׉?4ׁB!בCט ( (u׉׉	 7cassandra://FFlb1K6D_zIb1fi8OGUDXK4GyVdkvBqPA5rAQKQIMkc 	K`)׉	 7cassandra://EiPOl80cu2TewVb26el61ePD1oonnJkfrgflzv9baz4͝`J׉	 7cassandra://9Ba0X1lHQQ_JlZXQS-7HmEIAp69EEfo8Ukc_V4CkMH0,`̰ ׉	 7cassandra://w5gQtAoJ2uFMurL3HBwYqRqvBYRnnQfH2wc6rYx7yL4 [?T͠aVUpXJ נaVUpXJ# '̾9ׁHhttp://www.advocatenews.netׁׁЈ׈EaVUpXJ׉ECELEBRATING 30 YEARS AS REVERE’S LOCAL NEWSPAPER!
Vol.30, No.39
-FREEwww.advocatenews.net
Free
Every Friday
Council fired up over
Quality Inn plans
By Adam Swift
L
ast Monday night was an
opportunity for the City
Council and residents to stand
together against a controversial
plan by Boston offi cials to transform
the Quality Inn on Morris
Street into a transitional homeless
shelter. The issue exploded
last week, when Mayor Brian Arrigo
got wind of the plan from
the Boston Public Health Commission
(BPHC) to address the
longstanding, myriad homelessness
and substance abuse problems
at Massachusetts Avenue
and Melnea Cass Boulevard by
shuttling homeless people to
the closed motel along Route 1.
At Monday night’s meeting, the
City Council held an hour-long
executive session on the issue
before opening the City Council
Chamber doors to the public,
and then discussed fi ve motions
that addressed the issue in
some form or another.
“This issue has received quite
a bit of press over the last couple
of weeks, to the point where
everybody in the city wants to
talk about it,” said Councillorat-Large
Gerry Visconti during
a discussion on a motion he introduced
alongside City Council
President Anthony Zambuto
and Ward 6 Councillor Richard
Serino backing Arrigo’s opposition
to the BPHC plan. He
continued, “I want to say fi rst to
the homeless people – those
battling substance abuse in
and around the Mass. Cass area
– that I am so deeply sorry
that acting [Boston] Mayor Kim
Janey, the Boston City Council
and the Boston Public Health
Commission have failed you.
The fact that they have the audacity
to put their heads in the
sand for the past 10 years and all
of the sudden want to push that
problem over to the Revere area
is inconceivable.”
Rather than dealing with the
problem, Visconti said, Boston
offi cials have shifted the problem
down the road to Revere.
“Revere is not and will not be the
dumping ground for your problems,”
said Visconti. “I hope the
City Council, the administration
and all our residents stand united
on this issue. We can’t stand
idly by and let them dump their
problem on our city. For Mayor
Janey, I have one message: not
now, and not ever.”
Many of the councillors who
spoke on Monday night echoed
Visconti’s sentiments that the
city will stick together and not
accept Boston shifting a longstanding,
ongoing problem to
Revere. Several councillors also
noted the lack of information
and planning on the part of the
BPHC, and that an empty hotel
is not a proper landing spot for
people who need medical and
crisis intervention help.
Serino, whose North Revere
ward is home to the Quality Inn,
said the homelessness and substance
abuse problems are a regional
problem. But, he said, the
Quality Inn is not an acceptable
place to dump the problem.
“They are bringing their problem
to another community to
have them solve it,” he said.
Serino was also among the
councillors that noted that Revere
is more than willing to
HOMELESS | SEE Page 20
781-286-8500
Friday, October 1, 2021
Mayor, city officials present
$660K in CDBG grant funding
to local community organizations
City and state offi cials recently presented the checks to community organizations for assisting
low- and middle-income residents throughout the COVID-19 pandemic. See pages 8 & 9 for story
and photo highlights. (Photo Courtesy of the City of Revere)
City Council approves purchase
of Thayer Ave. boatyard site
By Adam Swift
I
n contrast to the ongoing controversy
over the Quality Inn,
the City Council took care of a
much more positive piece of
business last Monday night, approving
a $1.725 million loan order
for the purchase of the Riverside
Boatyard property on Thayer
Avenue. The purchase will set the
stage for the city to use the property
as a recreation site that will
include areas for nonmotorized
boat access, rowing, classes and
greater access to the waterfront.
The development of the property
is part of the Riverfront Master
Plan, which also includes improvements
to Gibson Park, the
private development of the G&J
towing property, and traffi c improvements.
“The
acquisition of this propThe
Quality Inn, which is located at 100 Morris St., could be used
as a transitional homeless shelter. (Courtesy Photo)
erty at 27 Thayer Ave. is a monumental
step towards advancing
the goals of the Riverfront Master
Plan and to expand and enhance
our recreational opportunities,”
said Elle Baker, the city’s
open space and environmental
planner. “The property, known to
most people as just the boatyard,
has a unique characteristic in that
it off ers appropriate waterfront
access for nonmotorized boating,
including a suitable site for a
dock to support rowing as an offi
cial elite sport for our youth and
our entire community.” Baker said
the property will provide an epic
opportunity for water-based recreation
in addition to the amenities
at adjacent Gibson Park.
“There’s a long history of controversy
with surrounding neighborhoods
with suggestions of
residential development, and this
acquisition, if approved, will put
a stop to that suggestion of residential
development,” said Baker.
Baker said it has yet to be determined
if the existing building
on the property can be preserved,
but she said the city
wants to maintain the character
of the building while renovating
the facility to provide some small
boat storage, classrooms, meeting
space and restrooms. “The
city is prepared to take the necessary
steps required to secure
grant funding in order to bring
this transformation to fruition,”
said Baker.
Elaine Hurley, who serves on
the Riverfront Advisory Group
and has been a key figure in
the battle against the residential
development of the property,
spoke in favor of the project.
“This piece of property survived
the development boom of
the 80s, when a 10-story, 82-unit
proposal was the beginning of 35
years of fi ghting to keep overdevelopment
out of our neighborhood,”
said Hurley. “Tonight, in
2021, we fi nally have a development
that fi ts our neighborhood
perfectly: a place for our children
to learn just how important the
ocean is.”
Several councillors praised Hurley
for her continued advocacy
for the Riverfront area.
The councillors also pointed to
the transformative nature of the
boatyard property for the neighborhood
and the city. “It’s so important
that we have more open
space in the city of Revere and
that we can actually access the
water,” said Councillor-at-Large
Jessica Ann Giannino. “We have
America’s fi rst public beach; it’s
a beautiful place; however, you
can’t easily send a kayak out from
Revere Beach.”
Giannino said she was on the
council when a 40B aff ordable
housing development was proposed
for the boatyard site and
that it was an awful situation for
the council and for the neighbors.
“This proposal is just a huge sigh
of relief, not just for the council,
but for the rest of this neighborhood
– to know this area will
be a place the public can utilize,”
she said. “It will not be residential,
and it will be a space the city
can take care of that generations
can enjoy.”
