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D
Your Local News & Sports Online. Scan Here!
CAT
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CELEBRATING A CENTURY IN SAUGUS
S
Mother Margretta Green, 90, received an Appreciation Award for being the oldest church
member from Reverend Leroy Mahoney last Sunday as First Baptist Church observed its
100th birthday. Please see inside for the story and more photos. (Saugus Advocate photo
by Tara Vocino)
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Please see inside for the story and more photos. (Saugus
Advocate photo by Tara Vocino)
TE
Vol. 26, No.39 -FREE- www.advocatenews.net Published Every Friday 781-233-4446 Friday, September 27, 2024
MCAS Results for Saugus
Superintendent Hashem says district school
offi cials are “encouraged” that Saugus is
improving in the area of student growth
By Mark E. Vogler
chools Superintendent
Michael Hashem
said he is optimistic
about the direction
in which Saugus Public
Schools are headed following
this week’s release
of the latest Massachusetts
Comprehensive Assessment
System (MCAS) test
results. “We are encouraged
to see that the Student
Growth Percentile [SGP]in
Saugus is improving,” HashMCAS
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THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FriDAy, SEpTEmbEr 27, 2024
MCAS | FROM PAGE 1
em said in a statement to
The Saugus Advocate this
week in response to the latest
MCAS scores released
by the state Department of
Elementary and Secondary
Education (DESE).
“As a district, our overall
SGP in ELA was up 2%
compared to the state average
which was down 6.7%.
Similarly, the SGP in math
was up 3.3% from last year,
while the state average
went down 2.9%.
The MCAS results showed
these overall trends this
year compared to last year
statewide:
· Science scores increased
in grades 5 and 10 and decreased
in grade 8.
· Compared to 2023, the
percentage of students
scoring Meeting or Exceeding
Expectations in
math remained the same
in grades 3-8. The percentage
of students who
scored Meeting or Exceeding
Expectations in grade
10 decreased 2 percentage
points.
· English language arts
scores decreased in 2024
as compared to 2023.
“After reviewing the released
MCAS data, Saugus,
as a district, experienced
similar trends as the state
with declines in the percentage
of students meeting/exceeding
in ELA and
science,” Hashem said.
“However, at the district
level our decline in ELA was
5% and in science 4% while
the state declined 13% in
both categories. Our percentage
of students meeting/exceeding
in the district
for math went up 1%
versus the state decreasing
8%,” he said.
The 2024 Official Accountability
Report for
Saugus compiled by DESE
showed the town’s school
district was classified as
“not requiring assistance
or intervention” because,
like a year ago, it was evaluated
as making “Moderate
Progress toward targets.”
However, DESE, in its
overall classification of the
Saugus Middle School determined
that it’s “requirLawrence
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ing assistance or intervention”
and was in need
of “focused/targeted support.”
The DESE report released
this week showed
the accountability percentile
for the Saugus Middle
School had dipped from
17 percent last year to 14
percent. An accountability
percentile between 1
and 99 is reported for most
schools.
The accountability percentile
for the Belmonte
STEAM Academy dropped
from 45 to 37, while the
accountability percentile
for Saugus High School
dropped from 24 to 21.
“As a district and as
schools, we will dig deeper
into the results to reflect
on specific areas in need
of improvement and provide
resources available to
meet those needs,” Hashem
said in his statement to the
newspaper.
“We will continue the implementation
of High Quality
Instructional Materials
across the district which
we know can significantly
improve student outcomes
for all students. We are also
aware of the need for improved
attendance, as the
impact that it has on student
learning,” he said.
“We echo the words of
Russell D. Johnston, acting
commissioner of elementary
and secondary education,
when he stated: ‘We
know that consistent attendance
is the key to learning,
and we’ll continue to
work with schools and districts
to help them connect
with students and families,
make schools welcoming
places, and offer students
interactive, real-world, and
engaging lessons.’ As is always
the case, we are committed
to provide our students
with a safe, positive,
and nurturing learning environment,
so as to prepare
them for college and career.”
The future of the MCAS
in testing students is uncertain,
as voters are just
weeks away from considering
Question 2 on the
November election ballot,
which would eliminate the
test as a high school graduation
requirement.
Here’s how Saugus Public
Schools compared this
year to last year in meeting
or exceeding expectations,
by grade and subject.
GRADE 3 ................................................................ 2023
English Language Arts ...................................... 44
Mathematics ......................................................... 42
GRADE 4
English Language Arts ...................................... 32
Mathematics ......................................................... 31
GRADE 5
English Language Arts ...................................... 35
Mathematics ......................................................... 38
Science and Tech/Eng ....................................... 41
GRADE 6
English Language Arts ...................................... 21
Mathematics ......................................................... 20
GRADE 7
English Language Arts ...................................... 21
Mathematics ......................................................... 19
GRADE 8
English Language Arts ...................................... 31
Mathematics ......................................................... 38
Science and Tech/Eng ....................................... 27
GRADE 10
English Language Arts ...................................... 52
Mathematics ......................................................... 44
Science and Tech/Eng ....................................... 43
GRADES 3-8
English Language Arts ...................................... 31
Mathematics ......................................................... 31
GRADES 5 & 8
Science and Tech/Eng ....................................... 34
25
39
21
47
43
39
26
32
27
16
15
28
33
33
22
21
33
42
2024
31
40
For
Advertising
with
RESULTS,
call The
Advocate
Newspapers
at
781-233-4446
or info@advocatenews.net
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DTHE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FriDAy, SEpTEmbEr 27, 2024
Page 3
Medal of Liberty
Saugus medal of Honor recipient DeFranzo among 11 veterans honored by the National Guard posthumously
By Janice Jarosz
Commonwealth.
The medal is heart-shaped
S
augus Medal of Honor
recipient US Army SSG
Arthur F. DeFranzo was
among 11 veterans who were
honored with the Massachusetts
Medal of Liberty posthumously
last Saturday during a
special ceremony hosted by
the Massachusetts National
Guard in Milford. SSG DeFranzo’s
nephew, Arthur DeFranzo,
accepted the Medal
for the family. He was among
a large contingent from Saugus
that made the trip for the
presentation.
The Massachusetts Medal
of Liberty is awarded to
the next of kin of Massachusetts
servicemen and women
who have been killed in action,
who died as a result of
wounds received in action or
who died as a result of a training
accident in the line of duty.
It is bequeathed on behalf of
the Governor of the Commonwealth
of Massachusetts as
Commander-in-Chief of the
to symbolize the Purple Heart
and is attached to a 1 3/8-inchwide
ribbon with a black border
representing mourning.
The center of the medal bears a
gold star symbolizing the Gold
Star Mothers Club. At the top
center of the medal is the coat
of arms and on the rear side is
the servicemember’s branch of
service with a blank space to
have the honored servicemember’s
name engraved by the recipient
and the words, “In Honored
Memory” engraved above
and “Service and Sacrifi ce” beMEDAL
| SEE PAGE 17
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THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FriDAy, SEpTEmbEr 27, 2024
Selectmen deny request to allow 7-11 on Hamilton Street to operate 24 hours
By Mark E. Vogler
G
ail Bagnera, the operator
of the 7-Eleven on
Hamilton Street, readily
admitted to selectmen that
it would be diffi cult to fi nd additional
workers to keep the
store open 24-hours-a-day
when she requested an extension
of hours at Tuesday
night’s meeting. Selectmen
cited Bagnera’s comments
about the challenges of fi nding
the additional help as one
of the reasons why they votDENT
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ed 4-0 to deny her request.
During a public hearing on
her request, Bagnera told the
board that she was required
by corporate 7-Eleven to seek
the extension to 24 hours/seven
days a week operation.
Board of Selectmen Chair
Debra Panetta asked Bagnera
if the extension would help
her business succeed. “The
overnights are diffi cult to staff
and operate a 24/7 business,”
Bagnera responded.
“But it’s something that’s required,”
she said.
Panetta asked Bagnera what
the impact would be on the
store if the board denied her
request. There would be no
impact, Bagnera answered,
adding that the store would
continue to operate from 6
a.m. to 11 p.m., seven days a
week.
Board of Selectmen Vice
Chair Jeff Cicolini suggested
that Bagnera’s comments
about the diffi culty in staffi ng
the store for 24 hours be included
in the reasons for denying
the request.
“Since COVID, nobody can
fi nd help,” Selectman Anthony
Cogliano said.
“I think that help is an issue…some
of the clientele
that roams the street at night
is an issue,” Cogliano added.
“I don’t see the benefi t as far
as being a business owner. I
don’t see the traffi c out there
that would warrant it,” he said.
Selectman Michael Serino
said he’s never heard anyone
from the public say that the
Hamilton Street convenience
store should operate 24 hours
a day. “The only comment I
get from the public is that the
place is really run-down,” Serino
said.
“I hope you take the message
back to your property
owner,” Serino said.
Cogliano made the motion
to deny the request for extended
hours, which was seconded
by Panetta. The vote
was unanimous among the
four selectmen present. Selectmen
Corinne Riley was absent
due to an illness.
In other action Tuesday
night, selectmen:
• Approved a request by
Town Clerk Ellen Schena to
reduce the hours for the fi rst
week of In Person Early Voting
for the Nov. 5 Presidential
Election. Schena requested
the hours for Saturday, Oct.
19, to be 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. The
hours for the rest of the week
would be as follows: Monday,
Oct. 21, 9 a.m. to 3 p.m.; Tuesday,
Oct. 22, 9 a.m. to 2 p.m.;
Wednesday, Oct. 23, 9 a.m.
to 2 p.m.; Thursday, Oct. 24, 9
a.m. to 2 p.m.; and Friday, Oct.
25, 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. The second
week would remain the regular
hours.
• Approved a request from
Christine Graff eo of 7 Warren
Rd. for a block party permit for
Oct. 5 from 11 a.m. to 8 p.m.
• Approved a request from
Aggregate Industries, Inc. for
an extension of its Special
Permit (S-2) to allow removal
of earth and rock and for the
operation of a quarry at 1731
Rear Broadway and Whittier
Avenue for a period of six
months
• Approved a request from
PPT Hospitality LLC, of Boxford,
for a Common Victualer’s
License and Entertainment License
to operate Stella’s Pizzeria
at 463 Essex St. The approved
hours are 11 a.m. to
9:30 p.m., Monday through
Thursday; 11 a.m. to 10 p.m.,
Friday and Saturday; and 11
a.m. to 9:30 p.m., Sunday. Selectmen
approved a maximum
seating of 20 people
with one television set.
• Approved a request from
PPT Hospitality LLC, of Boxford,
for a Common Victualer’s
License and Entertainment License
to operate Dumplin Garden
at 467 Essex St. The approved
hours are 11 a.m. to
midnight, Monday through
Friday; 11 a.m. to 1 a.m., Saturday;
and 11 a.m. to midnight
on Sunday. Selectmen
approved 13 seats and a television
set.
Saugus Democrats host
a “Unity Breakfast”
T
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The table setting for a “unity breakfast” attended by more
than 60 people and hosted by the Saugus Democratic Town
Committee last Sunday at the Saugus Italian American
Club. (Courtesy photo to The Saugus Advocate)
Designing and Constructing Ideas that are “Grounds for Success”
Landscaping
his past Sunday morning,
the Saugus Democratic
Town Committee
hosted a “Unity Breakfast”
at the Saugus Italian American
Club embracing the 2025
Democratic slogan, “Strength
and Collaboration.” The function
room was decked out
in red, white and blue with
nods to Kamala Harris through
pearls and blue fl amingos.
Over 60 supporters and politicians
were in attendance including
Diana DiZoglio, Mass.
State Auditor; Paul Tucker, Essex
County District Attorney;
Tom Driscoll, Essex CounDEMOCRATS
| SEE PAGE 6
׉	 7cassandra://qk_3bIW57OrtqkIOCHNU88ysk3cX_Y_LwFk95jD-Vo8-`̰ f5./׉ETHE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FriDAy, SEpTEmbEr 27, 2024
Page 5
Saugus DAR prepares for Veteran’s Day Field of Flags
P
reparations for the
Fourth Annual Veteran’s
Day Field of Flags
to be placed on the lawn of
the Saugus Town Hall to honor
and remember all veterans
on November 11 is underway.
The Parson Roby Chapter
of the Daughters of the
American Revolution (DAR) is
sponsoring this event to honor
all veterans, living or deceased,
including those currently
serving.
American flags may be
sponsored through the Parson
Roby Chapter DAR at
a cost of $5 each. The fl ags
will be placed on the Saugus
Town Hall prior to Nov. 11
and will wave until Nov. 12
with your veteran’s name on
the fl ag. Flags may be sponsored
to honor a family member,
friend, neighbor or employee
who has served or is
currently serving our country.
The deadline to sponsor
fl ags is October 30.
You may send a check ($5
per flag) made payable to
Parson Roby Chapter along
with the information of the
veteran – Name/Rank/Branch
of Service/Years or War if
known – and mail to Treasurer,
27 Pearson St., Saugus, MA
moting patriotism. For more
information on how to sponsor
a flag or in joining the
Parson Roby Chapter DAR,
please email parsonroby.saugusdar@gmail.com
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Norwood St.
