Street last July. Fire investigators found no
evidence of smoke alarms or carbon monoxide alarms in the home.
The “Dear Grandma / Querida Abuela” campaign began this month
on television and radio stations in the Boston, Worcester and Springfield
media markets. Recorded in both English and Spanish, it features
a granddaughter writing a letter to her grandmother about
all the things she looks forward to doing together, interspersed
with messages about the importance of having working smoke
alarms and replacing alarms after
10 years.
“In Massachusetts and nationwide,
people over 65 have
a disproportionately high risk
of dying in a fire,” state Fire Marshal
Peter J. Ostroskey said in a
press release this week. “Everyone
should have working smoke
alarms in their homes, but we
developed this PSA to reach older
adults in particular because
of the higher statistical risk they
face. Installing smoke alarms on
every floor of the home, checking
them regularly, and replacing
them after 10 years can dramatically
reduce that risk.”
Nationwide, about 60 percent
of fatal fires occur in homes without
working smoke alarms. And
in Massachusetts, people 65 and
older comprise about 17 percent
of the population but about 50
percent of last year’s fatal fire
victims.
“Working smoke alarms are
often the first line of defense
against injury and tragedy in
a fire,” Ostroskey said. “We invite
our partners in the fire service,
family members, caregivers,
and social service providers
to share these PSAs and emphasize
the importance of working
smoke alarms, especially among
seniors.”
Last year when Louis Gallo, 78, and his sister Rosemarie Naples,
80, died in the three-alarm house fire on Richard Street, fire officials
stressed that working smoke alarms in your home can double your
chances of survival if a fire occurs. Home fire deaths have been cut in
half since the early 1970s, when smoke alarms were first marketed,
and about 40 percent of fire deaths in the United States take place
in the four percent of homes without smoke alarms.
People should install smoke alarms throughout their home, test
them monthly and replace the batteries when they change their
clocks. If your smoke alarm is more than 10 years old, it should be
replaced, according to fire officials.
The PSAs are available for distribution through the Department of
Fire Services (DFS). They can be downloaded at the DFS webpage
and can be linked or shared from the DFS YouTube channel. They
complement the DFS Senior SAFE program, which provides grant
funding for local fire departments to provide fire and life safety education
for older adults.
Let’s hear it!
Got an idea, passing thought or gripe you would like to share
with The Saugus Advocate? I’m always interested in your feedback.
It’s been close to six years since I began work at The Saugus Advocate.
I’m always interested in hearing readers’ suggestions for possible
stories or good candidates for “The Advocate Asks” interview
of the week. Feel free to email me at mvoge@comcast.net.
Do you have some interesting views on an issue that you want
to express to the community? Submit your idea. If I like it, we can
meet for a 15- to 20-minute interview over a hot drink at a local coffee
shop. And I’ll buy the coffee or tea. Or, if you prefer to continue
practicing social distancing and be interviewed from the safety of
your home on the phone or via email, I will provide that option to
you as the nation recovers from the Coronavirus crisis.
If it’s a nice day and the temperature is 50 degrees or better, my
preferred site for a coffee and interview would be the picnic area
of the Saugus Iron Works.
~ Obituaries ~
Joseph M. Bono
A
ge 76, of
Danvers,
former l y of
Saugus and
Everett, lost his battle with
brain cancer and died at the
Life Care Center in Stoneham
on Friday, January 21. He was
the beloved husband of Mary
(Famiglietti) Bono with whom
he shared 48 years of marriage.
Born in Boston and raised in
Everett, Joe was the son of the
late Vincent and Lucia (Sclafani)
Bono. He was a member
of the National Guard
and earned his Bachelor’s Degree
from Bentley College.
In addition to his wife, Joe is
survived by his son, Joseph
M. Bono, Jr. and his wife, Sherri
of Revere; his granddaughter,
Natalie; his brothers Francis
Bono of West Virginia and
Vincent Bono of Saugus; and
his sister, Josephine Frate
of Medford. He was predeceased
by his sister, Nina Esposito,
and his brothers, Anthony
and Augustus Bono.
Joe lived for his family and
was always the life of every
get together. His happy
go lucky nature and ability
to make people laugh
made him always fun to be
around. He worked hard and
played hard and was a great
example of a life well lived.
Donations in Joe’s memory
may be made to St. Jude Children’s
Research Hospital at stJude.org.
James
W. Martin
Age 88, of Saugus, died on
January 18 at the High Pointe
Hospice House in Haverhill.
He was the husband of Jean
(Ciarletta) Martin and the late
A. Marcia (Robertson) Martin.
Born and raised in Revere, he
was the son of the late Henry
and Lillian (Ege) Martin.
A U.S. Navy veteran, James
“Big Jim” Martin owned and
operated Martin’s Autobody
in Lynn for many years.
He enjoyed boating, working
around his house, and
spending time with his family.
Besides his wife, he is survived
by his five children; Melinda
Gagnon and her husband Richard
of Maine, Cathy Ciociolo
and her husband Robert of FL,
James Martin Jr. and his wife
Maureen of Saugus, Lori Gordon
and her husband George
of NH, Pattye Griffin and her
husband Thomas of Peabody,
12 grandchildren and 14 great
grandchildren. Mr. Martin was
predeceased by his siblings;
Gertrude Sidebottom, Lorraine
Palm, and Clara Schmidt.
In lieu of flowers, the family
asks for donations to the charity
of your choice.
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THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FRIDAY, JANUARY 28, 2022
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We follow Social Distancing Guidelines!
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Page 19
Follow Us On:
COMMERCIAL & RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY SALES & RENTALS
Sandy Juliano
Broker/President
Welcome to New England in winter. Due to
the extremely cold temperatures, our
office may not be open every day.
Please call the number below for an
immediate response.
WE KNOW EVERETT!! Call TODAY to sell or buy with the best!
LISTED BY NORMA & ROSEMARIE
SOLD!
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617-590-9143
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SINGLE FAMILY
39 ARLINGTON ST., EVERETT
$529,900
NEW LISTING
UNDER AGREEMENT BY NORMA
AS BUYER’S AGENT
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HUGE 3 FAMILY
21-23 CLEVELAND AVE., EVERETT
$980,000
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SOLD BY JOE!
6 FAMILY
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$1,250,000
CALL JOE FOR DETAILS 617-680-7610
UNDER AGREEMENT
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SOLD BY MICHAEL
AS BUYER’S AGENT
58 BRADFORD ST.
EVERETT
Open Daily From 10:00 A.M. - 5:00 P.M.
433 Broadway, Suite B, Everett, MA 02149
Open Daily From 10:0
Joe DiNuzzo
- Broker Associate
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00 AM
5:00 PM
www.jrs-properties.com
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Norma Capuano Parziale
- Agent
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THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FRIDAY, JANUARY 28, 2022
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