׉	 7cassandra://9Ba0X1lHQQ_JlZXQS-7HmEIAp69EEfo8Ukc_V4CkMH0,`̰ aVUpXJaVUpXJ
PבCט   (u׉׉	 7cassandra://OIv-Rt7DEL9YgxKnmOMZYURIMXomWWEmTiIbNhzaAB4 `)׉	 7cassandra://RYDA7v4lM4WB0UzqgP0liNSEsTX4pa1jSZhV2bSNE9Q͢3`J׉	 7cassandra://-YVK0Xfwjg_8gDUAgMBgmf4G3Mb-nuLgIFGjYL6pmos/P`̰ ׉	 7cassandra://PrRrAEhwoQyYiJ8M1a05eY_teEBV6-Bq1psr739ctXE 4|/2͠aVUpXJ$ט ( (u׉׉	 7cassandra://-KuiWkz1sKl0BNrMdGvn7eNO5cLB0nzGCqlP9i4ktok ;O`)׉	 7cassandra://-xH3-kHxsJsxd0H0h4p0T8_gE5FFTHMiT0w86OyA_i0ͩ'`J׉	 7cassandra://LgZtKvFxEHUmKtt5ag2nU05GmB6FJB8uIE4DlhCcaBM0w`̰ ׉	 7cassandra://PB2_bXNDMCZoDbK_antIfqYaLNqoqih_8Vgalg9gxj8 EX@͠aVUpXJ%נaVUpXJ+ yb"9ׁHmailto:Info@advocatenews.netׁׁЈנaVUpXJ*  9ׁH  mailto:lsimeonejr@simeonelaw.netׁׁЈ׉EPage 2
THE REVERE ADVOCATE – FRIDAY, OCTOBER 1, 2021
ANGELO’S
FULL SERVICE
Regular Unleaded
$2.959
Mid Unleaded
$2.999
Super
$3.119
Diesel Fuel
$3.149
"42 Years of Excellence!" 1978-2020
KERO
$4.65
DEF
$3.49
9
Diesel
$2.799
9
HEATING OIL
24-Hour Burner Service
Call for Current Price!
(125—gallon minimum)
DEF Available
 
Open an account and
order online at:
www.angelosoil.com
(781) 231-3500 (781) 231-3003
367 LINCOLN A  A    DA
R
Councillor wants action
on abandoned shopping carts
By Adam Swift
eturning your shopping
cart after you’ve loaded
the groceries in the car is just
good manners. But in Revere,
there’s been an ongoing problem
with the carts getting away
from the store.
Over the past month, Ward 1
www.eight10barandgrille.com
We Have Reopened for
Dine-In and Outside Seating
every day beginning at 4 PM
Councillor Joanne McKenna said,
she’s counted over 150 derelict
carts on her own that have been
dumped on city streets, sidewalks
and property. At last Monday
night’s City Council meeting,
McKenna introduced a motion
asking representatives from
some of the city’s bigger grocery
and box stores to appear
before the council and address
the problem. “In the last couple
of months, I don’t know if anyone
has seen the overwhelming
amount of shopping cars that
are in the city,” said McKenna.
Revere has an ordinance on
the books where it can charge
$25 per abandoned and stored
shopping cart it picks up, but
McKenna said the issue is that
the city has no place to store
the abandoned buggies. “What
the city has been doing is they
have been working overtime
and putting them back in the
Market Basket where someone
from those stores will come and
retrieve the shopping carts within
two days. However, McKenna
said that from what she has
seen the stores have not been
picking up the carts, and that
they should be removed from
the city streets sooner than in
two days.
Councillor-at-Large Steve MoJOANNE
MCKENNA
Ward 1 Councillor
stores,” she said. “What good is
this? We have to come up with
some kind of solution.”
The stores either need to hire
someone to pick up the shopping
carts, or install a system
where there are brakes on a cart
that locks the wheels if someone
tries to take it past a certain
boundary.
“All the shopping carts are getting
thrown all over our city, and
they are littering our city, but we
can’t do anything about it because
we don’t have any place
to store them,” McKenna said.
Ward 2 Councillor Ira Novoselsky
said there are phone numbers
listed for Stop & Shop and
rabito said the abandoned carts
are a public safety issue. “We
have two supermarkets, one on
the west side of Revere and one
near Beachmont,” he said. “We
have main roads like Washington
Avenue, Salem Street, Revere
Beach Parkway, State Road;
this is a public safety issue. These
carriages – we have one night
of wind, high winds – these are
going right into someone’s car;
it’s going to cause a major accident
and maybe even cost
someone’s life.”
Morabito said the fines for
abandoned carts should be increased
and corporate supermarkets
held accountable.
Councillor-at-Large Jessica
Ann Giannino suggested the
council look at an ordinance
where larger stores with shopping
carts have to install a braking
system.
Options on the table for redistricting
By Adam Swift
At a public meeting last week,
A
WE'RE
OPEN!
8 Norwood Street, Everett
(617) 387-9810
STAY
SAFE!
s the community that saw
the biggest percentage
jump in population with the
2020 U.S. Census, the City has a
lot of work to do when it comes
to redistricting.
city offi cials laid out six potential
redistricting maps they are looking
to get more input on before
bringing one or two plans before
the City Council later this
month. Those potential redistricting
maps look to even out
the six city wards so they are
close in population to each other,
according to Reuben Kantor,
Revere’s Chief Innovation Offi cer.
Some of the draft maps presented
during the public forum seek
to make the wards more geographically
even, while others
seek to keep the lines as close as
possible to the current boundaries
while making sure the city
still meets state and national legal
requirements for the population
fl uctuations between wards.
“A lot has changed in Revere in
the last 10 years since the 2010
census,” said Kantor. The two biggest
changes are the 20 percent
jump in total population and the
large jump in Hispanic/Latino
population in the city.
The 2020 census pegs the Revere
population at 62,186 residents,
the highest growth of
any municipality in the state. According
to Kantor, the city saw
growth in all wards. The greatest
amount of growth was in Ward
2 at nearly 32 percent. In 2010,
62 percent of Revere’s population
identifi ed as white, while in
2020, that number is down to 45
percent. During the past decade,
the Hispanic/Latino population
increased from 24 percent to 37
percent.
POPULATION | SEE Page 16
Prices subject to
change
   
  
FLEET
׉	 7cassandra://-YVK0Xfwjg_8gDUAgMBgmf4G3Mb-nuLgIFGjYL6pmos/P`̰ aVUpXJ׉ETHE REVERE ADVOCATE – FRIDAY, OCTOBER 1, 2021
Page 3
Councillors work for safer streets
By Adam Swift
C
ouncillors Steven Morabito
and Patrick Keefe want
Revere’s drivers to slow down.
During last Monday night’s City
Council meeting, Morabito requested
that Mayor Brian Arrigo
and the Traffi c Commission look
into establishing a slow streets
pilot program. Earlier this summer,
Keefe proposed a similar
idea to help combat drivers who
speed through many of Revere’s
cut-through streets.
“As you know, speeding is a
hot topic throughout the city,
and it is a major concern of the
residents,” said Morabito. “The
purpose of launching a slow
streets pilot program is to help
curb speeding.”
The motion by Morabito includes
the introduction of traffi
c-calming measures, such as
speed tables, speed humps,
crosswalks, signage and bollards
to help curb the excessive
speeding. He said similar measures
have been effective in
Dorchester and Jamaica Plain.
“The slow street pilot program
will engage community groups,
ward councillors, residents, the
mayor, traffi c commission, the
police,” Morabito said. “The program
will aim to use safety tools
MPR ENGINEERING CO.
AFFORDABLE & COST EFFECTIVE
     
     
     
~ LICENSED & INSURED~
Lawrence A. Simeone Jr.
Attorney-at-Law
STEVEN MORABITO
Councillor-at-Large
to slow down speeds on streets
that are used as cut-through
streets to primary roads.”
Several months ago, Keefe advocated
for the city to undertake
a campaign against distracted
driving. “It’s a problem in our
city, it’s a problem in every city,”
said Keefe.
He said the problems are especially
bad on the cut-through
streets on Broadway. “There are
just too many high speed accidents
in the city, and we need
to take a step in the right direction,”
Keefe said.