Everett
(617) 387-9810
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Announcing our Classic Specials
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DAR’S FIELD OF FLAGS: Miniature American fl ags honored deceased
and living veterans on the lawn of Town Hall during
Veterans Day 2022. The Parson Roby Chapter of the DAR is
sponsoring another “Field of Flags” event. (Saugus Advocate
fi le photo)
01906. After noon on Nov. 11,
you can pick up your sponsored
fl ag to either keep or
put on a grave.
Parson Roby Chapter’s fi rst
year sponsoring the Field of
Flags was 2021, and it has
been a huge success. So
many members of the community
stopped by to thank
us in remembering our veterans
this way. There were over
140 fl ags sponsored with veterans’
names waving in the
wind, and we hope for many
more veterans to be sponsored
this year. REMEMBER
OUR VETERANS!
All proceeds from the Veteran’s
Day Field of Flags will
support the DAR’s mission to
preserve American history
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THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FriDAy, SEpTEmbEr 27, 2024
Town-wide fall street sweeping program begins Monday
(Editor’s Note: The Saugus
Town Manager’s Offi ce issued
the following press release.)
T
own Manager Scott
C. Crabtree and the
Department of Public
Works are pleased to announce
that the town’s annual
fall street sweeping
program will begin on Monday,
Sept. 30, weather permitting.
Sweepers will start
in the area of North Saugus
(Precincts 5 and 7) and make
their way across town, working
from 7 a.m. to 3:30 p.m.
The work will generally
follow the schedule listed
below:
• Week of Sept. 30: Precincts
7, 5, 3, 10, and 2
• Week of Oct. 7: Precincts
6, 8, 1, 4, 9
• Week of Oct. 14: Remaining
work not accomplished
in the areas listed above
Please use the town precinct
maps posted on the
town website to identify
your precinct.
As the sweeping eff orts are
based on many variables including
weather, this schedule
is subject to frequent
changes. Please check back
with the town’s website for
updates.
Residents are kindly asked
Need a hall for your special event?
The Schiavo Club, located at
71 Tileston Street, Everett is
available for your Birthdays,
Anniversaries, Sweet 16 parties
and more?
For more info,
call (857) 249-7882
DEMOCRATS | FROM
PAGE 4
ty Clerk of Courts; Brendan
Crighton, State Senator, 3rd
Essex District; Sean Reid, State
Representative, 11th Essex
District; Eileen Duff, Governor’s
Councillor and candidate
for Register of Deeds;
Debra Panetta, Chair, Saugus
Board of Selectmen; Michael
Serino, Saugus Selectman. The
room was energized by their
speeches and committed to
working together for our common
goals in the upcoming
Celebrating Our 52nd Year
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Saugus Democratic Town Committee Chair Joe Malone receives
a citation from State Auditor Diana DiZoglio, recognizing
him for his decades of professional work for the
Commonwealth along with his decades of community service.
(Courtesy photo to The Saugus Advocate)
Chris 2024
to keep vehicles off the
street when sweepers are
in the area. Locals may assist
the Department of Public
Works by sweeping their
driveways or sidewalks into
the gutter area prior to the
program’s start. Residents
are asked not
to sweep
driveways and/or sidewalks
once the sweepers have
swept.
Keep in mind that street
election. We want to thank our
community and elected offi -
cials for their support.
Offi cers of the Saugus Democratic
Town Committee are
Joe Malone, Chair; Karen Rakinic,
Vice Chair; Mary Robblee,
sweepers are unable to collect
stones, branches, leaves,
or other foreign objects. In
addition, residents are asked
to be mindful that sweepers
cannot pick up large piles
of sand.
If you have any questions,
please contact the Department
of Public Works at 781231-4143.
Thank
you for your patience
and consideration.
Outreach Coordinator; Mary
Kinsell, Treasurer; and Lin Bell,
Secretary.
If you would like to join us
or seek further information,
please contact us at saugusdtc@gmail.com
Political
speeches and a breakfast buff et (Courtesy photo
to The Saugus Advocate)
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Page 7
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THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FriDAy, SEpTEmbEr 27, 2024
Celebrating a Century in Saugus
The First baptist Church thanks God’s provisions in celebrating its 100 years located in town
By Tara Vocino
F
irst Baptist Church celebrated
100 years on
Sunday. Retired United
States Navy veteran Rev.
Leroy Mahoney, who was licensed
to preach on July 12,
2009, led the special afternoon
sevice. The previous six
years Mahoney was the Chairman
of the Deacon Ministry.
“Our secret is being okay
with change,” Mahoney said.
“We partner with a nonprofit
to teach computer and financial
planning classes.”
They focus on community
activities, such as feeding the
homeless, educating the community
and preaching the Gospel.
Mahoney is the Founder
and CEO of Community Tech
Care Corporation, which is an
organization set up to provide
free classes to Saugonians in
technology, financial literacy
and human resources. Mahoney
stressed the importance
of community, adding that it’s
not just about Sunday morning
services.
First Baptist Church opened
September 21, 1924, and the
church’s original location was
22 Robins Road, Saugus. They
are members of American
Baptist Churches USA.
As for the anniversary,
he said it’s very exciting to
see how far the church has
come since 1924. The Baptist
tradition began in the early
17th-century during the
Protestant Reformation in England.
“The First Baptist Congregation
is generally believed
to have been founded
in 1609 by John Smyth, an
English Separatist,” Mahoney
said. “Baptists emphasize individual
faith, baptism and
autonomy of local congregation.”
Mahoney
was installed as
the Pastor of FBC on August
17, 2024. His wife is Deaconess
Natavia Mahoney; their
daughter is Shataya Pope. Mahoney
is bi-vocational. While
he is the Pastor of FBC, he is
also Vice President of Information
Technology at MIT Federal
Credit Union.
Music Minister Melvin Murphy
said ministering music at
First Baptist Church has always
been a joy. “We strive to lift the
hearts of those who enter the
sanctuary through song and
worship,” Murphy said. “Happy
Anniversary, FBC.”
The church has six staff and
86 members (45 are in person).
Several Baptist churches
joined in on the two-hour
service, followed by a celebratory
dinner.
(Advocate photos by Tara Vocino)
Mother
Margretta Green, 90, received an Appreciation Award
for being the eldest church member from Reverend Leroy Mahoney.
Shown
from left to right: Kim
Henry, Rev. Letitia Stroud, Monique
Hicks, Mother Beth Cole
Williams, Deaconess Natavia
Mahoney and Sister Mattie
Tyler.
First Baptist Church Pastor
Rev. Leroy Mahoney was licensed
to preach on July 12,
2009.
Shown from left to right: First Baptist Church Minister Ernest
Dudley, Reverend Ed Bernard, Pastor Leroy Mahoney, Reverend
Letitia Stroud and Reverend Bernard Stroud minister
through music.
First Baptist Church Rev.
Ulysses Bernard Stroud
read from Psalms 37:8.
Music Minister Melvin Murphy
sang praises to God.
First Baptist Church Pastor Rev. Leroy Mahoney said it’s exciting
to see how far the church has come in celebrating its
100th anniversary on Sunday.
Massachusetts Avenue Baptist
Church Reverend Brenda
Brown said they’re here to celebrate
the goodness of God
and a joyful occasion, adding
that a hallelujah is always
welcome.
It was a full house in the sanctuary.
Deaconess Nativia Mahoney and Reverend Leroy Mahoney.
Sister Pat Campbell offered
her congratulations.
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Page 9
S&P Global Ratings affirms town’s excellent bond rating
(Editor’s Note: The Town Manager’s
Office issued the following
press release this week.)
T
own Manager Scott
Crabtree announced
that S&P Global Ratings
assigned an AA+/Stable rating
to Saugus’ $5.7 million in general
obligation bonds this year,
in addition to affirming the
town’s AA+/Stable long-term
bond rating for outstanding
debt. AA+/Stable is the best
bond rating that Saugus has
achieved under any administration
in town history.
S&P Global Ratings, a renowned
municipal credit rating
agency, explained in its report
earlier this year that the
town’s “general creditworthiness
is characterized by comprehensive
and forward-looking
management practices,
consistently balanced-to-positive
operations, and strong reserves.”
AA+/Stable
is the second
highest bond rating tier that
S&P Global Ratings designates
for municipalities. Grading
the Town of Saugus AA+/
Stable signifies S&P’s expectation
that the town will maintain
its strong budgetary performance
and very strong financial
reserves.
According to S&P Global Ratings,
the AA+/Stable bond rating
reflects the agency’s view
of the town’s:
· Ongoing development and
new growth opportunities
· Track record of positive operations
expected to continue
this fiscal year, driven by stable
operating revenue from property
taxes and intergovernmental
sources, and expected
maintenance of very strong reserves
and liquidity
· Cautious budgeting practices
and monthly review
of budget-to-actual reports;
long-term forecasting and
comprehensive five-year capital
planning; a conservative
debt policy in relation to debt
service of operating expenditures;
robust investment and
reserve policies; steps to mitigate
cyber risk; and a strong
institutional framework
Town Manager Crabtree
was pleased that S&P Global
Ratings continues to affirm
the town’s AA+/Stable
bond rating, which helps the
town achieve better borrowing
rates and yields budgetary
savings that can be reallocated
to other town services
and infrastructure improvements
that benefit residents.
“This is great news that a reputable
credit rating agency has
acknowledged the steps the
town has taken to make sure
taxpayer dollars are being utilized
wisely in a fiscally-prudent
manner,” Town Manager
Crabtree said. “The continued
AA+/Stable bond rating is a direct
result of the commitment
from the town, Finance Committee,
Board of Selectmen
and Town Meeting to developing
and maintaining sound
budgetary practices that are
supported by strong reserves.”
Selectman Jeff Cicolini said
the town’s ability to maintain
an AA+ bond rating during
these trying economic times is
a true testament to the town
manager’s effectiveness and
the entire administration’s
commitment to fiscal responsibility.
“Our taxpayers can rest
easy knowing Saugus continues
to remain on stable footing
which allows us to keep
the cost of borrowing low,
which in turn eases the burden
on the need for additional
tax increases,” Selectman Cicolini
said. “Having a AA+ bond
rating is not something that
should be overlooked. It is the
second highest rating a community
can achieve and is the
highest Saugus has been rated
since the town has participated
in the creditworthiness
rating system. Hats off to our
town manager and his finance
team for continuing to apply
the conservative budgeting
mechanics and fastidiously
monitoring our costs across
all departments. The results are
a financially stable and fiscally
strong community.”
“This is great news for the
town and our residents,” said
Board of Selectmen Chair Debra
Panetta. “The better our
bond rating is, the more funding
that can be used for important
projects that benefit
the community, as opposed
to going toward interest obligations.
Kudos to the administration
for establishing and
embracing prudent fiscal measures
that have been rightfully
commended by S&P Global
Ratings.”
“Once again S&P Global
has AFFIRMED the town’s
AA+ rating and specifically
makes note of the administration’s
strong budgetary performance,
very strong budgetary
flexibility, very strong
liquidity due to its strong liquid
reserves, along with good
financial management,” said
Saugus Finance Committee
Chairman Ken DePatto. “This
report reflects the good financial
practices of the administration
as supported by the
Finance Committee and Town
Meeting. This has all been accomplished
in an economy
that has been stressed by inflation.
But our town continues
to be solid financially and S&P
Global has rewarded the town
with its AA+ rating, which will
continue to save the community
money in interest on all of
our borrowing projects.”
Saugus Birthday Celebrations
T
he Saugus Council on
Aging had its biggest
birthday celebration
A lot of praise and worship
was in the building.
Roxbury Timothy Baptist
Church Associate Minister
Erica Wilder stood up to offer
her congratulations.
yet with two dozen people
recognized for their September
birthday last Friday, Sept.
20. It was an awesome afternoon
filled with lots of laughs;
comedian David Shikes performed
and kept everyone
laughing. A special thank you
to Doris Napier for sponsoring
the cake and ice cream in
honor of the 80th birthday of
her husband, Bill Napier.
Birthdays are always special
occasions at the Saugus
Senior Center. Every month
the Center holds a birthday
celebration for any senior
who would like their birthday
to be recognized. They receive
a free pizza lunch, cake
and ice cream and a souvenir
group photo to take home.
Anyone that would like to attend
a birthday celebration at
the Senior Center must sign
up and get their ticket in advance.
A
lot of devotion was given in the sanctuary.
Shown from left to right: Lynn Zion Baptist Church staff:
Reverend Adrienne Berry-Burton, Rev. Louise Cheryl Moore,
Minister Brenda Womack and Sister Christina Caldwell.
SEPTEMBER 2024 BIRTHDAYS: The Senior Center celebrated the collective birthdays of
24 Saugonians for the month last Friday (Sept. 20). Pictured from left to right: Front
row: Ann Erickson, Cathy Strum, Margie Rota and Joan Lanzerio; second row: Sandra
Cameron, Doris Piwowarski, Marie Boudreau, Leslie Deland, Eleanor Gallo, Charlene
Robicheau, Pauline Agnew, Marian Ravagni, Charles Zapolski and Bill Stewart; back
row: Daniel Blaney, Dick Lynch, Mona Assortato, Valerie Costello, Roberta Perry, Al Edmunds,
Janesta Smallman, Cheryl Roberto, Lenny Constantino and Bill Napier. (Courtesy
Photo to The Saugus Advocate)
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THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FriDAy, SEpTEmbEr 27, 2024
Rebirth of the Pumpkin Patch
“pumpkin Church” called it the fastest unloading in the 22-year history of the event – despite the heavy rain
By Tara Vocino
gray but the spirit was bright
all around!”