In other council business last
Monday night, Ward 3 Councillor
Arthur Guinasso was not
a fan of Councillor-at-Large
Traffic Commission
finds parking relief for
Jack Satter House
By Adam Swift
T
he parking woes look to be
at an end for the residents
of Jack Satter House, a senior
housing development on Revere
Beach Boulevard. For the
last several months, the residents
have been campaigning
before city offi cials in an eff ort
to increase the number of visitor
parking passes available to
the 250 or so residents in the
building. Coming before the
City Council and the Traffi c Commission
several times, they have
described the hardship of having
only 19 visitor passes available
for the entire building. But
last week, the Traffi c Commission
and new Parking Director
Zachary Babo delivered some
good news to the residents in
attendance at the monthly Traffi
c Commission meeting.
“We’ve looked through the
[city’s parking] ordinance and
[Jack Satter House is] listed under
Schedule F, which allows for
a resident one resident parking
sticker per unit, as long as your
car is registered in Revere,” said
Traffi c Commission Chair Paul
Argenzio. “You will be afforded
the opportunity to receive
a permit, one per unit, and you
are also aff orded the opportunity
to apply for one visitor permit
per unit.”
The parking permits are free
with vehicle registration, and
the visitor permits are free for
anyone 65 and above and $10
for anyone under 65. Residents
do not have to have a registered
vehicle in order to apply for a visitor’s
permit. The visitor parking
permit will allow for 24-hour
parking on Oak Island Street and
the adjacent roads.
The only potential wrench in
that plan is that the state Department
of Conservation &
Recreation (DCR) owns Oak Island
Street and has the right to
take over the street if it sees fi t.
Currently, the DCR is allowing
the City of Revere to operate
the street under its ordinances.
“As of right now, we will make
these changes and we will support
the Jack Satter House residents
with their permits, but
this isn’t a guaranteed thing,”
said Babo. “If DCR takes over this
area, the enforcement would
be done by them and handled
by them.”
PARKING | SEE Page 6
PATRICK KEEFE
Ward 4 Councillor
George Rotondo’s motion to allow
a councillor to submit up
to 10 motions per meeting and
speak on four in months when
the council meets twice. Rotondo
said there is often important
business councillors are
approached about that can’t always
be handled with the fi ve
allowed motions per meeting.
“Seriously, there are 11 councillors
here and 10 motions each
is 110 motions,” said Guinasso.
Guinasso said the meetings
would quickly bog down if there
were so many motions allowed
on the agenda.
Rotondo’s motion was sent
to committee for further discussion.
~
Since 1989 ~
* Corporate Litigation
* Criminal/Civil
* MCAD
* Zoning/Land Court
* Wetlands Litigation
* Workmen’s Compensation
* Landlord/Tenant Litigation
* Real Estate Law
* Construction Litigation
* Tax Lein
* Personal Injury
* Bankruptcy
* Wrongful Death
* Zoning/Permitting Litigation
300 Broadway, Suite 1, Revere * 781-286-1560
lsimeonejr@simeonelaw.net
For Advertising with Results,
call The Advocate Newspapers
at 781-286-8500 or
Info@advocatenews.net
100 years of
cigar experience
Buy Cigars by the Box & Save!
Our store is still open to serve you!
* SPECIAL EDITION *
6 Year Old Tobacco * 100% Long Leaf Individually
Wrapped * Bundle of 20 * ONLY $89.95
~ SMOKER’S DELIGHT ~
RYO
Tubes
15 Churchill Size Cigars including a Cohiba,
4 Year Old Tobacco Individually Wrapped
ONLY $43.95
A.B.C. CIGAR
170 REVERE ST., REVERE
(781) 289-4959
GREAT SELECTION! GREAT PRICES!
STORE HOURS: Mon. - Wed.: 8 AM - 7 PM / Thurs., Fri. - Sat.: 8 AM - 8 PM
Sunday & Holidays: 8 AM-6 PM
* Travel Humidors * Desk Top Humidors * Many Types of Lighters
* Ash Trays * Juuls * Vapes * Glass Pipes * Rewards Program
* CBD Infused Products
׉	 7cassandra://LgZtKvFxEHUmKtt5ag2nU05GmB6FJB8uIE4DlhCcaBM0w`̰ aVUpXJ	aVUpXJ
PבCט   (u׉׉	 7cassandra://FlX1Jz0l8mhopp9RF_RZNiT1jhiKbT1n8XSOyxC05e0 `)׉	 7cassandra://JYJei-9d48BfRYYFXMH8Djd7K8HshMv_AYfeFgokHCsͥ`J׉	 7cassandra://sqm6ezbbnTCeLqKmMb9jv4BLN2qxqQzpwNlKjFSNyos-`̰ ׉	 7cassandra://5DpVNyUvAWT34a5xAN4adAlG6qi48_kXCCGgA2abJ4s 8͠aVUpXJ,ט ( (u׉׉	 7cassandra://8Tizt2Gci3blwR-jXV73n-3csl9JrDKW2uF8jfj7xho S`)׉	 7cassandra://r3ITJjBLGgiygd0VTvQdum1EcsHXvslo4IQeLcaoFMs͇`J׉	 7cassandra://4LqUmWA3Jd81clT3LHgwauFG2UKJSRNPKaF-bZ26Qdc*y`̰ ׉	 7cassandra://NwoJuzgZHNNdKi6I-iov4AK19CZiAFpPAgYm4ZrSPdw %%͠aVUpXJ-נaVUpXJ0 H9ׁHhttp://revere.orgׁׁЈ׉EPage 4
THE REVERE ADVOCATE – FRIDAY, OCTOBER 1, 2021
Mystic Valley files Complaint against Mass. Department of
Elementary and Secondary Education
Special to Th e Advocate
Y
esterday, Mystic Valley Regional
Charter School (Mystic
Valley) fi led a complaint in Suffolk
Superior Court against the
Massachusetts Department of Elementary
and Secondary Education
(DESE) in response to a draft
report issued by DESE which will
impact Mystic Valley’s application
for reauthorization in 2023.
Summary of the Complaint
M ystic Valley fi led a complaint
on September 20, 2021, in Suffolk
Superior Court against DESE
seeking to enjoin the Department
from evaluating the school
based upon what the school
contends are newly created, unlawful,
vague and targeted “cultural
proficiency” criteria that
would put the school in breach
of its Charter and potentially
cause it to be shut down. Mystic
Valley is a widely respected,
successful charter school that
has been regularly rechartered
over the last two decades by the
state without issue. Mystic Valley
employs a dress code and bases
its curriculum on a commonality
and “melting pot” approach
to education that is hyper-focused
on excellence in academic
achievement. Mystic Valley alleges
in its Complaint that it has
unearthed internal DESE emails
showing that DESE is directly targeting
Mystic Valley and its Charter,
including by appointing at
least one member of a review
panel who openly described
the member’s bias and intention
to go after Mystic Valley before
the review even began. At very
same time, internal DESE email
conceded that DESE had no formal
complaints pending against
Mystic Valley from anyone.
Mystic Valley strenuously
objects to the draft report and
issues the following statement
from its Board of Trustees
“This is a case about academic
freedom. The Commonwealth
of Massachusetts granted Mystic
Valley’s charter more than twenty
years ago, and the School has successfully
followed its charter ever
since. However, DESE is now clearly
working to try and undermine
Mystic Valley’s charter and approach
to education. DESE’s biased
actions are an existential threat to
our continued operations, jeopardizing
the very core of Massachusetts’s
legal obligation to protect
charter schools and their autonomy.
That is why we have gone
to court.
“We are proud of our school, its
mission, its values, its diverse community
and the achievements of
our thousands of students and
alumni. We will continue to defend
our community against baseless
attacks. If we do not, thousands of
students of all races, ethnicities, incomes,
and backgrounds will lose
the opportunity to attend a nationally
recognized school with
a remarkable record of student
achievement. We cannot let that
happen.
“It is clear that the DESE offi cials
who conducted the site visit did
so with a pre-existing bias against
our school and its charter. In internal
emails exchanged six months
before any site visit, DESE personnel
repeatedly stated, without evidence,
that Mystic Valley is in need
of reform. They used this sham site
COMPLAINT | SEE Page 6
Revere CARES Coalition to address
proposed indoor smoking bar
Special to Th e Advocate
O
n October 5 at 6:30 p.m.,
the Revere Board of Health
will hold a hearing to discuss
whether to allow an indoor
smoking bar. Smoking bars can
include hookahs, cigars and
vapes. While Massachusetts
passed a fl avor restriction in November
2019, fl avored tobacco
is allowed in smoking bars.
We have learned from the
vaping crisis that fl avors attract
young people, leading to unintended
addiction and negative
health consequences. Tobacco
use causes chronic diseases
and shortens life. As a city
and state, we have come a long
way in reducing tobacco use in
young people. As a community,
we should strive to create an
environment that makes the
healthy choice the easy choice.
The health of our citizens should
come before business interests
and profi ts. Allowing a smoking
bar creates an environment
that promotes the use of tobacco
and sends the wrong message
to our kids – enticing and
addicting young adults.
Right now, we are living
through the COVID-19 pandemic.
Can we allow one more business
to operate that negatively
aff ects people’s health? Can
hookah instruments, which are
meant to be shared, be properly
sanitized to prevent the spread
of disease? These are questions
we all need to consider.
We invite you to attend the Revere
Board of Health meeting to
share your concerns, or you can
submit your comments by calling
781-485-8486 or emailing
Paula Sepulveda at psepulveda@
revere.org.
About the MGH Revere
CARES Coalition
The mission of the Revere
CARES coalition is to strengthen
the health of Revere by addressing
priorities established by
community members. We utilize
an environmental approach;
advocate for evidence-based,
culturally competent strategies,
programs and services; increase
connectedness among
individuals and organizations;
and support and empower local
youths. The Revere CARES
Coalition is a program of Mass
General’s Center for Community
Health Improvement.
׉	 7cassandra://sqm6ezbbnTCeLqKmMb9jv4BLN2qxqQzpwNlKjFSNyos-`̰ aVUpXJ
׉E	cTHE REVERE ADVOCATE – FRIDAY, OCTOBER 1, 2021
Page 5
~ REVERE BEAUTIFICATION COMMITTEE NEWS ~
Local landscaper steps up in support of Historical Museum
tiful, multicolored plants and
flowers around the property.
What a diff erence! The end result
is a beautiful RSCHP property
of which all of Revere can
be proud.
Improvements of this kind
could not be made without the
support of the businesses that
support our various programs.
For more information, call the
RBC at 781-485-2770.
Gerry
Pictured from left to right: RSCHP Director Bob Upton, RBC member Janelle O’Brien, RBC Treasurer
Karen Knapp, RBC Vice-Chair Annette Bornstein, RBC Chair Eleanor Vieira, Green Acres Landscaping
VP Mike Colecchia, RBC member Carol Haney, RSCHP member Toby Pearlstein and Kat Corley.
I
n keeping with its mission of
working to improve the image
of the city of Revere through an
aggressive clean up and beautifi
cation program, the Revere
Beautifi cation Committee (RBC)
has fi nanced the beautifi cation
of the Revere Society for Cultural
and Historic Preservation.
While driving by the RSCHP
recently, one of the RBC members
noticed that the grounds
had not been landscaped and
were in disrepair. The end result
was a Revere museum that
looked shabby. After conferring
with other members of the RBC,
it was decided to investigate the
situation.
The results of the investigation
indicated that the museum
did not have the funds to
beautify the property. RSCHP
Director Bob Upton explained
that essential expenses, such as
heat, electricity, etc., consumed
the museum’s available resources.
He also bemoaned the condition
of the property’s landscaping.
As
a result, RBC voted to provide
the landscaping for the
museum and contacted Green
Acres Landscaping Vice President
Mike Colecchia to do the
job. Mike and his crew trimmed
trees, edged the lawn, dug up
dead plants and planted beauD’Ambrosio
Attorney-at-Law
Is
Your Estate in Order?
Do you have an update Will, Health
Care Proxy or Power of Attorney?
If Not, Please Call for a Free Consultation.
14 Proctor Avenue, Revere
(781) 284-5657
THEY CARE ABOUT YOU . . .
If a City Councillor tells you the truth,
If they tell you what you want to hear,
they care about themselves!
I ALWAYS TELL YOU THE
TRUTH
VOTE TUESDAY NOVEMBER 2, 2021
4TH NAME ON THE BALLOT
PAID FOR BY THE COMMITTEE TO ELECT ANTHONY ZAMBUTO
ANTHONY T. ZAMBUTO
PAID POLITICAL ADVERTISEMENT
׉	 7cassandra://4LqUmWA3Jd81clT3LHgwauFG2UKJSRNPKaF-bZ26Qdc*y`̰ aVUpXJaVUpXJ

PבCט   (u׉׉	 7cassandra://-USBaVzHVwOAxBYhZzbcSEvZaTUL_3h0jFB_7Wr_tKA w`)׉	 7cassandra://Lt0lNDs27NFFnYWfOjhkc8CsC1nTJAJ7lM07cJ1qNOY͊`J׉	 7cassandra://nChvA2qU5KGQgaVZ7od8_ji0OTXL3CbfVvNkuY9zO7M*X`̰ ׉	 7cassandra://YUUoo5iQ77420ovmbRZQV0n7TSzihHpVFdnKOLzQMHk ͠aVUpXJ1ט ( (u׉׉	 7cassandra://Nfx6TiGLWItZ0WQ2TR9jNrZckIjNWFPKLG6CfB6g9N8 X`)׉	 7cassandra://2j1lNl1bH0GLjO6yZulbhCYn0raMfc6r7WbPPMtuQzkͣ=`J׉	 7cassandra://yWqYS7hU1XZay_XhpA96azwL9Gvp3pXe-R4Jl0Muqz40`̰ ׉	 7cassandra://Vd-kV06dmLQNMsJaPOlRWyihVrN330h5wnMBfUVVSlA UN -͠aVUpXJ2נaVUpXJ8 u$n9ׁH $http://Facebook.com/Advocate.news.maׁׁЈנaVUpXJ7 9ׁHhttp://EddiesAutotech.comׁׁЈ׉EPage 6
THE REVERE ADVOCATE – FRIDAY, OCTOBER 1, 2021
El Salvadorian first annual flag raising kicks off
Hispanic Heritage Month
Mayor Brian Arrigo said Salvadoran Americans have made
huge contributions to the community, adding that residents
are grateful to them for the enriching food, businesses
and neighbors that make the city greater. (Advocate
photos by Tara Vocino)
Shown from left to right are City Council President/Councillor-at-Large Anthony Zambuto, City
Council Vice President/Councillor-at-Large Gerry Visconti, Mayor Brian Arrigo, event organizer Reinaldo
Morro Santos, Consulate Jakelinn Corleto, State Rep. Jeff Turco, translator Karla Trigueros,
Ward 5 Councillor candidate Christian Majano, School Committee member/Senate candidate Anthony
D’Ambrosio and State Rep./Councillor-at-Large Jessica Giannino.