I
t was raining heavily, but
approximately 100 volunteers
still stepped in to
help unload 4,000 pumpkins
from a box truck outside of
First Congregational Church
on Saturday.
Pastor of First Congregational
Church Saugus UCC
Reverend Bill Ladd said it was
so amazing how everyone
pitched in, from the tall to the
small, in the drizzle and the
rain. “We had children from
kindergarten through high
school passing pumpkins
from the truck to the pallets,
being passed hand to hand –
no matter how the rain came
down – with their coaches,
parents and families laughing
and cheering and helping
out as well,” Ladd said.
“The clouds may have been
On behalf of First Congregational
Church Saugus, he
thanks volunteers so much.
It was the fastest unloading
in history – approximately an
hour and a half.
“We couldn’t have done it
without our wonderful community,”
Ladd said. “And the
second truck comes in two
weeks – more fun to come!”
Pumpkin Patch Coordinator
Carl Spencer said that even
in the rain everyone came.
“I didn’t expect everyone to
show,” Spencer said on Saturday
in the rain. “Volunteers
look forward to it every year.”
Spencer said they are seeking
volunteers on Oct. 12 at 9
a.m. to help unload the truck
when 3,000 pumpkins will arrive
– rain or shine.
Saugus Youth Cheerleader
Avaleigh Kohr said she came
to help in the rain. “They
needed help rain or shine,”
Avaleigh said. “I wanted to
help.”
Her organization president,
Gregory Bluestein, said this
is one of their favorite days
of the year in Saugus Youth
Football and Cheer. “The
foundation of these sports
are teamwork, family and
community,” Bluestein said.
“Just like on the field or on
the mats, this is an opportunity
to teach kids what it means
to be something bigger than
themselves.”
The Navajo Reservation
grows pumpkins in New Mexico.
At the church, they are
sold by weight, measured
with a tape. “Throughout the
country, pumpkins are sold
through nonprofits,” Spencer
said. “The church gets the proceeds
of those sales.”
Pumpkins are sold through
Oct. 31. After Nov. 1, the
church will give out pumpkins
free, but rarely are any left,
according to Spencer.
Houston, Texas, resident
Anya Barksdale, 3, picked a
pumpkin for her best friend,
Razzie Smith, 3, in the pouring
rain.
Lynn resident Jasmine Smith
said she feels honored to support
a church that aligns with
her faith. She attends Impact
Church in Medford, which is a
nondenominational space. As
far as the Navajos, she feels a
deep connection. “My family
is from Taino, Jamaica, on my
father Winston’s side,” Smith
said. “It’s also an indigenous
tribe.”
Volunteer/Church member
Carol Gilmore was selling
pumpkins on Sunday. “I always
feel better volunteering, because
I put a smile on people’s
faces, and I put one on them,”
Gilmore said, who has been
attending church for eight
years. “I drove by the pumpkins
Saturday, and it looked
like a Christmas miracle.”
Veterans Memorial Elementary
School kindergartener
Christian Peixoto, 5, came to
choose a pumpkin with his
family. His mother, Jeanine,
said her son looks forward to
coming every year. Christian
likes the colors and thinks it’s
cool.
Haverhill resident Luanna
Wiswall said it’s nice that
her daughter, Bianca, 2, picks
pumpkins. Her father, Patrick,
who grew up in the area, said
it’s good for the community.
“It’s in the center of town,”
Wiswall said. “It’s easy to drive
by and stop.”
WAVE OF ORANGE: Shown from left to right: Pumpkin Patch Coordinator Carl Spencer, Assistant
Coordinator Karen Spencer and volunteer Linda Anderson, all of Saugus – who attend
church here – sold pumpkins in the rain on Saturday.
Small pumpkins and gourds are for sale for between 75 cents
and two dollars.
On Saturday 4,000 pumpkins were delivered.
Church member/Lynn resident
Carol Gilmore drove by
Saturday and said the Pumpkin
Patch looked like a Christmas
miracle.
Saugus Youth Football and
Cheer helped to unload the
truck. (Courtesy photo, President
Greg Bluestein)
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Page 11
THE PUMPKIN
PATCH IS BACK!
T
Houston, Texas, resident
Anya Barksdale, 3, chose a
little pumpkin for her best
friend, Razzie Smith.
he “Pumpkin Truck” arrived at First Congregational
Church in Saugus Center on Saturday, Sept. 20. The Annual
Pumpkin Patch is now up and running and will be
open through Halloween, Oct. 31. Pumpkins of all sizes are displayed
on the church lawn and will be available for purchase every
day from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Pumpkin Patch Coordinator Carl
Spencer said, “We’re happy to get our pumpkins and appreciate
all the people who helped unload the truck. We had over
100 people who helped with the unloading Saturday. A large
group of players and cheerleaders from Saugus Youth Football
and Cheer and their parents under the direction of president
Greg Bluestein participated as well as students from Pioneer
Charter School and Saugus High. The church appreciates their
help as well as the off-loading of pallets by Patrick Follis from
Agganis Construction. The church truly enjoys providing the
community with pumpkins and hosting this great fall event.”
(Saugus Advocate photos by Tara Vocino)
Volunteer/church member Carol Gilmore measured a pumpkin
to sell.
At First Congregational Church’s
pumpkin patch on Saturday, Aunt
Jasmine Smith, of Lynn – shown with
her niece, Anya Barksdale, 3 – said she
wants to support a church that aligns
with her faith.
Veterans Memorial Elementary School
kindergartener Christian Peixoto, 5,
and his father, Fabio, are shown inside
the pumpkin patch on Sunday.
Bianca Wiswall, 2, was all smiles after
choosing a pumpkin with her mother,
Luanna.
Haverhill resident Bianca Wiswall, 2,
picked out a pumpkin, guided by her
parents, Luanna and Patrick.
Voters in Massachusetts face wide range of Ballot
Questions on Election Day, November 5
New poll: Voters still up in the air on most of the questions, but support auditing the mass. Legislature; ending
mCAS testing for HS grad support building
By Steve Freker
M
assachusetts voters
this fall are facing
the most Ballot
Questions to ponder – five
in all – since a state record
eight questions appeared on
the 2000 state ballot. The five
this year represents the second-most.
With
five binding statewide
ballot questions officially certified
to appear on the November
5, 2024, State Election
ballot, Secretary of the Commonwealth
William F. Galvin
has assigned question numbers
to each initiative. The
questions on the November
ballot will appear as follows:
Question 1: State Auditor’s
Authority to Audit the Legislature.
Question
2: Elimination of
MCAS as High School Graduation
Requirement.
Question 3: Unionization
for Transportation Network
Drivers.
Question 4: Limited Legalization
and Regulation of Certain
Natural Psychedelic Substances.
Question
5: Minimum Wage
for Tipped Workers.
According to a new WBUR
poll, things are still very much
up in the air in voters’ minds
as the General Election nears.
According to the WBUR poll,
most respondents said they
want the state’s auditor to
have authority to investigate
the Legislature, and a
slim majority want to end
the MCAS standardized test
as a high school graduation
requirement. But voters are
still mulling if tipped workers
should receive the general
minimum wage and if therapeutic
psychedelics should
be legal.
The WBUR/CommonWealth
Beacon poll of 800 likely voters
was conducted from Sept.
12 to 18 and has a margin of
error of 4.1%. It was conducted
by MassINC Polling Group
and supported with funding
from Knight Election Hub. The
poll did not ask about an initiative
that will be labeled Question
3 on the ballot: to grant
network transportation workers
like Uber and Lyft drivers
the right to join a union.
Here are some WBUR poll results
on the ballot questions:
Question 1: State Auditor’s
Authority to Audit the Legislature
Some
70% of respondents
said they supported Question
1, which would allow Massachusetts
Auditor Diana DiZoglio
to audit some functions
and processes of the Legislature.
Just 8% of those polled
opposed the measure, with
22% saying they didn’t know
how they would vote, or did
not answer
Question 2: Elimination of
MCAS as High School Graduation
Requirement
Question 2 would end the
use of the Massachusetts
Comprehensive Assessment
System (MCAS) as a requisite
Five ballot questions will be
decided by Massachusetts
voters on November 5. (Advocate
Photo)
for a high school diploma.
About 51% said they would
ELECTION DAY | SEE PAGE 17
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THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FriDAy, SEpTEmbEr 27, 2024
~ Saugus High Weekly Sports roundup ~
By Dom Nicastro
SAUGUS GIRLS
SOCCER TEAM NETS
FIFTH WIN
The Saugus High School
girls soccer team dominated
Swampscott on Tuesday as it
poured 18 shots on goal and
came away with a 3-1 win at
home. The team improved to
5-1-1. The Sachems had goals
from Layla Manderson, from
35 yards out, and Madison
Botta and Kendall Hatch, who
notched her first goal of the
season. Goalkeeper Tori Carter
made crucial saves, including
a diving save at the end. The
team’s offensive strategy emphasized
patience and communication.
The
team is now bracing
for some upcoming games
against tough opponents
like Beverly and Danvers.
The coach, April Martinez, is
pleased with the first half of
the season and emphasizes
the importance of continued
hard work and communication.
Martinez
praised Hatch for
her first goal of the season,
noting her hard work and understanding
of her role. “She
knows her role and where she
should be,” Martinez said. “And
she was right where she needed
to be.”
Manderson’s goal came on
a beautiful shot from 35 yards
away, a line drive that found
a home in the back of the Big
ing shots, not forcing passes.
And we made some bad passes
up in their third but they
were being patient, moving
around, changing fields, communicating
movement off the
ball, running off the ball being
providing options. That’s
something that they really haven’t
done well up until now.
But I told them they need to
do that against better teams
that we have coming up, like
Beverly. We need to dominate
and control the ball. If we can
control the ball, you control
the game.”
The team is approaching the
end of the first half of the season.
Martinez, with only one
loss and one tie, likes the way
things have gone overall. “I’m
very happy with this first half,”
Martinez said. “I mean, we have
a couple hard games coming
up. We’ve got Beverly on Friday.
We have Danvers coming
up. We have to play St. Mary’s
again. And those are all hard
games, which I’m looking forward
to. But the girls, they need
to just continue playing hard
and communicating and controlling
the ball, and you know
they’ll be successful.”
Before the Swampscott
game, Saugus tied Marblehead,
2-2. Its two goals were scored
by Botta and Shawn Sewell.
TEAM LEADERS: The Lady Sachems Soccer Captains, shown from left to right: Layla
Manderson, Victoria Carter, Taylor Deleidi and Madison Botta. (Advocate photo)
Blue net. “It was a hard shot
into the upper corner of the
net,” Martinez said. “It was a
great shot.”
All in all, the coach loved
how the team moved the ball
all night. “I liked it,” she said.
“They were patient in moving
the ball around and not forcSAUGUS
BOYS
SOCCER TEAM TIES
IPSWICH
Saugus ended up in a 1-1
draw against the Tigers. Each
team scored on PKs, the Sachems
getting their tally from
Noah Giron.
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SAUGUS BOYS
GOLF TEAM SEES
PROGRESS
The Sachems had three
matches last week that resulted
in losses but did see
some progress. The team fell
to Northeast Metro Tech but
collected 31.5 points as a team
with a great performance by
freshman John Morello. As
the No. 3, he won his match,
7-2. Sophomore Artie O’Leary
tied his opponent, 4.5-4.5, and
Dalton Diozzie also earned a
draw. Junior Nathan Soroko
won his match-up in the No.
8 spot, 5-4.
The team lost to Beverly and
Swampscott but showed signs
of improvement, which was
encouraging, according to
Saugus Coach Dan Bertrand.
׉	 7cassandra://OZ5VBkBP8xa7C7_PE1P8AN-u_bl-IAGgGttUcNByuUk*`̰ f5./׉EBTHE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FriDAy, SEpTEmbEr 27, 2024
Page 13
Meet the 2024 Saugus High School Sachems Girls’
Varsity Cheerleading Team
By Tara Vocino
T
he Saugus High School Sachems Girls’ Varsity Cheerleading
Team introduced themselves on Sunday at Saugus
High School. Their Senior Night is Oct. 18 at 5:30 p.m.
against Swampscott High School.
Shown from left to right: Head Coach Hannah Phelan with seniors Nyah Similien, Rhianna Rodriguez,
Anna Felicio, Gabriela Mund, Sofia Correa and Valani J-Charles.
Captains, shown from left to right: Gabriela Mund, Anna Felicio
and Lanyelis Perez.
Anna Felicio performed a
two-leg stunt on Sunday
at Saugus High School.
Flyers Anna Felicio and Yamilett
Alvarez performed an extension.
Shown from left to right: Top row: Sofia Correa, Anna Felicio, Gabriela Mund, Lanyelis Perez
and Rhianna Rodriguez; middle row: Ava Pina, Stephanie Perez, Yamilett Alvarez, Ana Clara,
Kethellen Rodrigues and Mikaela Trombella; back row: Nyah Similien, Alesha Bien-Aime, Mckayla
Malbranche, Savanna Dalton and Valani J-Charles.
Cody’s world: Munafo powers Saugus past Wilmington
By Dom Nicastro
S
augus got in the winner’s
column last Friday
night in a 22-10
road win over Wilmington.
The non-league victory put
the Sachems at 1-1 on the
season, and the team continues
its non-league portion
of the schedule with a Thursday
night, Sept. 26, matchup
against Lynn Tech in the home
opener at 6:30 p.m.
Senior Cody Munafo led
the Sachems in a lot of ways
against Wilmington. The captain
had 30 carries for 160
yards, two touchdowns and a
two-point conversion. On defense,
Munafo recorded nine
tackles, a sack and an interception
and recovered two
fumbles.
“I was going into that week
a little mad because of the prior
week’s game [21-14 loss to
Cambridge R&L] but I just had
to put that anger aside and focus
on the Wilmington game,”
Munafo said. “My team, coaches
and all the practices and
film sessions we had beforehand
led to my success on the
field. I give all the credit to the
team since the team worked
hard in practice, and in the
game that made me want to
work even harder and focus
even more for that game. The
film sessions were probably
the biggest part of my success.
It showed where I should be at
the right time on defense. Also
my fumble recovery on the
first play of the game set the
tone for the rest of the game
and on offense I give credit to
my offensive line; they didn’t
quit not even for one play.”
Wilderson Lafortune, Koby
Jette, Laith Haddad, Moises
Perez and Paxton Ferraro
composed an offensive line
that paved the way for Munafo,
whose looks on offense
have increased significantly
this season.
Steve Cummings, Saugus’
coach, highlighted Munafo’s
growth and contributions,
noting that Munafo was one
of the few players with significant
playing experience from
last season. However, last year
Munafo mostly played as a
lead blocker and linebacker.
This season, he has a chance
to step up and shine, and he’s
making the most of it in the
first eight quarters of the season.
He had two touchdowns
in the opener as well. Despite
having never carried the
ball as much before, Munafo
showed no signs of fatigue
and even performed better in
the second half.
The coach emphasized that
Munafo’s 160 yards on the
ground were a team effort,
made possible by strong offensive
line play, including
CODY’S WORLD | SEE PAGE 18
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THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FriDAy, SEpTEmbEr 27, 2024
The Sounds of Saugus
By Mark E. Vogler
Good morning, Saugus
Selectman Corinne Riley,
who was the driving force behind
a nifty program that helps
newcomers to Saugus – as well
as old-timers – get better acquainted
with their community,
said “Saugus 4-1-1” won’t be
happening this fall after successful
Saturdays at the Saugus
Middle-High School over
the past two years.
“The Saugus 4-1-1 Committee
would like everyone to
know that the Saugus 4-1-1
event will be taking place, but
will be held in March 2025,” Selectman
Riley said in an announcement
this week.
“Invitations to all new residents
as well as non-profits will
be mailed out in January. We
are looking forward to having
this wonderful event for new
residents as well as those who
have been here for years to
learn what Saugus has to offer!
More detailed information
will be coming soon,” she said.
Stay tuned for updates on
“Saugus 4-1-1.”
Fall Family Festival is tomorrow
Here’s
a good weekend best
bet for parents with children
who are looking for a fun activity
this weekend.
In another week, it will be
time for family gatherings at
Breakheart Reservation, as the
Annual Fall Family Festival is set
for Saturday, Sept. 28, from 10
a.m. to 2 p.m. This FREE event
will include lawn games, a petting
zoo, storytellers, music
and family-oriented activities.
Watch and learn about owls
with Mass Audubon or hold a
live snake with Cape Ann Vernal
Pond Team. All this and so
much more! This event is cosponsored
by the Department
of Conservation & Recreation
(DCR), Friends of Breakheart,
Saugus Cultural Council and
S.A.V.E. The event will take
place in and around the Christopher
P. Dunne Visitor Center.
Please wear comfortable
shoes and dress for the weather.
Bring drinking water, sunscreen
and insect repellent.
Rain or shine. Look for rangers
who will assist with parking.
whom had passed. My conversation
with Bill over lunch was
indeed one of the highlights of
my weekend.
Another memorable part
of my UMass reunion weekend
was walking all over campus
to visit familiar landmarks
and buildings that were part
of my world back in the day. I
must have walked more than
10 miles over the weekend,
with frequent stops at buildings
that got me going back
into the time machine, recalling
some favorite professors –
mentors who helped shape my
journalism education and prepare
me for my chosen career.
At almost every stop, memoUMASS
LANDMARKS: The Old Chapel and the W.E.B. DuBois Library were famous buildings
that I passed by almost daily during my years as a student at the University of Massachusetts
campus in Amherst. I got to walk by them a lot last weekend when I returned
to celebrate the 50th Anniversary of the UMass Class of 1974. (Saugus Advocate photo by
Mark E. Vogler)
SAVE plans to have a “It’s
New to You” SWAP table at the
Breakheart Fall Festival to keep
still usable goods out of the
waste stream/trash. Bring items
in good condition that are too
good to toss or come and find
a treasure at our table to take
home! Bring, take or do both!
All FREE!
SAVE is also sponsoring a Live
Owl Show presented by Mass
Audubon. Come learn about
these fantastic creatures up
close. Show times are at 11:00
a.m., 11:30 a.m., noon, 12:30
p.m. and 1:00 p.m. Free admission
to the public.
Food Pantry notes
The Saugus United Parish
Food Pantry will be open today
(Friday, Sept. 27) from 9:3011
a.m. at 50 Essex St. in the
basement of Cliftondale Congregational
Church. The Saugus
United Parish Food Pantry
welcomes all neighbors facing
food insecurity. If you are able
to donate to the food pantry,
you can also stop by during
those hours or drop donations
off at the Saugus Public Library
during library hours.
RON’S OIL
Call
For
PRICE
MELROSE, MA
02176
NEW
CUSTOMER’S
WELCOME
ACCEPTING VISA, MASTERCARD & DISCOVER
(781) 397-1930 OR (781) 662-8884
100 GALLON MINIMUM
Legion Breakfasts today
The American Legion Post
210 has begun its 2024-25
breakfast season. There’s a
good deal for Saugus veterans
and other folks who enjoy
a hearty breakfast on Friday
mornings. Doors open at
7:30 a.m., with breakfast served
from 8-9:00 a.m. for an $8 donation.
Veterans who cannot
afford the donation may be
served free.
Reliving UMass Amherst
memories
Last weekend was one of
the best ones I’ve had in many
years. I took the two-hour drive
back to my alma mater – UMass
Amherst – to be a part of
the 50th reunion of the Class
of 1974. It could be 30 years
or more since I last stepped
foot on the sprawling campus
in Western Massachusetts
where I embarked on a journalism
career, which continues
to this day.
Late last Friday morning,
I drove from my home in
Methuen to I-93, to I-495, to
Route 2, to Route 202 and
through some backroads with
one mission – to meet at least
one classmate I graduated
with a half century ago whom
I knew.
I had signed up for a special
Saturday luncheon at the Old
Chapel, where 75 Class of 1974
graduates would get to walk
up to the stage and receive a
“Golden Diploma” celebrating
the 50-year anniversary of completing
their college degrees.
The Old Chapel is a famous
UMass landmark, situated right
next door to the W.E.B. DuBois
Library, the third tallest library
in the world, with 28 floors and
286 feet and four inches tall. At
the time of its opening in 1974,
it was promoted as the world’s
tallest library.
It was during my days at the
Massachusetts Daily Collegian
that I researched and wrote an
investigative story before the
library opened with the lead
paragraph: “The world’s tallest
library has kingsize problems.”
The article detailed some issues
like fireproof carpeting that actually
burned and doors that
opened into the stairwell the
wrong way, blocking firefighters’
access to standpipes. But
those problems paled compared
to bricks falling off the
building, which gained national
publicity years after the
opening.
It was at the “Golden Diploma”
luncheon in the Old Chapel
that I got to accomplish
my main mission: getting reacquainted
after many years
with a fellow classmate. I was
thrilled to hear the name “Bill
Ballou” announced. We were
colleagues at the Daily Collegian.
Bill went on to become an
accomplished sports writer and
columnist for many years at the
Worcester Telegram & Gazette.
After the ceremonial diploma
presentation ended, I went
over to greet Bill and joined him
and his wife Debbie for lunch.
We reminisced about the old
times and got caught up about
lives and careers of fellow Daily
Collegian colleagues, some of
ries of times past – happy times
spent with classmates as well as
some challenging times – filled
my thoughts. It was truly a nostalgic
journey into my past. I
made the grueling uphill climb
to Grayson Hall on Orchard Hill,
where I lived in a student dormitory
for the first three years.
Students I talked with said
they still call the grassy depression
that was located in
the center of the four dormitories
on Orchard Hill “the bowl.”
I remember students sliding
into “the bowl” in the winter
or sloshing into “the bowl” on
a warm, but rainy spring day
or night.
One of the students I talked
to said walking up and down
the trail to Orchard Hill was the
worst part of his college life. I
told him that I would make as
many as three round trips a day
from Orchard Hill to the heart of
the campus back when I was at
UMass Amherst.
The student was stunned
when I told him that my annual
college bill – tuition, room and
board and other UMass-related
expenses – only added up to
about $1,700 a year when I was
a student. Nowadays, the price
of instate tuition alone costs
more than $17,000 a year and
overall costs exceed $33,000.
What a bargain it was for me
to obtain an education when I
did at UMass Amherst. I worked
part-time to help pay my college
expenses. There was no
need to take out a college loan
back then.
In my travels, I noticed some
big changes to some of the
places I frequented. One noticeable
change to the UMass
Campus Center was that the
dive bar known as “The Blue
Wall Cafe,” which once served
2,750 gallons of draft brew a
week – the most of any bar on
the Eastern Seaboard (an interesting
stat I reported in a series
I did on college drinking) –
THE SOUNDS | SEE PAGE 15
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Page 15
SOUNDS | FROM PAGE 14
had been converted into a large
food court full of fancy eateries
of all kinds of cuisine with tables
and chairs in the middle. It
has enough space for 900 customers.
When
I was a student, the legal
drinking age was lowered
in April of 1972 from 21 to 18,
which probably was the main
reason why the Blue Wall’s beer
sales soared, then took a dive
when the drinking age was
moved back up to 21.
Jimmy Fund Craft Fair at
The MEG Sunday
Sharon Genovese and the
members of Sharon’s Sneaker
Crew will be involved again
in the Boston Marathon Jimmy
Fund Walk, which is set for
Oct. 6. The MEG Foundation announced
that the Jimmy Fund
Craft Fair – sponsored by Sharon’s
Sneaker Crew – will be
held at The MEG building (5458
Essex St., Saugus) on Sept.
29 from 1 to 4 p.m.
A Pumpkin Patch “SHOUT
OUT”
Karen Spencer, one of the
organizers of First Congregational
Church’s annual “Pumpkin
Patch,” offered the following
“Shout Out.”
“Thank you to the members
of the community that came
to the First Congregational
Church last Saturday morning
to unload the delivery of pumpkins.
A large tractor trailer truck
came from the Navajo Reservation
in New Mexico to Saugus
with 4,000 pumpkins. Students
from Saugus High School, Pioneer
Charter School, N.E Vocational
School, Pop Warner
football players, cheerleaders,
coaches and parents, School
Committee member Stephanie
Mastrocola, Athletic Director
Matt Serino along with members
and friends of the church
formed an assembly line and
passed pumpkins one to one
until our lawn was full. They
did this while it rained the entire
time. Thank you also to Patrick
Follis from Agganis Construction
who showed up with
a forklift to unload some pallets.
It was like a scene from a
movie watching these 100 people
working together in the rain
to help our church. THANK YOU
THANK YOU THANK YOU.
“If you would like to help, we
have another delivery on October
12 @9.00 am.”
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.
The Library hosts a Helen
Keller portrayal tomorrow
The New Friends of the Saugus
Public Library welcome
back actor Sheryl Faye in “Helen
Keller: Champion of the Disabled.”
Fae will perform in the
Community Room of the Saugus
Public Library from 2 to
3:30 p.m. tomorrow (Saturday,
Sept. 28).
The program is written from
Helen’s mind’s eye. The story is
told on a taped voice-over as
Helen reenacts her full life from
THE SOUNDS | SEE PAGE 17
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THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FriDAy, SEpTEmbEr 27, 2024
Saugus Gardens in the Summer
Here’s what’s blooming in town this week to make your walks more enjoyable
By Laura Eisener
N
ow that we are on
the brink of October,
fall displays are appearing
all around town. The
pumpkin patch at the Congregational
Church in Saugus
Center is a popular spot, with
people selecting their pumpkins
as well as little ghost lollipops,
ornamental gourds and
squash.
In addition to the pumpkins,
popular fall decorations indoors
and out include wheat,
barley and cattails, cornstalks
and hay bales and late blooming
perennials and annuals.
Garden Club President Donna
Manoogian has some beautiful
window boxes with pale
orange-pink geraniums (Pelargonium
hortorum) in bloom,
sweet potato vine (Ipomoea
batatas), dracaena (Dracaena
marginata) and a medley of
fall-themed decorations. The
plants have grown in these
boxes all summer, but the addition
of the fall decorations
change the look from summer
to fall.
Donna’s entrance garden features
a lovely statue of a lady
admiring a bird perched on
her hand, ‘Autumn Joy’ sedum
in bloom and a bench under a
Japanese maple (Acer palmatum).