COMPLAINT | FROM Page 4
visit, conducted virtually and without
ever setting foot on Mystic Valley’s
campus, to set up an agendadriven
takedown of one of the best
schools in the Commonwealth of
To Do:
Take a Vacation
Replace Windows
Pay Tuition
Massachusetts.
“This comes as surprise, as DESE
has reauthorized Mystic Valley’s
charter and educational mission
without fanfare every five years
since the school’s founding in 1998.
“We took advantage of the statDone:
Members
Plus
Home Equity Line
3.25%
APR*
No Closing Costs 12-Year Draw
Use Your Home for The CASH You Need – Today!
Apply FAST at memberspluscu.org
utory revision period and submitted
our changes and criticisms of
the integrity of the draft report
but have received no assurances
that DESE will rescind it. It is unfortunate
that it has come to legal
action, but with no recognition
of the gravity of this matter
from DESE and no intervention
from the Massachusetts Board of
Elementary and Secondary Education,
this course of action was
PARKING | SEE Page 3
However, Argenzio said he
doesn’t foresee the DCR taking
control of Oak Island Street in
the near future.
In addition to the visitor parking
permits, caregivers will also
be allowed to apply for parking
permits to park in the area of
Jack Satter House.
“While I’m not a big fan of
MEDFORD NORWOOD DORCHESTER EVERETT PLYMOUTH
*APR = Annual Percentage Rate. Rate subject to change without notice. Variable rate based on Prime Rate as published by the Wall Street
Journal. As of August 15, 2021, the Prime Rate is 3.25%. 12-year draw, 8-year repayment. Best rate requires a new HELOC application,
loan-to-value (LTV) of 80% or less and strong creditworthiness. Properties held in trust may require additional fees. Early termination fee
of $400 applies for lines of credit closed within first 36 months. Requires property insurance. NMLS #472281
changing ordinances, I think
this is defi nitely one we needed
to revisit and make some adjustments
to, so I’m defi nitely in
favor of it, and the City Council
was in favor of it,” said City Councillor-at-Large
Gerry Visconti. “It’s
much needed after everything
unavoidable. DESE must drop its
agenda-driven attacks on our
school by immediately retracting
its biased and uninformed site visit
report, grant Mystic Valley a waiver
from new criteria it is using to assess
the school, and begin a new
evaluation process with an unbiased
review team.
“Mystic Valley remains faithful
to its charter, its academic program
is resoundingly successful,
and it is organizationally viable.
Provided DESE reviewers examine
Mystic Valley without any preconceived
biases, the school fully satisfi
es the statutory Charter School
requirements, and it is confi dent
that it will be renewed once again
in 2023, as it has been during every
renewal cycle since its inception,
including its most recent renewal
in 2018.”
To read the full complaint,
please visit MVRCS.com/ADVOCATE
the
people at the Jack Satter
House have gone through.”
While the residents of Jack
Satter House are in a better position
for parking, the issue of
parking, especially on and near
Revere Beach Boulevard, is a
never-ending struggle. A resident
at 1 Carey Circle noted
that she is not able to get a visitor
parking pass at her development
and that while the development
was built with the
expectation that there would
be enough parking, there is
no longer space for visitors to
park. Argenzio suggested that
the issue be brought before
the Traffi c Commission at a future
meeting.
׉	 7cassandra://nChvA2qU5KGQgaVZ7od8_ji0OTXL3CbfVvNkuY9zO7M*X`̰ aVUpXJ׉ErTHE REVERE ADVOCATE – FRIDAY, OCTOBER 1, 2021
Page 7
~ LETTER-TO-THE-EDITOR ~
Rotondo opposes using Quality
Inn as homeless shelter
Dear Editor:
I stand shoulder to shoulder
with Mayor Arrigo and all of
my Colleagues in Revere City
Government against acting
Mayor Janey and the Boston
Public Health Commission’s
attempt to create a homeless
shelter at the Quality Inn in
West Revere.
Acting Mayor Janey’s ineffective
leadership and disingenuous
comments recently
made to the Boston media
of regional homelessness in
a Boston neighborhood from
what the press calls Methadone
Mile a regional issue is
just fl at out nonsense. If acting
Mayor Janey and the Boston
Public Health Commission
honestly believe that homelessness
is a severe regional issue
(which it is), then the best
approach, in my experience,
would have been to have the
acting Mayor contact the surrounding
municipality’s leadership
(Brookline, Winthrop,
Saugus, Cambridge, Chelsea,
Dedham, Everett, Milton, Newton,
Needham, Quincy, Revere,
Somerville, Watertown
and Westwood) and develop
a regional task force with support
from the state to create a
regional solution. Instead, she
lacks leadership, and her behavior
exemplifi es the not in
my backyard attitude of an untrustworthy
partner in fi ghting
any initiative moving forward.
Further, her lack of vision ignores
the plight of those stricken
with substance abuse disorder
living in the substandard
conditions in Boston. Last I
checked, Revere does not have
a hospital, an addiction treatment
center; whereas Boston
is the health care mecca of the
world. So, let’s call out Acting
Mayor Janey’s BS for what it
is, the next phase of the city
of Boston’s gentrifi cation plan
(South End) from the area described
by the media as Methadone
Mile. What troubles me
is the lack of transparency considering
Acting Mayor Janey’s
husband is one of the largest
contractors in the city of Boston.
If you go to the Boston
Planning and development
agency you will see all the
projects underway from Albany
Street to South Hampton
Street to South Bay, all steps
from Methadone mile. Considering
her husband is a major
contractor and her apparent
lack of transparency it does
not surprise me. She is dumping
the most vulnerable of society
into a hotel isolated next
to Kappys liquor.
That said, as an ICU nurse,
I do not know of any studies
that suggest warehousing
people in a hotel in Revere
next to a Liquor store is a tremendous
public health solution.
However, if the wizards
led by Acting Mayor Janey believed
this was the best solution,
then why did they not
choose the numerous hotels
located in the city of Boston?
If Boston truly wants to work
on homelessness and addiction
as a fundamental regional
issue, let’s have an open dialogue
between all regional
stakeholders in the public and
LETTER | SEE Page 10
George Rotondo is 100% against Boston
turning Revere into a drug treatment facility
Boston’s acting-mayor Janey is
failing the homeless and those with
substance abuse disorder and her
attempt at warehousing them at the
Quality Inn in Revere.
As an ICU Nurse, I don’t
remember any study that promotes
warehousing the homeless and
those with substance abuse
disorder in a hotel.
Revere is willing to work with all
its neighbors for a regional
solution to homelessness and
addiction.
I refuse to let Revere be dumped on by Boston.
AUTOTECH
DRIVE IT - PUSH IT - TOW IT!
Cold Hard Cash for Your Vehicle!
RIVE IT - PUSH IT - TOW IT
$$ CASH FOR YOUR CAR,
TRUCK OR SUV! $$
Get your vehicle Winter Ready!
We offer a Winter Inspection Service that includes:
• Oil Filter Change • Anti-Freeze Check
• Complete Safety Check
Only $39.95
2012 KIA SPORTAGE
All Wheel Drive,
Most Power Options,
Runs Great,
Only 95K Miles,
Warranty!
TRADES WELCOME!
$11,900
Financing
Available!
1236 EasternAve • Malden
EddiesAutotech.com
(Most vehicles)
2010 NISSAN ALTIMA
Loaded, Leather Interior,
Just Serviced, Warranty,
Runs Beautiful,
Only 160K Miles!
TRADES WELCOME!