Many varieties of Japanese
maple hold their dark red
foliage color through the heat
of summer and when cooler
weather arrives can turn intense
fall shades of orange or
red. This is a tree that has a long
season of interest because the
color lasts for months as a contrast
to its green surroundings.
The statue is the focal point of
this part of the garden and is
very appropriate for the nature-loving
homeowner. Donna
says, “The statue was a surprise
70th birthday gift from
my 2 daughters. The party was
held at the library’s community
meeting room while Books in
Bloom was in full bloom.”
Some beautiful fall arrangements
can be made from flowers
grown in your own garden
and then dried. The Chinese
lanterns from Julia Aston’s
garden shown a few weeks
ago are perennials that produce
new decorations each
year, but the dried fruits can
also be kept and used for several
years’ worth of decorations.
Once the flowers of ‘Autumn
Joy’ and some other sedum
varieties fade, their dark
brown seed heads can be left
in the garden through winter
or can be snapped off and
used as dried decorations. Baby’s
breath, statice and safflowers
are a few blossoms often
used in florists’ bouquets
that also last very well, not to
mention wheat, barley and
many grass seed heads.
Some plants sold as sumJulia
Aston’s Chinese lanterns
look great in her tiny
woodpecker vase. (Photo
courtesy of Julia Aston)
Deep blue flowers of hardy leadwort brighten the autumn
landscape in the garden behind St. John’s Church in early
fall. (Photo courtesy of Laura Eisener)
Donna Manoogian’s fall window box display features geraniums,
sweet potato vine and fall-themed decorations.
(Photo courtesy of Laura Eisener)
mer or fall annuals are very
useful as dried flowers. One
of the best is strawflower (Xerochrysum
bracteatum, formerly
known as Helichrysum
bracteatum), which keeps its
vivid flower color when dried.
The strawflower is a native of
Australia and has been grown
since the early 19th century
for its interesting papery flower
heads. In warmer climates it
is a perennial, but is only hardy
to zone 8. Flowers may be
bright yellow, orange, red or
white. Its main disadvantage
for dried flower arrangements
is that the stems are short, but
it is perfect for small vases or
teacup arrangements.
We see a lot of warm colors
in fall, in the foliage and
in many of the popular flowers
as well as the oranges and
yellows of all the pumpkins.
Sometimes cool blues, purples
and greens will set off these
warm colors by their contrast,
whether this is the blue sky behind
the trees ablaze with fall
color or the plantings of blue
asters surrounding the pumpkins.
Sandy Mears has a stunning
‘Magic Purple’ aster glowing
in the sunshine along her
driveway wall.
Hardy leadwort, also sometimes
called hardy plumbago
(Ceratostigma plumbaginoides),
is one of the unusual
plants that produces a truly
bright blue flower. Several of
these are blooming in the garden
at St. John’s Church near the
back fence. This plant can grow
in full sun to light shade, and at
this time of year the leaves have
begun turning from green to a
dark reddish purple, which enhances
the blue of the blossoms
even more.
Editor’s Note: Laura Eisener is
a landscape design consultant
‘Magic Purple’ aster blooms in Sandy Mears’ garden. (Photo
courtesy of Sandy Mears)
A short stack of interesting pumpkins and a potted orange
strawflower on a porch are long-lasting harvest decorations
that can sometimes last until Thanksgiving or even beyond.
(Photo courtesy of Laura Eisener)
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.
Japanese maple, ‘Autumn Joy’ sedum, a lovely statue and
a bench to relax and enjoy it all are welcoming features of
Donna Manoogian’s entrance garden. (Photo courtesy of Laura
Eisener)
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Page 17
SOUNDS | FROM PAGE 15
her childhood through her discovery
of language when she
was seven years old to the writing
of her 12 books. She will
show the audience how she
speaks and reads in Braille, and
her story continues through
her graduation from college.
This is one of our most unique,
very special programs, which
helps us to understand and accept
the different ways people
do the same things and inspires
them to be the best they can be
with the talents they possess.
The show is 45 minutes with
questions.
Space is limited so registration
is required. Register online
at https://www.sauguspubliclibrary.org/events
or over the
phone (781-231-4168).
Sheryl Fae stars in 11
one-woman shows and tours
throughout the country, performing
for a variety of organizations
for children and adults.
She has been the recipient of
many awards for both stage
and film.
Library features paranormal
investigations on Oct. 3
“Paranormal Investigation
with Don DeCristofaro” will be
featured at the Saugus Public
Library on Thursday, Oct. 3,
from 6-7 p.m. in the Community
Room. Don will discuss paranormal
investigation in general,
then get into some memorable
investigations, including ConMEDAL
| FROM PAGE 3
low. The medal was designed
by Kristopher W. Adams.
SSG. DeFranzo was a Saugus
hero who sacrificed his
The Saugus Business Education
Collaborative (SBEC) is
gearing up for the 12th Annual
Trivia “Travaganza,” which is set
for Oct. 17 at 7 p.m. at the Kowloon
Restaurant.
All teams and players must
A TEMPORARY VENUE FOR THE BOARD OF SELECTMEN: With the second floor auditorium
at Town Hall undergoing several weeks of painting and restoration, selectmen had to
find a substitute location for Tuesday night’s meeting. They chose the Belmonte STEAM
Academy School Committee Room at 25 Dow St. (Saugus Advocate photo by Mark E. Vogler)
juring House, Hell House and
the USS Salem. The USS Salem
is a post–World War II Heavy
Cruiser and is considered to be
the most actively haunted location
in New England! Don
will share video, photographic
and audio evidence with the
audience.
Please register in advance using
our online Events Calendar:
https://www.sauguspubliclibrary.org/events.
Author
Laurie King’s virtual
visit on Oct. 7
Residents who use the Saugus
Public Library will be able
life to save the lives of his fellow
soldiers in World War II.
He was the first Saugus man
killed during the D-Day Invasion
on June 10, 1944. He is
the town’s lone Medal of Honor
recipient.
to have an hour-long virtual
visit with Laurie King, The New
York Times bestselling author
of the Mary Russell & Sherlock
Holmes series, via Zoom
on Monday, Oct. 7, at 7 p.m.
Mystery lovers everywhere
are welcome to meet the writer
of one of the most celebrated
mystery series – featuring
Sherlock Holmes’ apprentice,
Mary Russell, and the great detective
himself – and celebrate
the 30th anniversary of the
publication of “The Beekeeper’s
Apprentice,” the first book
in the series. Follow the unlikely
pair from their first meeting
when the great detective, now
retired, mistakes 15-year-old
Mary Russell for a boy, to their
most recent adventure uncovering
Sherlock Holmes’s family
secrets in “The Lantern’s Dance.”
Library visitors can register
for An Evening with Laurie
King at https://www.sauguspubliclibrary.org/events
or
https://www.eventkeeper.com/code/ekform.cfm?curOrg=SAUGUS&curID=722396
Every
registrant will be entered
to win A Beekeeper’s Apprentice
Gift Basket!
Trivia Night Oct. 17
be registered in advance. Entry
costs $250 per team, with five
players to a team. The price includes
an all-you-can-eat buffet.
The buffet opens at 6 p.m.
and ends at 7 p.m. The overall
winning team will win a trophy
and bragging rights. Registration
forms may be picked up
at any Saugus public school,
at the school administration
building, at North Shore Bank
(Route 1 South) and at Rossetti
Insurance.
Spectators are welcome to
cheer on the teams for only $25
per person. The price includes
an all-you-can-eat buffet.
Please make checks payable
to SBEC. For more registration
information, please email
Kim Lovett at Klovett@northshore-bank.com
Knights
planning Oct. 19
flea market and craft fair
The Knights of Columbus
Council 1829 plans to hold its
Festive Holiday Flea Market and
Craft Fair on Saturday, Oct. 19
from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. at 57 Appleton
St. The huge indoor affair
is still several weeks away.
But it’s not too early for participants
to begin planning.
THE SOUNDS | SEE PAGE 19
THE MASSACHUSETTS MEDAL OF LIBERTY: This medal is
awarded to Massachusetts servicemen and women who have
been killed in action or who died as a result of wounds received
in action. (Courtesy photo of Janice Jarosz)
ELECTION DAY | FROM
PAGE 11
vote to end the requirement,
while 34% said they would
vote to keep things as they are.
The MCAS dates back to the
Education Reform Bill of 1993
and was conceived as a way to
measure school performance
in educating students. Using
the test to gauge students’
readiness for graduation came
10 years later, in 2003.
The Saugus contingent attending last Saturday’s Medal of Liberty presentation to 11 Massachusetts
veterans who died for their country included family members of US Army SSG Arthur
F. DeFranzo, veterans officials and representatives of local veterans groups. Left to right: Front
row: VFW Commander Keith McDonald, Gold Star Wife Pamela Hart, nephew Arthur DeFranzo,
niece Linda Call, Parson Roby DAR member Janice Jarosz, M.G. Virginia Gaglio and VFW
member Lloyd Sayles; back row: Saugus Veterans Service Officer Major (Retired) Paul Cancelliere,
VFW President Joseph Roussin, nephew Gary Walsh and nieces Pamela MacDonald, Colby
Zeltmann and Tessa MacDonald. Missing due to illness: niece Joanne Olsen. (Courtesy photo
to The Saugus Advocate)
If the question passes and
the graduation requirement is
scrapped, kids would still have
to pass necessary coursework
in English, math and science
– the subjects covered in the
MCAS exams.
Question 4: Limited Legalization
and Regulation of Certain
Natural Psychedelic Substances
Voters
seem split on Question
4, which asks whether
the state should legalize some
therapeutic uses of psychedelics
and decriminalize possession
and the growing of small
amounts for home use; 42%
said yes, while 44% said no,
ELECTION DAY | SEE PAGE 22
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THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FriDAy, SEpTEmbEr 27, 2024
CODY’S WORLD | FROM PAGE 13
contributions from younger
players like a freshman guard
(Perez) and sophomores (Ferraro
and Haddad). Defensively,
Munafo was in the right place
at the right time, securing an
interception off a tipped ball
thanks to Saugus cornerback
Pharaoh Brandenburg. “All
those things are happening
because his teammates around
him are doing the right things
as well,” Cummings said. “160
yards on the ground doesn’t
happen by yourself. We had a
great performance by our offensive
line.”
Saugus simply came up
clutch on this night. Munafo
scored on a 4th-and-1 from
the 4-yard line in the third
quarter, and he scored on a
4th-and-1 from the 1-yard line
in the fourth. Saugus quarterback
Jordan Rodriguez had
a huge touchdown from the
5-yard line to close out the
fi rst half.
“If one guy goes the wrong
way, or if we jump off sides, or
if we make a bad play that’s not
only a drive killer, we’re turning
the ball over,” Cummings
said. “So we’re taking points off
the board and giving the other
team the ball back. So it was
just one of those nights where
you kind of look back on it: every
time we needed to make
a play, somebody stepped up
and did that.”
Now it’s on to Lynn Tech,
which is also 1-1, after a 2720
loss to Malden and a 27-26
win over Montachusett. Cummings
recalled last year’s close
matchup where Lynn Tech initially
took the lead before a few
key plays helped Saugus regain
control in a 27-18 win. He described
Lynn Tech as a scrappy
team with unconvention~LEGAL
NOTICE~
DEPARTMENT OF ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
WATERWAYS REGULATION PROGRAM
Notice of Waterways Permit Application pursuant to M.G.L. Chapter 91
Waterways Permit Application Number 24-WW01-0084-APP
Applicant: Wheelabrator Saugus Inc.
Project Location: Rumney Marshes ACEC, Saugus River, 100 Salem Turnpike, Saugus,
Essex County
Notification Date: October 3, 2024
Public Comments Deadline: October 17, 2024
Public Notice is hereby given of the Chapter 91 Permit Application by Wheelabrator Saugus Inc.
for maintenance dredging with insignificant deviation from the previously authorized dredging
footprint within the Rumney Marshes Area of Critical Environmental Concern in Flowed Tidelands of
the Saugus River off 100 Salem Turnpike in Saugus, Essex County. The Department has determined
that the proposed project is a Water-Dependent Use project.
Written comments must be sent within fifteen (15) days of the Notification Date by October 17,
2024 to Susan You at susan.you@mass.gov or MassDEP Waterways Regulation Program c/o
Susan You at 100 Cambridge Street, 9th Floor, Boston, MA 02114.
The Department will consider all written comments on this application received by the Public
Comments Deadline. Failure of any aggrieved person or group of ten (10) citizens or more to
submit written comments to the Waterways Regulation Program by the Public Comments Deadline
will result in the waiver of any right to an adjudicatory hearing in accordance with 310 CMR
9.13(4)(c). The group of citizens must include at least five (5) citizens who are residents of the
municipality in which the proposed project is located. A public hearing may be held at the request
of the Municipal Official.
Project plans and documents for the Waterways application are on file for public viewing
electronically at: https://eeaonline.eea.state.ma.us/EEA/PublicApp/ (enter 24-WW01-0084-APP
in the Refined Search Page in the field for Record ID). If you need assistance, please contact
susan.you@mass.gov or if you do not have access to email, please leave a message at
(617) 292-5929 and you will be contacted with alternative options.