(781) 321-8841 • (617) 571-9869
Easy
For Your
Vehicle!
$5,995
We Pay Cash
RE-ELECT
ROTONDO
REVERE CITY COUNCILOR AT LARGE
(Paid Pol. Adv.)
Like us on Facebook
advocate newspaper
Facebook.com/Advocate.news.ma
GEORGE
׉	 7cassandra://yWqYS7hU1XZay_XhpA96azwL9Gvp3pXe-R4Jl0Muqz40`̰ aVUpXJaVUpXJ
PבCט   (u׉׉	 7cassandra://CJJwPKO0e7QhZQSohscxVQmoGems8I5S2wsU447i_cs `)׉	 7cassandra://f5RXZaoVppD-gbyd410bw-9y23ZvgqZw5b9FrCe8x8Uͥa`J׉	 7cassandra://Uy68Wm6cyAoGJD88hzDYzQQU_rzJ4reP1nWEg9E-bjg0`̰ ׉	 7cassandra://d07W-rME6oRGqieVoKm_OwqecMBhlB3new5lVKuxrnY ͌͠aVUpXJ9ט ( (u׉׉	 7cassandra://Rq_cbCFipZX-6nPr9BV07zrtSEEZ7uGot2GeZB12kbg <`)׉	 7cassandra://8q_h-OcQTCjexVgYBFPP1f3nTIu1L7TBsYhPsduWq_4͗/`J׉	 7cassandra://OzD1rI6TeMejfMS3r6n2jJ3n2nLVV2QwsaIL0xd340s-@`̰ ׉	 7cassandra://XIQGrpKeUxLZ724pPVOHGkqIGHewQm23rd_bvlgaFJI N͠aVUpXJ:נaVUpXJ= X8E9ׁHhttp://revere.orgׁׁЈ׉E)Page 8
THE REVERE ADVOCATE – FRIDAY, OCTOBER 1, 2021
City awards $660K of CDBG public service funding
to organizations that supported low-to-moderate
income Revere residents during pandemic
M
ayor Brian Arrigo and
the Department of Planning
& Community Development
awarded Revere community
organizations and municipal
agencies a total of $660,000
through Community Development
Block Grant (CDBG) funding.
Each awarded organization
successfully demonstrates
an ability to prevent, prepare
for, and/or respond to the pandemic
as well as service predominantly
low- to moderateincome
Revere residents.
“The pandemic has heightened
the need for collaborative
approaches to economic
recovery,” said Arrigo. “The
CDBG program is an incredible
opportunity for community
partners and organizations.
I am thankful for all the work
they have done throughout
the pandemic and know they
will use this grant to better our
community.”
The following nonprofit organizations
and City of Revere
departments will receive CDBG
funding:
• Cambridge Health Alliance
(CHA): CHA will establish a CaRevere
Community School Director Fatou Drammeh and ESOL Teacher
Fatimaezzahrae Harrouchi (fi fth and sixth from left) accept the check.
For Kids Only Afterschool Executive Director Deborah Kneeland
Keegan (fi fth from left) accepts the check.
CAPIC, Inc. Executive Director Richelle Cromwell (fourth from left) accepts
the check.
  
Attorneys at Law
     
     
     
14 Norwood St., Everett, MA 02149
Phone: (617) 387-4900 Fax: (617) 381-1755

John Mackey, Esq. * Katherine M. Brown, Esq.
Patricia Ridge, Esq.
reer Pathways program for Revere
youths and young adults.
The program will focus on exploring
healthcare-related career
pathways and leadership
development. A Youth Advisory
Board will also be created to
help guide curriculum development,
overall structure and
supportive services. In addition,
CHA will enroll 15 Revere residents
in its Community Health
Worker Training Program.
• Community Action Programs
Inter-City (CAPIC):
CAPIC will provide rental or
mortgage assistance to Revere
households that are facing evicRevere
Farmers’ Market Manager Britney Sao (fi fth from left) accepts
the check.
tion or housing displacement.
• CONNECT: In partnership
with Revere Works, CONNECT
will hire a bilingual job navigator
to provide one-on-one job
navigation services, including
resume editing, interview preparation,
application guidance
and soft skills training.
• For Kids Only: For Kids
Only will provide health and
wellness-focused services to
Revere youths aff ected by the
COVID-19 pandemic. This includes
the addition of an Inclusion
Specialist and one-to-one
aides to work with children in
small group settings, train staff
on therapeutic techniques and
communicate with families
about support and additional
resources.
• HarborCOV: HarborCOV will
hire a bilingual Domestic Violence
Case Manager to provide
intensive case management for
survivors of domestic violence,
hotline and on-call coverage
and comprehensive referrals to
community resources.
• Mystic Valley Elder Services
(MVES): MVES will provide
transportation to Revere elders
and a congregate meal program
in partnership with the Revere
Senior Center.
Monogram D4 Double siding
Cedar impression half rounds
Harvey Vinyl
63
Replacement Windows
Custom Aluminum Trim work
Windows
& Doors
Top quality
Vinyl Siding!
•Vinyl Siding •Carpentry Work •Decks
•Roofing •Free Estimates •Replacement Windows
•Fully Licensed •Fully Insured
׉	 7cassandra://Uy68Wm6cyAoGJD88hzDYzQQU_rzJ4reP1nWEg9E-bjg0`̰ aVUpXJ׉ETTHE REVERE ADVOCATE – FRIDAY, OCTOBER 1, 2021
Page 9
City and state offi cials present a check to Cambridge Health Alliance (CHA) Community
Health Improvement Manager Jean Granick, CHA Community Health Youth
Initiatives Director Jaime Lederer and CHA Health Education and Access Programs
Director Jamila Xible, respectively, who are pictured beside the mayor.
Pictured from left to right: State Rep. Jeff Turco, Community Development Program
Manager Danielle Osterman, Mayor Brian Arrigo, The Neighborhood Developers
(TND) Senior Grant Writer Sean Mock, TND Resident Services Manager Marilyn
Salgado, City Council Vice President/Councillor-at-Large Gerry Visconti, Ward
2 Councillor Ira Novoselsky, City Council President/Councillor-at-Large Anthony
Zambuto and State Representative/Councillor-at-Large Jessica Giannino.
Mystic Valley Elder Services Development Coordinator Lisa McGovern (fi fth from left) accepts
the check.
• Revere Community Health
and Engagement Department:
The Revere Farmers’ Market will
provide Revere residents with
a $20 shopping card, enabling
them to purchase fresh, local
produce at the market, and provide
Community Supported Agriculture
(CSA) bags to residents
facing increased food insecurity
due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
• Revere Community School
(RCS): RCS will provide scholarships
for Revere residents to attend
English and/or HiSET classes
for those who are looking to
attend college, gain employment
and/or obtain a better job.
• Revere Parks & Recreation
Department: Parks & Rec will
provide a Saturday enrichment
camp for Revere youths. The
camp will enable parents and
guardians to work on Saturdays
without worrying about
the cost of childcare. Additionally,
youths enrolled in the camp
will be provided with additional
educational supports to address
any adverse impacts of remote
learning over the past year.
• Revere Substance Use
Disorder (SUDI) Office (and
homelessness initiatives):
The Offi ce will hire a full-time
outreach worker who will carry
out a wide range of services
with the unsheltered population
in Revere. Services will
focus on linking individuals to
community resources, providing
social and healthcare support
and facilitating continuity
of care by providing follow-up
and improved communication
between partners.
• The Neighborhood Developers
(TND): TND will expand
resident services programming
for residents living in their affordable
housing units in Revere.