September 27, 2024
al off ensive formations, using
unbalanced setups and a variety
of players in the backfi eld,
which requires extra practice
time to adjust to. The team’s
unique approach makes it challenging
to identify eligible receivers
and manage extra gaps
on the fi eld.
“Coach [James] Runner does
a great job over there with his
guys,” Cummings said. “They
also have some really good
young talent. I mean, their
quarterback last year, he was
an eighth grader, and he was
their starter, and he had a very
good day against us. He’s a
freshman this year. He’s still
there. It’s very rare that you
get a freshman quarterback
that has a lot of experience.
He’s a very polished quarterback,
and they have some really
good speed in the skill
positions and some good size
up front.”
Sa nir
Sa
a nior
y Senior
Seni
by Jim Miller
How to Arrange Your Own
Cremation Service
Dear Savvy Senior,
I would like to arrange a
simple cremation that doesn’t
cost me, or my family, a lot of
money. Can you off er any tips
that can help me with this?
Still Kicking
Dear Kicking,
If you’re looking for a simple
and aff ordable way to go, cremation
is an excellent choice, and
one that’s become exceedingly
popular in the United States.
About 60 percent of Americans
are now choosing cremation
over a traditional burial, versus
only around 20 percent in the
mid-1990s.
Why the big shift? Price is a key
reason. A basic cremation can
cost as little as $700 to $1,200,
depending on your location and
provider, versus $7,500 or more
for a traditional funeral and cemetery
burial. Geography is another
factor, as many families are
spread across the country, making
future gravesite visits less
common.
Here are a few tips to help you
arrange your cremation and ensure
you get a good deal.
Shop Around
You can arrange a cremation
through a funeral home or a cremation-only
business, but it’s
wise to shop around because
prices vary widely. It’s not unusual
for one funeral home to
charge $1,000, while another
charges $4,000 or more for the
same service.
Call fi ve or six funeral homes
or cremation-only businesses
in your area and ask them how
much they charge for a “direct
cremation,” which is the most affordable
option there is. With direct
cremation, there’s no embalming,
viewing or memorial
service. It only includes the essentials:
transportation of the body;
required paperwork such as
death certifi cates; the cremation
itself; and return of the ashes to
the family, usually within a week.
If you want a viewing, memorial
service or anything beyond
what a direct cremation provides,
ask the funeral home for an itemized
price list so you know exactly
what you’re paying for. All funeral
providers are required by law to
provide this.
To locate nearby funeral homes,
Google “cremation” or “funeral”
followed by your city and state.
You can also shop and compare
prices from funeral homes in your
area at Funeralocity.com.
Cheaper Urns
The urn is another item that can
drive up your cremation costs.
Funeral home urns usually cost
around $100 to $350, but you aren’t
required to get one.
After cremation, your family
will receive your ashes in a thick
plastic bag inside a cardboard
box. This is all they need if you
intend to have your ashes scattered,
but if your family wants
something to display, Amazon.
com and Walmart.com both sell a
wide variety of urns for under $50.
Green Cremation
If you’re an environmentally
conscious person, there’s also
a green cremation option you
should know about called “alkaline
hydrolysis” that chemically
dissolve the body. This is a
gentler, more eco-friendly process
than traditional cremation,
which uses combustion. It’s legal
in more than 20 states, and costs
around $2,000 to $3,500. Google
search “alkaline hydrolysis” followed
by your city or state to fi nd
for a provider.
Free Cremation
If you’re interested in a free fi -
nal farewell, you may want to consider
donating your body to a university
medical facility. After using
your body for medical research or
surgical practice they will cremate
your remains for free, and either
bury or scatter your ashes in a local
cemetery or return them to
your family, usually within a year.
To fi nd a medical school near
you that accepts body donations,
the University of Florida off ers an
online directory at Anatbd.acb.
med.ufl .edu/usprograms.
Whatever arrangements you
end up making, make sure you
tell your family your wishes so
they will know what to do and
who to call after your death.
Also, if you have a written agreement
with any funeral/cremation
provider, give them a copy
to let them know if you’ve prepaid
or not.
Send your senior questions
to: Savvy Senior, P.O. Box
5443, Norman, OK 73070, or
visit SavvySenior.org.
Jim Miller is a contributor
to the NBC Today show and
author of “The Savvy Senior”
book.
ior
׉	 7cassandra://llkzwjT4zHfTqPEUVokcGYqQpdSD4oi6k9bzseVkhaw&`̰ f5./׉ETHE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FriDAy, SEpTEmbEr 27, 2024
Page 19
SOUNDS | FROM PAGE 17
Vendor space for this year’s
event will be $30 with free admission
and free parking to go
along with raffles, food and fun.
Anyone with questions should
call the Knights of Columbus at
781-233-9858. For more information,
Paul Giannetta can also
be reached at 978-239-1392.
Halloween Pet Parade Oct.
20
Breakheart Reservation will
be hosting its Second Annual
Halloween Pet Parade on Sunday,
Oct. 20, at 11:30 a.m. Registration
begins at 11 a.m. at
Breakheart Reservation (177
Forest St., Saugus). There will be
a $10 donation to enter the costume
contest – cash only. Prizes
will be awarded for best behavior
and best pet costume.
Raffle prizes will be open to all
who donate. This fall event will
include the Pet Parade, the Pet
Costume Contest, Pet Photo
Opportunities, local vendors,
raffles and giveaways.
The event is sponsored by the
Department of Conservation &
Recreation (DCR), the Friends of
Breakheart Reservation and Peter
A. Rossetti Insurance Agency,
Inc. For questions, please
call Joyce at 781-233-1855, extension
1019 or Lisa at 781808-7817.
Health
and Wellness Fair
Oct. 21
The Saugus-Everett Elks and
the Saugus Senior Center are
teaming up to cosponsor a
Health and Wellness Fair on
Monday, Oct. 21, from 10 a.m.
to 1 p.m. at the Saugus Senior
Center (466 Central St., Saugus).
There will be a variety of
health organizations that will
offer free health screenings,
educational tables, giveaways,
raffles and much more. This is a
free event and open to the public
for all ages.
“Evil Dead The Musical”
next month
The Theatre Company of Saugus
(TCS) is proud to present
seven performances of “Evil
Dead The Musical” next month,
beginning with an opening
night performance on October
11. The six other performances
are Saturday, Oct. 12 (8 p.m.);
Sunday, Oct. 13 (2 p.m.); Thursday,
Oct. 17 (8 p.m.); Friday, Oct.
18 (8 p.m.); Saturday, Oct. 19 (8
p.m.); and Sunday, Oct. 20 (2
p.m.). This cult classic is sure to
have you laughing and rolling.
The production takes place at
the American Legion (44 Taylor
St., Saugus, Mass.). Please
join us for an Opening Night
Reception immediately following
the performance on October
11. “Evil Dead The Musical”
is one of the craziest, funniest
and bloodiest theatrical experiences
of all time. (There will
be a limited number of splatter
zone tickets!)
Follow five college students
to an abandoned cabin in the
woods, where they accidentally
unleash an evil force that
turns them all into demons. It’s
all up to Ash (a housewares employee,
turned demon-killing
hero) and his trusty chainsaw
to save the day. What could be
more fun?
Follow us on Instagram (@
tcsaugus) for a peek into what
goes on behind the scenes of
creating this groovy production.
“Evil Dead” features TCS
veteran actors Brady NeissMoe,
Dana Murray, Mariah Hanzel,
Caroline DeBrota, Andy
LeBlanc, Lauren Thompson, Brian
Dion, Michael Silvia, Mark
Damon, Melissa Sullivan, Meg
Brown and Shawyoun Shaidani
as well as newcomers Chelsea
Callahan, Ian Page and Valerie
Whiteneck.
“Evil Dead” is unlike any live
show you’ve ever seen – it’s an
experience! Join us for a funfilled,
bloody evening full of
camp and music. Warning: for
mature audiences (contains
THE SOUNDS | SEE PAGE 22
~ LEGAL NOTICE ~
Saugus Board of Selectmen
Public Hearing
Notice is hereby given that the Saugus Board of Selectmen
will conduct a Public Hearing on the request of Family AP
Corp., 44 Broadway, Saugus, MA, d/b/a Tribu Mexican
Kitchen & Bar, for a Common Victualer’s License and
Entertainment License, to operate Tribu Mexican Kitchen &
Bar, 44 Broadway, Saugus, MA 01906.
Paul Mongui, 271 Reservoir Ave, Revere, MA & Abner
Gonzales, 614 Tremont St, #2, Boston, MA, Owners and
Paul Mongui, Manager.
This hearing will be held in the Saugus Town Hall Auditorium,
second floor, 298 Central Street, Saugus, MA, on October 17,
2024 at 7:05 PM.
HOMESTEAD EXEMPTION
INCREASE
T
his past August, our
State Legislature
passed Session Law
2024, Chapter 150, Section
51, An Act relative to the Affordable
Homes Act. Contained
within this legislation
was an increase in the
homestead exemption from
$500,000 to $1,000,000 for
all Massachusetts homeowners.
The prices of homes have
increased so much over the
past several years, this type
of legislation was certainly
warranted.
This increase in the exemption
applies retroactively to
any valid homestead that
a homeowner has already
declared and recorded at
the appropriate registry of
deeds. There is no need to
declare and record another
homestead to take advantage
of the new $1,000,000
exemption.
Under the current law,
your principal residence
that you own is automatically
protected up to $125,000.
It would have been nice if
the legislature simply made
the automatic homestead
$1,000,000. The $125,000 exemption
is simply too small
with the prices of homes in
Massachusetts.
A primary residence also
includes a manufactured
home and a mobile home.
is reconstructed, or a new
home is purchased, whichever
is earlier.
The homestead is deRefinancing
your mortgage
will not terminate your
homestead exemption. Furthermore,
since 2011, homeowners
are able to declare a
homestead even if they place
their home in a Trust. There
is a separate Declaration of
Homestead form designed
for Trusts.
A Declaration of Homestead
also protects the sales
proceeds upon the sale of
your home for up to one
year after the date of sale,
or on the date when a new
home is purchased with the
net sales proceeds, whichever
occurs first. If your home is
destroyed by fire, the insurance
proceeds are protected
for a period of two years after
the date of the fire or on
the date when your home
signed to protect the equity
in your home against creditors
or lawsuits of any nature.
Federal, state and local
tax liens are not protected
by the homestead. Neither
are you protected in the
event you default on a mortgage
secured by your home,
or against a lien by MassHealth’s
estate recovery unit
seeking reimbursement for
Medicaid payments made
on behalf of the homeowner.
Child support and spousal
support orders issued by
a Probate Court are also not
protected by the Declaration
of Homestead.
If a married couple are
both age 62 or more, the elderly
homestead protection
then increases to $2,000,000.
That represents excellent
protection for the home.
Every homeowner in Massachusetts
has to declare a
homestead and record it at
the registry of deeds. The
protection is invaluable.
Joseph D. Ca taldo is an
esta te planning/elder law
a ttorney,Certified Public
Accountant, Certified Financial
Planner, AICPA Personal Financial
Specialist and holds a masters
degree in taxation.
Debra Panetta, Chairman
Meredith K. Casagrande, Clerk
September 27, 2024
- LEGAL NOTICE -
COMMONWEALTH OF MASSACHUSETTS
THE TRIAL COURT
PROBATE AND FAMILY COURT
Essex Probate and Family Court
36 Federal Street
Salem, MA 01970
(978) 744-1020
Docket No. ES22P3135PM
Estate of: MARIE POLYNICE
CITATION ON PETITION
FOR ORDER OF
COMPLETE SETTLEMENT
A Petition for Order of Complete Settlement has been filed
by Sara Spooner of Auburn, MA requesting that the court
enter a formal Decree of Complete Settlement including the
allowance of a final account and other such relief as may be
requested in the Petition.
IMPORTANT NOTICE
You have the right to obtain a copy of the Petition from the
Petitioner or at the court. You have a right to object to this
proceeding. To do so, you or your attorney must file a written
appearance and objection at this court before: 10:00 a.m. on the
return day of 10/21/2024.
This is NOT a hearing date, but a deadline by which you must file
a written appearance and objection if you object to this proceeding.
If you fail to file a timely written appearance and objection
followed by an affidavit of objections within thirty (30) days of
the return day, action may be taken without further notice to you.
WITNESS, Hon. Frances M. Giordano, First Justice of
this Court.
Date: September 12, 2024
PAMELA A. CASEY O’BRIEN
REGISTER OF PROBATE
September 27, 2024
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THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FriDAy, SEpTEmbEr 27, 2024
OBITUARIES
Carl F. “Joe” Saunders
September 14, 1928 –
September 20, 2024
September 20th, at his home
with his family at the age of
96. He was the loving husband
of the late Anna M. Saunders,
with whom he shared 67 years
of marriage.
Born and raised in Wakefield,
he was one of nine
children of Paul A. Saunders,
and the oldest son of
Paul and Marjorie Forbes
Saunders. A 1946 graduate
of Wakefield Memorial
High School, he was a varsity
baseball and hockey player
for his beloved Warriors.
Joe went on to Tufts University,
graduating in1950 with
a degree in Economics.
Joe enlisted in the United
O
f Saugus.