They will focus their eff orts
in three areas: 1) off ering part
and full day on-site childcare to
allow for residents to go back
to work; 2) a tutoring program
for youths who may need extra
help as a result of virtual learning;
and 3) pilot rent reporting as
a tool for increasing credit scores
for individuals who took on debt
during the pandemic.
“Given the adverse impacts
of the pandemic on Revere residents,
funding our community
partners will yield exciting, innovative
approaches to struggles
our community faces every day,”
said Community Development
Program Manager Danielle Osterman.
“By focusing on housing
stability, pathways to good jobs,
and increasing access to aff ordable
childcare, these community
partners draw upon key recommendations
from Revere's
Workforce Development Plan.
The CDBG Program in Revere
continues to take steps towards
establishing long-lasting, transformational
benefits for our
hard-working residents.”
This work coupled with the
city's overall master plan, Next
Stop Revere, will create the tools
and policies necessary for the
next generation of success in
Revere. Visit the Community Development
Offi ce’s webpage on
revere.org for more information.
Mayor Brian Arrigo and Community Development Program Manager Danielle
Osterman.
Parks and Recreation staff Michael Hinojosa and Jennifer Duggan (fi fth and sixth from left) accepted the
check from city and state offi cials on Tuesday inside City Hall’s City Council Chambers.
׉	 7cassandra://OzD1rI6TeMejfMS3r6n2jJ3n2nLVV2QwsaIL0xd340s-@`̰ aVUpXJaVUpXJ
PבCט   (u׉׉	 7cassandra://BzdlbQyikiGjtXy35ErFQ1NFc4iZm58fPU4HIsptsIg }`)׉	 7cassandra://TnxJZbpXMfvawXKGZkKVgkMF62XwfVGNSWMwxl0kA9w͒`J׉	 7cassandra://SG5E3VDDC4JCZIbkIXCIZ-99pjr0KqaE7NUMjO66yHc.`̰ ׉	 7cassandra://pTYzmJcZQlJDYtYmeS5VvvrMN0ZMWPXZI7wFf1_fGbg >L͠aVUpXJ<ט ( (u׉׉	 7cassandra://caM4meom27Rv0OehzvbQR-F9T8KreIizTWOBxRvLbjA `)׉	 7cassandra://qh0K1b0Bbkc3c370z0apjbKZ99cKEvgwLD_fbzPJmHw͇`J׉	 7cassandra://kD4BhUOJtGnsmo_gq8HgO3Dj8WymgYdBA2510zkTNN0*8`̰ ׉	 7cassandra://FeilpHwSEIyUutt-HpQOemR-JC9pznZx1t8GZlqJnwA ̠͠aVUpXJ>נaVUpXJ@ X̀9ׁHhttp://votecarrero.comׁׁЈ׉E2Page 10
THE REVERE ADVOCATE – FRIDAY, OCTOBER 1, 2021
Local family raises $20K for Breast Cancer research
Mayor donates buses for travel to Boston fundraiser
Back row, pictured from left to right: Billy, Karen, Derek, Zack, Billy and Sherice
Reed, friend Kevin Rosado, Kathy and Billy Mercurio, family friend Christy Cann
and Jamie Mercurio. Front row, pictured from left to right: Stephanie, Dante and
Giovanni Reed, Matthew Connor, CJ Cann and Patti Difonzo.
By Tara Vocino
T
he Reed family has raised
approximately $20,000 for
breast cancer research across
20 years in the Making Strides
Against Breast Cancer Walk.
Breast cancer 26-year surviBack
row, from left to right: breast cancer survivor Karen Reed, husband Billy and
their sons Billy, Derek and Zachary Reed. Front row, from left to right: daughterin-law
Stephanie, grandson Dante, daughter-in-law Sherice and grandson Giovanni
Reed.
vor Karen Reed and her team,
Bosom Babes, raised approximately
$5,000 on Sunday’s walk
around the Charles River in Boston.
Mayor Brian Arrigo donated
two courtesy buses to leave from
Beachmont Veterans Memorial
School in Revere to go into Boston
early Sunday morning.
“It’s awesome to have family
and friends here walking with
me,” Reed said.
LETTER | FROM Page 7
private sectors. Let us work
with MGH/Brigham, Boston
Medical Center, the State of
Massachusetts Department of
Public Health to address substance
abuse disorder and regional
homelessness collectively.
The current approach
by acting Mayor Janey is to
dump Boston’s most needy,
who have substantial health
needs at a secluded hotel
which is next to a liquor store
in Revere isolated by a highway
and miles away from the
mecca of medicine and addiction
recovery in Boston. Janey
is irresponsible and reckless.
In closing, we need to stand
against Mayor Janey’s Master
Plan to gentrify the area and
her fi nal solution to warehouse
the affl icted in a remote hotel.
The afflicted cannot be further
negatively impacted by
Janey’s poor leadership and
reckless fi nal solution!
Sincerely,
George Rotondo RN
Revere City Councilor
׉	 7cassandra://SG5E3VDDC4JCZIbkIXCIZ-99pjr0KqaE7NUMjO66yHc.`̰ aVUpXJ׉ETHE REVERE ADVOCATE – FRIDAY, OCTOBER 1, 2021
Page 11
Ward 2 Council Candidate Manuel Carrero to host fundraiser
at Cinco de Mayo Restaurante y Cantina on Oct. 4th
Get to know fi rst-time City Council candidate at ‘An Evening with Manuel Carrero’
M
anuel Carrero, candidate
for Revere City Council
Ward 2 will host a fundraiser
and meet and greet on Wednesday,
October 4th, from 5:30 to
8pm at Cinco de Mayo Restaurante
y Cantina, 124 Centennial
Ave. Featuring complimentary
food, a cash bar, and lively music,
the event will off er opportunities
to connect with Manuel,
his supporters, and neighbors
from across Ward 2 as well
as learn how Manuel plans to
deliver change that works for
us. Suggested donations are $25
and can be made via his website,
votecarrero.com, or his Facebook
page.
Manuel is running to ensure
all residents of Ward 2—which
includes the historic Shirley
Ave neighborhood and parts of
America’s fi rst public beach—
are represented at City Hall. Being
the fi rst-generation American
son of a union hospitality
worker and a self-employed
mechanic, Manuel’s upbringing
refl ects the hard working character
of our city. Manuel’s parents
came to America looking
for an opportunity to improve
their lives and that of their family.
At the age of 13 Manuel and
his single mother, Maria Patiсo,
moved to Ward 2 where they
have lived since.
Manuel is a proud graduate
of Revere High School’s Class of
2014 and holds a degree in engineering
from Merrimack College.
As an engineer he continues
to fi nd solutions to everyday
problems and hopes to
bring critical thinking to local
government. As our next City
Councilor, Manuel will deliver
the change that our neighborhood
deserves—change rooted
in the idea that there is a delicate
balance needed in city government
in order to protect the
fabric of our community. From
housing and development to
public infrastructure to government
accessibility, Manuel and
his supporters believe it is time
to bring Change that Works for
Us to City Hall.