Died peacefully
on
States Navy in 1952, proudly
serving during the Korean
War. He was honorably dis-
LEGAL NOTICE -
COMMONWEALTH OF MASSACHUSETTS
THE TRIAL COURT
PROBATE AND FAMILY COURT
Essex Division
Docket No. ES 24P 2854EA
Estate of: RICHARD A. D’EON
Date of Death: 07/15/2024
INFORMAL PROBATE
PUBLICATION NOTICE
To all persons interested in the above captioned estate, by Petition
of Petitioner Phyllis Scalia D’Eon of Saugus, MA
Phyllis Scalia D’Eon of Saugus, MA has been informally
appointed as the Personal Representative of the estate to serve
without surety on the bond.
The estate is being administered under informal procedure
by the Personal Representative under the Massachusetts
Uniform Probate Code without supervision by the Court.
Inventory and accounts are not required to be filed with the
Court, but interested parties are entitled to notice regarding
the administration from the Personal Representative and
can petition the Court in any matter relating to the estate,
including distribution of assets and expenses of administration.
Interested parties are entitled to petition the Court to
institute formal proceedings and to obtain orders terminating
or restricting the powers of Personal Representatives
appointed under formal procedure. A copy of the Petition
and Will, if any, can be obtained from the Petitioner.
September 27, 2024
charged in 1955. After leaving
the service, he worked
for the Shawmut Bank, Massachusetts
Housing and Finance
Authority, and Crowninshield
Corporation. After
retirement, Joe continued to
work as the Veterans’ Agent
for Saugus, Wakefield and
Stoneham for 19 years.
Joe is survived by his three
children: Carla Scuzzarella
of Saugus, Joseph Saunders
ad his wife Gail of Andover,
and Andrea Holstein of Florida.
He was the much-loved
“Papa” of Robert Scuzzarella,
Michael and Raylyn Scuzzarella,
Nicole Holstein, Derek
Holstein, Nicholas Saunders
and Daniel Saunders who
were as he often described
them – “his pride and joy.” He
adored his newest family
members, his great-grandchildren
Olivia and Jordan
Scuzzarella. He is also survived
by many dear nieces
and nephews.
Joe was an avid golfer
until age 85. He belonged
to the Bellevue Golf Club
in Melrose for many years,
winning the Senior Club
Championship more than
once. Later in his life, he enjoyed
playing golf with all
five of his grandsons. He
loved watching his grandchildren
play ice hockey,
baseball and lacrosse
throughout their youth and
high school years. Joe was
a member of the Wakefield
Elks for more than 50 years.
In lieu of flowers, donations
in his memory may
be made to the Paul A. and
Marjorie F. Saunders Scholarship,
c/o the Scholarship
Foundation of Wakefield,
PO Box 321, Wakefield, MA.
01880 or the Frank J. Scuzzarella,
Jr. Memorial Scholarship,
c/o Saugus High
School, 1 Pearce Memorial
Dr., Saugus, Ma. 01906
SERVICE INFORMATION
Relatives and friends are
invited to attend an hour of
visitation in the Bisbee-Porcella
Funeral Home, 549 Lincoln
Ave., Saugus on Friday,
September 27th, from 10 –
11 a.m. followed by a service
in the funeral home at
~ LEGAL NOTICE ~
Saugus Board of Selectmen
Public Hearing
Notice is hereby given that the Saugus Board of Selectmen
will conduct a public hearing on the transfer of an All
Alcohol liquor license, from 44 Broadway Restaurant Group,
Inc, d/b/a Oye’s Restaurant & Bar, 44 Broadway, Saugus,
MA, to Family AP Corp., d/b/a Tribu Mexican Kitchen & Bar,
Paul Mongui & Abner Gonzales, new owners.
Paul Mongui, 271 Reservoir Ave, Revere, MA & Abner
Gonzales, 614 Tremont St, #2, Boston, MA, Owners and
Paul Mongui, Manager.
This hearing will be held in the Saugus Town Hall Auditorium,
second floor, 298 Central Street, Saugus, MA, on October 17,
2024 at 7:10 PM.
Debra Panetta, Chairman
Meredith K. Casagrande, Clerk
September 27, 2024
9. In 2024 what city is having
its 189th Oktoberfest?
1. On Sept. 27, 1840, Thomas
Nast was born; he became
well-known as a political cartoonist
for attacking “Boss”
Tweed of what city?
2. What doll is Barbie’s little
sister?
3. In what country were bagels
created: Germany, Poland
or USA?
4. What is uniform resource locator
more commonly known
as?
5. On Sept. 28, 1912, what “Father
of the Blues” was born in
Alabama?
6. Which happens more frequently:
lunar or solar eclipses?
7.
In what publication did Benjamin
Franklin say, “Better slip
with foot than tongue”?
8. September 29 is World
Heart Day; what is CVD?
10. What is the tallest bird in
the USA: Goliath heron, marabou
stork or whooping crane?
11. What is a Maillard reaction?
12.
On Sept. 30, 1982, what
TV show “Where Everybody
Knows Your Name” debuted?
13. In what country with a
famous tomb is the Sudha
Cars Museum, which has the
world’s largest collection of
wacky vehicles in a museum?
14. How are balloon, leg of
mutton and raglan similar?
15. In September 2024 what
waxworks couple visited London’s
Duke of Sussex Pub?
16. On Oct. 1, 1903, the Boston
Americans played what
Pittsburgh team in the modern
World Series’ first game?
17. In October 1673 what colony
declared piracy a capital
offense?
18. On Oct. 2, 1803, what person
who is the namesake of a
beer died?
19. The Appalachian Trail
crosses how many states: 10,
12 or 14?
20. On Oct. 3, 1990, what
country was reunified?
11 a.m. Interment at Riverside
Cemetery in Saugus.
For directions & condolences
www.BisbeePorcella.com.
Marcia B. (Kunian)
Luongo
A
ge 88, of Parrish, FL
passed away peacefully
on September 16, 2024.
Marcia was an avid reader,
a master at crossword puzzles
and had a beautiful, warm
smile. She loved filling her
time listening to Frank Sinatra,
watching Jeopardy, and
enjoying an occasional glass
of wine. She also loved her
cruises and collecting elephant
statues.
She obtained her Associates
Degree from Fisher Jr. College
and held positions in accounting
and tax preparation.
In 1957 she married Frank A.
Luongo. Together they raised
5 children in Saugus, MA and
moved to Florida after retirement.
Marcia
was predeceased by
her husband, Frank.
She is survived by her sister,
Barbara Lipofsky, daughter,
Elizabeth Cassese, her son
and daughter-in-law, Frank
and Roz Luongo, her son and
daughter-in-law, Chris and
Louise Luongo, her daughters,
Kathy Luongo and Kim Luongo,
along with 7 grandchildren
and 1 great-granddaughter.
A private burial next to her
ANSWERS
1. NYC
2. Skipper
3. Poland
4. URL
5. W.C. Handy
6. Solar
7. “Poor Richard’s Almanack”
8. Cardiovascular disease
9. Munich
10. Whooping crane
11. Browning of food caused by heating
12. “Cheers”
13. India (Taj Mahal is a tomb.)
14. They are types of sleeves.
15. Prince Harry and Meghan Markle (They are usually
at Madame Tussauds London.)
16. The Pirates
17. Massachusetts Bay Colony
18. Samuel Adams
19. 14
20. Germany
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Page 21
beloved husband is planned
at Sarasota National Cemetery.
Mrs. Susan A. (Daniels)
Miller
funeral will be held from the
funeral home on Saturday,
September 28 at 9 a.m. followed
by a funeral mass in
Blessed Sacrament Church,
14 Summer St., Saugus at
10 a.m. Interment in Riverside
Cemetery in Saugus. For
directions and condolences
www. BisbeePorcella.com.
$$ I PAY CASH $$
for World War II military items.
Top prices paid for helmets,
swords, daggers, uniforms, etc.
Call 617-719-1698
O
f Saugus. Age 66, died
unexpectedly at Melrose-Wakefield
Hospital
on Saturday, September
21st. She was the beloved wife
of Gary J. Miller with whom
she shared 47 years of marriage.
Born
in Malden and a lifelong
resident of Saugus, Susan
was the daughter of the
late Walter J. and Virginia
(Linehan) Daniels. She liked
knitting, gardening and going
to Maine. Susan was an
avid Boston sports fan and
was an animal lover and advocate.
She put magic into
everything she touched. Susan
enjoyed her time spent
with family especially with
her husband, kids and grandkids
and her love, laughter
and light will be embedded
into all that she did.
In addition to her husband,
Susan is survived by her
three children, Gary W. Miller
and his wife Diana of Topsfield,
Shannon Hinton and
her husband Matthew and
Courtney Whitehurst and her
husband Steven all of Saugus;
five grandchildren, Maxwell
and Owen Miller, Grace
and Steven Whitehurst and
Sheila Hinton; one brother,
Walter R. Daniels of AK. She
was the sister of the late Laurence
P. Daniels.
In lieu of flowers, donations
in Susan’s memory
may be made to the Tunnel
to Towers Foundation at
t2t.org.
SERVICE INFORMATION
Relatives and friends are
invited to attend visiting
hours in the Bisbee-Porcella
Funeral Home, 549 Lincoln
Ave., Saugus on Friday, September
27 from 4 – 8 p.m. A
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EVERETT ADVOCATE
MALDEN ADVOCATE
REVERE ADVOCATE
SAUGUS ADVOCATE
One year subscription to
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REAL ESTATE TRANSACTIONS
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
Rivera-Acosta, Marta L
Sakkara, Pradit
BUYER2
Flores, Marlon S
SELLER1
Plugis, Eleanor L
Tran Corstone General Con
SELLER2
ADDRESS
5 Lincoln Ct
14 Elaine Ave
CITY
Saugus
Saugus
DATE
09.03.24
09.04.24
PRICE
570000
675000
Humane Removal Service
COMMONWEALTH
WILDLIFE CONTROL
ANIMAL & BIRD REMOVAL
INCLUDING RODENTS
CALL 617-285-0023
~ School Bus Drivers Wanted ~
7D Licensed School Bus Drivers
Malden Trans is looking for reliable drivers for
the new school year. We provide ongoing training
and support for licensing requirements. Applicant
preferably lives local (Malden, Everett, Revere).
Part-time positions available and based on AM &
PM school hours....15-30 hours per week. Good
driver history from Registry a MUST! If interested,
please call David @ 781-322-9401.
CDL SCHOOL BUS DRIVER WANTED
Compensation: $28/hour
School bus transportation company seeking
active CDL drivers who live LOCALLY (Malden,
Everett, Chelsea and immediate surrounding
communities).
- Applicant MUST have BOTH S and P endorsements
as well as Massachusetts school bus certificate.
Good driver history from Registry a MUST!
-
Part-time hours, BUT GUARANTEED 20-35
HOURS PER WEEK depending on experience.
Contact David @ 781-322-9401.
SPECIAL OFFER
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9ׁHmailto:infowithmango@gmail.comׁׁЈנfA./ ̈9ׁHmailto:chrstdesousa@yahoo.comׁׁЈנfA./ %p	9ׁHhttp://www.mangorealtyteam.comׁׁЈנfA./ [c	9ׁHmailto:infowithmango@gmail.comׁׁЈנfA./ k{p	9ׁHmailto:infowithmango@gmail.comׁׁЈנfA./ ̍̮9ׁHhttp://www.mangorealtyteam.comׁׁЈנfA./ ̍̬9ׁHmailto:infowithmango@gmail.comׁׁЈ׉E?Page 22
THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FriDAy, SEpTEmbEr 27, 2024
THE SOUNDS| FROM
PAGE 19
language, suggestive themes,
blood and violence and is all
around pretty gross). For more
information or to order tickets,
visit www.tcsaugus.org
About The Saugus Advocate
We
welcome press releases,
news announcements, freelance
articles and courtesy photos
from the community. Our
deadline is noon Wednesday.
If you have a story idea, an article
or photo to submit, please
email me at mvoge@comcast.
net or leave a message at 978683-7773.
Or send your press
release to me in the mail at PO
Box 485, North Andover, MA
01845. Let us become your
hometown newspaper. The
Saugus Advocate is available in
the Saugus Public Library, the
Saugus Senior Center, Saugus
Town Hall, local convenience
stores and restaurants throughout
town.
We follow Social Distancing Guidelines!
ELECTION DAY | FROM
PAGE 17
putting the question well within
the poll’s margin of error.
If passed, Question 4 would
American Exterior and
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Contact us for all of your
home improvement projects
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Call Jeff or Bob
Toll Free: 1-888-744-1756
617-699-1782 / www.americanexteriorma.com
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All estimates, consultations or inspections completed
by MA licensed supervisors. *Over 50 years experience.
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Carpentry * Kitchen & Bath * Roofs * Painting
Decks * Siding * Carrijohomeimprovement.com
Call 781-710-8918 * Saugus, MA
General Contractor * Interior & Exterior
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* Free Estimates
Tom’s Seal Coating
Call Gary: 978-210-4012
allow the supervised cultivation
and use of plant-based
psychedelics (mushrooms and
mescaline) by people 21 or older.
It also establishes a commission
to determine who gets to
supervise these uses.
Massachusetts has been a
leader in researching medical
uses of psychedelics to treat
depression and addiction. But
opponents worry about the
potential for a black market to
form, especially since federal
law still bans psychedelics.
Question 5: Minimum Wage
for Tipped Workers
Some 43% of poll respondents
said they’d vote yes on
Question 5, which would raise
the tipped workers minimum
wage from $6.75 to match the
general minimum wage of $15.
About 40% of respondents said
they’d vote no, and another
16% said they weren’t sure. If
passed, Question 5 would increase
the tipped minimum
wage in stages through 2029
Clean-Outs!
We take and dispose
from cellars, attics,
garages, yards, etc.
Call Robert at:
781-844-0472
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THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FriDAy, SEpTEmbEr 27, 2024
Page 23
MANGO REALTY INC
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Seasonal Home Maintenance Tips: Keep Your Home in Top
Shape Year-Round and Save on Energy Costs
Keeping your home well-maintained
throughout the year not only enhances
its value but also saves you money on
energy bills. With a few seasonal tips,
you can ensure your home remains in
peak condition while reducing energy
usage. Spring is the perfect time for
deep cleaning and checking for winter
damage. Clean gutters, inspect your
roof for any leaks, and make sure your
HVAC system is working efficiently
before the summer heat arrives.
In Summer, focus on energy-saving
strategies. Seal windows and doors to
prevent cool air from escaping, and
consider installing ceiling fans to
reduce air conditioning usage.
Outdoor maintenance such as
trimming trees and inspecting your
deck is also crucial.
Staging Secrets: Boost Your
Home's Value with These
Simple Tips for an Attractive
Space
Staging your home is an effective way
to increase its value and appeal to
potential buyers. Start by decluttering
and depersonalizing the space,
removing excess furniture and personal
items to create a clean, open
environment. Neutralizing the color
palette with light tones on walls and
decor helps rooms appear larger and
more inviting. Maximizing natural light
by opening curtains and adding wellplaced
lighting can make spaces feel
brighter and more welcoming. Focus on
key areas like the living room, kitchen,
and master bedroom, as these rooms
leave the strongest impressions. With
these simple staging strategies, your
home can attract more buyers and
potentially sell for a higher price.
During Fall, prepare for the colder
months by clearing leaves from gutters
and inspecting your home’s insulation.
Sealing cracks or gaps around
windows will help keep heat inside,
reducing your heating bills.
In Winter, test your heating system
regularly, and if you have a fireplace,
get it cleaned professionally. Use
energy-efficient bulbs and unplug
electronics when not in use to save on
energy.
A little maintenance each season can
make a big difference in the longevity
and energy efficiency of your home.
MANGO REALTY INC
781-558-1091| infowithmango@gmail.com
www.mangorealtyteam.com
Client Testimonials:
Gloria W.
Very smart and educated people. When hiring
a real estate team you want to make sure you
choose one that is going to have the best
understanding of real estate trends and laws.
Also, it is great to have someone that knows
the neighborhood and surrounding areas as
well. At Mango Realty you will see that they
are hard working, honest, and driven.
Suman M.
Working with Sue Palomba on this transaction
was a pleasure. She maintained clear and
timely communication, which made the
process seamless for both parties. Sur was
professional, cooperative, and solutionoriented,
ensuring that our clients’ needs were
met every step of the way. Looking forward to
collaborating on future deals!
FOR SALE: Charming home
on a picturesque tree-studded
lot, blending comfort with
convenience. The first floor
features a bright family room
and an inviting oak kitchen
with hardwood floors. The
main bedroom offers a
private balcony and his-andher
closets. With 2.5 baths, a
spacious deck, and a garage,
this home is both functional
and serene. Set back for
privacy yet close to
For SALE
$649,000.00
amenities. Call Christina at
603-670-3353 or email at
chrstdesousa@yahoo.com
$1900 per month
For Rent
FOR RENT: Available October 1st. Malden studio apartment
conveniently located near train. First floor with laundry available in
building. Off street parking for one car. NO PETS. NO SMOKING. First,
last and 1 month broker fee = $5,700 to move in plus $32.95 credit and
background check. Offered by MANGO Realty of 38 Main Street Saugus.
We adhere to fair housing laws and guidelines. Call Peter at 781-8205690
or send an email at infowithmango@gmail.com
If you're looking to buy or sell, Mango Realty is your trusted partner in
navigating the real estate market with confidence and ease. Our
experienced team brings expert knowledge, local market insight, and a
commitment to delivering results that meet your unique goals. Whether
you're a first-time homebuyer, seasoned investor, or ready to sell, we
provide personalized support tailored to your specific needs. From strategic
marketing and home staging to negotiations and closing, we ensure every
detail is handled with care. Let us guide you through the entire process,
making your next real estate move seamless and stress-free. Contact Mango
Realty today to get started on achieving your real estate dreams!
$749,900.00
For SALE
FOR SALE - If space is your last frontier then look
no further than this magnificent 10 room 2230 s.f.
10 room, 4 bed, 2 bath Saugus home offered by long
time owners who have recently re-done kitchen,
bathrooms, central A/C and more. Seconds from Rt.
1. Absolute move in condition! $749,900.00 Call
Peter 781-820-5690.
$2600 per month
For Rent
FOR RENT: Step into this inviting 2-bedroom
apartment. Gleaming hardwood floors and bathed in
natural light, this space exudes warmth and comfort. A
washer, dryer and refrigerator included with the rent
amount. To maintain our standards, we require a
credit score of 680 or higher along with references.
Enjoy a pet-free and smoke-free environment, fostering
a clean and tranquil atmosphere for all.
TRINITY REAL ESTATE
Providing Real Estate Services for 17 Years
Servicing Saugus, Melrose, Wakefield, Malden, all North Shore communities, Boston and beyond.
Stay current on all industry updates
and trends with your most trusted
neighborhood real estate resource...
228 Main Street, Melrose
Single Family Home
List price: $525,000
6 rooms | 3 bedrooms
1.5 baths | 1,458 square feet
617.957.2728...Dale Brousseau®
32 Elmwood Ave, Saugus
Single Family Home
List price: $569,000
6 rooms | 3 bedrooms
1 bath | 1,139 square feet
781.883.8130....Lucia Ponte, Realtor ®
For a free
5 Old Bear Hill Road, Merrimac
Single Family Home
List price: $749,900
10 rooms | 4 bedrooms
2 baths | 3,010 square feet
781.883.8130...Lucia Ponte, Realtor ®
home market
analysis,
contact us
today.
321 MAIN STREET | SAUGUS, MA | VILLAGE PARK
TrinityHomesRE.com
781.231.9800
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THE SAUGUS ADVOCATE – FriDAy, SEpTEmbEr 27, 2024
FOR SALE
FOR SALE- CHARMING 3-BEDROOM CAPE COD STYLE HOME FEATURING
BRAND NEW KITCHEN CABINETS WITH QUARTZ COUNTERS AND
STAINLESS STEEL APPLIANCES. REFINISHED HARDWOOD FLOORING.
NEW CUSTOM BUILT-IN ENTERTAINMENT CENTER WITH FIREPLACE AND
NEW 60 INCH SAMSUNG TV. MAIN BEDROOM ON FIRST FLOOR. 1ST
FLOOR DINING ROOM THAT COULD BE USED AS FOURTH BEDROOM.
TOP LEVEL HAS TWO LARGE BEDROOMS. ROOF IS 2 YEARS OLD. FRESH
PAINT THROUGHOUT. FULL BASEMENT READY FOR FINISHING. 4+ CAR
PARKING! SPACIOUS 16K LOT IS PERFECT FOR ADU UNIT, GARAGE OR A
GREAT PLAYGROUND FOR THE KIDS. EASY HIGHWAY ACCESS AND
CLOSE TO SHOPPING, ENTERTAINMENT, AND ALL THE OFFERINGS OF
THE NORTH SHORE. COME ENJOY YOUR NEW HOME!
PEABODY $649,000 CALL KEITH 781-389-0791
RECENTLY
SOLD
IN SAUGUS
LAND
FOR RENT
COMMERCIAL OFFICE SPACE AVAILABLE
PRIME LOCATION. PROFESSIONAL BUILDING
JUST OUTSIDE OF SAUGUS CENTER.PLENTY
OF PARKING. THIS SPACE IS PERFECT FOR
ATTORNEYS, ARCHITECTS, PLUMBERS,
CONTRACTORS, ELECTRICIANS, ETC. UTILITIES
INCLUDED, EVEN WI-FI. INCLUDES WALK IN
AREA, SEPARATE OFFICES, RECEPTION AREA,
WOMEN & MEN’S BATHROOMS, COMMON
CONFERENCE ROOM. CONVENIENT TO ROUTE
1. SPACE COULD BE SHARED, SPLIT OR THE
ENTIRE SPACE COULD BE LEASED.
SAUGUS CALL KEITH 781-389-0791
DEVELOPMENT OPPORTUNITY. LEGAL GRANDFATHERED LOT LOCATED IN R3 ZONING. THIS LOT HAS AN
EXPIRED ORDER OF CONDITION 2010. BUYERS TO PERFORM DUE DILIGENCE REGARDING CONSERVATION
AND PERMITTING, ETC. SAUGUS $125,000 CALL KEITH 781-389-0791
RENTAL
• REMODELED TWO-BEDROOM UNIT FEATURING AN EAT IN KITCHEN, TENANT WILL NEED A
REFRIGERATOR, NEW PAINT AND CARPETS. LAUNDRY HOOK-UPS. PARKING FOR TWO
CARS. HEAT AND HOT WATER INCLUDED. NO PETS AND NO SMOKING. WALKING DISTANCE
TO BUS. SAUGUS $2,400
CALL RHONDA 781-706-0842
MANUFACTURED HOMES
FOR SALE
FOR SALE- 4 LEVEL TOWNHOME WITH OPEN
FLOOR PLAN. LIVING/DINING ROOM LEADS TO
YOUR EXCLUSIVE SUN-SOAKED DECK WITH FULL
SIZE RETRACTABLE SHADE. 3RD FLOOR OFFERS A
LARGE PRIMARY BEDROOM WITH VAULTED CEILING
AND SKYLIGHT. SPACIOUS 2ND
• LOT AVAILABLE IN DESIRABLE FAMILY ESTATES COOPERATIVE MOBILE PARK. APPROX
120' X 30' SEWER AND WATER BRING YOUR UNIT AND HAVE A BRAND NEW BEAUTIFUL
HOME. COOP FEE IS ONY 300- 350 A MONTH PEABODY $74,900
BEDROOM
WITH LARGE CLOSET AND ENTRANCE TO 4TH
FLOOR LARGE LOFT USED AS 3RD BEDROOMS.
THE LL FAMILY ROOM, OFFICE SPACE WITH STORAGE,
LAUNDRY, AMENITIES INCLUDE CLUBHOUSE,
SAUNA, AND SWIMMING POOL DANVERS $519,000
CALL ANTHONY 857-246-1305
COMING SOON
LOOKING TO SELL
OR BUY?
COMING SOON-SPACIOUS TOWNHOUSE
ON THE LOWELL LINE. THIS
HOME OFFERS AN EAT-IN KITCHEN, 2
BEDROOMS, 2 FULL BATHS, LARGE
LIVING ROOM, AND A FULL FINISHED
BASEMENT. SLIDER TO SMALL DECK
AND YARD AREA. PETS WELCOMED.
DRACUT $259,900 CALL DEBBIE
617-678-9710
JULIEANNE
CIPRIANNO
781-953-7870
CALL HER
FOR ALL YOUR
REAL ESTATE
• LARGE 2 BEDROOM MOBILE LOCATED ON A HUGE PRIVATE LOT THAT MUST BE SEEN.
LARGE ADDITIONS 1,5 BATHS, CARPORT, NEWER OIL TANK , PITCHED ROOF. LARGE
ENCLOSED PORCH SHED AND SO MUCH MORE. BEAUTIFUL UPDATED HUGE DOUBLE
LEVEL YARD. MANY NEW FEATURES INCLUDE NEW FLOORING THROUGHOUT, NEW
SIDING AND SKIRTING, NEW OIL TANK AND HOT WATER, NEWER ROOF, & SHED NEW
AC. SAUGUS $149,900
• THIS WAS ORIGINALLY A 2 BEDROOM, AND CAN BE CONVERTED BACK TO 2 BEDROOM
PEABODY $169,900
• VERY WELL MAINTAINED AND UPDATED UNIT IN VERY DESIRABLE PINE GROVE MOBILE
PARK. LARGE PORCH AND DECK, SHED GREAT LEVEL YARD, NEWER FLOORING AND
WINDOWS. LAUNDRY HOOK UP SHOWS PRIDE OF OWNERSHIP. PEABODY $159,900
• TWO NEW PRE CONSTRUCTION MANUFACTURED HOMES. BOTH ONE BED WITH MANY
UPGRADES FROM CAR PARKING TO FULL SIZE LAUNDRY, SO MUCH MORE.
DANVERS $199,900
• SHADY OAKS PHASE 2 NEW CONSTRUCTION: 2 NEW MANUFACTURED 2 BEDROOM
UNITS DANVERS $229,900
• DOUBLE WIDE UNIT WITH APPROXIMATELY 1250 SQFT OF LIVING AREA. 4 BEDROOM
LOCATED IN DESIRABLE OAK LEDGE HEIGHTS COOPERATIVE PARK PEABODY $249,900
CALL ERIC 781-223-0289
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