׉	 7cassandra://kD4BhUOJtGnsmo_gq8HgO3Dj8WymgYdBA2510zkTNN0*8`̰ aVUpXJaVUpXJ
PבCט   (u׉׉	 7cassandra://Lmqo3lpUNn3KEcZM80-nngR8eydZiFV6P00cc5InPpg ;`)׉	 7cassandra://oxbipGeS9Ix0bgUMpN6Vevug38e6mlchQCi752kjd04́`J׉	 7cassandra://6B7vJsuc4cDfCG31Zv5aEkiRqsVbGVKRsIWBrII7Xng,`̰ ׉	 7cassandra://L-QCyrPmcePADkE1j49OFjNbQtLxI8VfEXWynROBv10 	t͠aVUpXJAט ( (u׉׉	 7cassandra://RoaFtes9ogg8jm4K_U-DmEa3S3RbgUpfqxPBE0F8fYU s` )׉	 7cassandra://CYwRMtSKoDvTn82Nx0BYCwBdq_s8xcRzbSZhrOrHyAMUB`J׉	 7cassandra://23f-ZLMcX3ls6HqN-4NDIhFyHMVkBkC_M2xWTx86CpAU`̰ ׉	 7cassandra://ErRt0ZJM0FoPWno8C9dlB7g1xW7vN68r_TaqtvDq9sI ̓͠aVUpXJB׉E7Page 12
THE REVERE ADVOCATE – FRIDAY, OCTOBER 1, 2021
City Council candidate Marc Silvestri hosts fundraising
reception at Fine Line
Supporters applaud Marc Silvestri during his campaign speech. At right, Councillor-at-Large Steven
Morabito.
Shown from left to right are First Lady Daveen Arrigo, candidate
Marc Silvestri and Mayor Brian Arrigo.
Saber Abougalala, owner of The Good Diner, proudly endorses
Marc Silvestri.
Shown, from left to right, are Mayor Brian Arrigo, Joan Wells, First Lady Daveen Arrigo, Michael
Wells and their son, Michael.
Pictured from left to right are Ward 2 Councillor Ira Novoselsky, State Senate candidate/School
Committee Member Anthony D’Ambrosio, Ward 3 Councillor candidate Anthony Cogliandro, candidate
Marc Silvestri and Ward 2 Councillor candidate Manuel Carrero.
Marc Silvestri and family, shown from left to right: father Joseph,
Marc, daughters Sienna and Saige (at bottom) and mother Sharon.
Pictured from left to right: “Boston Bob,” lobbyist Scott Delaney, candidate Marc Silvestri, Police
Offi cer Jorge Romero, Marine Corps Veteran Michael Pavone and Kimberly Fall. Pavone said Silvestri
is relentless, hardworking and caring.
Candidate Marc Silvestri, Revere Chief of Public Health and
Human Services Dr. Nathalee Kong and Ward 4 Councillor
Patrick Keefe
RECEPTION | SEE Page 17
׉	 7cassandra://6B7vJsuc4cDfCG31Zv5aEkiRqsVbGVKRsIWBrII7Xng,`̰ aVUpXJ׉ETHE REVERE ADVOCATE – FRIDAY, OCTOBER 1, 2021
Page 13
Mystic Valley Regional Charter School
2021 MCAS Results
Grade 10 ELA
% of Students Exceeding+ Rank Among
Sending Districts
Meeting Expectations
MVRCS
Everett
Malden
Medford
Melrose
Stoneham
Wakefield
State
89
41
54
61
76
73
70
64
1
7
6
5
2
3
4
-13
270
227
195
89
101
126
-In
Grade 10 ELA, MVRCS ranks among the top 5% in all of Massachusetts.
Grade 10 Math
% of Students Exceeding+ Rank Among
Meeting Expectations
MVRCS
Everett
Malden
Medford
Melrose
Stoneham
Wakefield
State
80
23
42
41
61
52
61
52
Sending Districts
1
7
5
6
2
4
3
-28
277
209
215
103
151
103
-In
Grade 10 Math, MVRCS ranks among the top 10% in all of Massachusetts.
Maintaining Excellent Academic Outcomes
Through COVID-19
State Ranking
State Ranking
׉	 7cassandra://23f-ZLMcX3ls6HqN-4NDIhFyHMVkBkC_M2xWTx86CpAU`̰ aVUpXJaVUpXJ
PבCט   (u׉׉	 7cassandra://_dlAXQhYFYzCD80JvFFbJRQrD_Hp0rGwolao1gflLRs [`)׉	 7cassandra://vNxymYIFtwAwFt-sj-a0YSsypXW2ZA3bX2VJq5XakKY͓`J׉	 7cassandra://Rz5TT96V-pi1j9JtfAbocWMuBGPdiNRgw3CJtd2eTgQ,`̰ ׉	 7cassandra://ZzIHZKsb-3BhyiS_dPDa_6z7Rr9VmVT72EfegQ9t0uA _j͠aVUpXJDט ( (u׉׉	 7cassandra://tmQgHPRlB6Sb5_gisM5erju6dz4xKedGGGn80QQ-Lrk N`)׉	 7cassandra://kBuKrfefqPzYcN3w_KrYvRpGiqIq0mt2G5w3EYmbtWQ͊`J׉	 7cassandra://KpTKdUHkyHxxZ_4gQ8vRZqXie6zTudRfsQ8GUXTQjVY,&`̰ ׉	 7cassandra://3E2EGhlQLl1y16UXPmFIlEojTxu12FA0iIMDHYza3pI ͠aVUpXJEנaVUpXJG ̌69ׁHmailto:Info@advocatenews.netׁׁЈ׉E@Page 14
THE REVERE ADVOCATE – FRIDAY, OCTOBER 1, 2021
GREATER BOSTON LEAGUE
NOTEBOOK: MIAA to
student-athletes... Get the Vax!
State board votes in near-unanimous fashion to support schools in
encouraging student-athletes to get vaccinated against COVID-19
By Steve Freker
T
For Advertising with Results,
call The Advocate Newspapers
at 781-286-8500 or
Info@advocatenews.net
he Massachusetts Interscholastic
Athletic Association
(MIAA) Board of Directors
made it loud and clear what its
stance would be when it comes
to student-athletes and the
widely-available COVID-19 vaccine:
Get the Vax! At a meeting
at its Franklin headquarters on
Tuesday and following a recommendation
by its Sports
Medicine Committee, the MIAA
Board of Directors voted nearly
The MIAA Board of Directors voted Tuesday in near unanimous
fashion to urge Massachusetts student-athletes to get vaccinated
against COVID-19. (Courtesy Photo)
unanimously, 22-0-1, in favor of
encouraging student-athletes
to take the COVID-19 vaccination
shots.
According to recently apBanking
with a
hometown touch.
Open a free checking account with no monthly fees, and get
access to Mobile Banking, Bill Pay and other features. Because
no matter where you go, we’re right by you. Call or visit us to
sign up.
419 BROADWAY, EVERETT MA 02149
      
7 7 1 SALEM ST, LYNNFIELD, MA 01940
  
WWW.EVERET TBANK . COM
pointed MIAA Executive Director
Bob Baldwin, the Board’s
support was in line with the
National Federation of High
Schools (NFHS) guidance on
the issue. Baldwin told the
Board that NFHS has set the
goal “of getting as many kids
vaccinated as possible.” The
MIAA director also noted that it
would be valuable to get ahead
of this issue before the arrival
of winter sports, largely due to
the fact that some of the MIAA’s
traditional, premier postseason
venues, such as the TD Garden
in Boston, where high-level
basketball and hockey championships
have been played
in the past, are now requiring
proof of vaccination for entry
to events.
Malden Public Schools DirecRight
by you.
Member FDIC
Member DIF
tor of Athletics Charlie Conefrey
is a member of the MIAA Board
of Directors, as well as MIAA
District 5 Chairperson, and he
joined his colleagues in voting
to encourage student-athletes
to be vaccinated.
There are no public high
schools in Massachusetts that
formally mandate that students
be vaccinated to either
attend school or participate
in interscholastic athletics,
though nearly every school
has strict protocols in place to
address student-athletes who
either display COVID-19 symptoms
or test positive for COVID-19.
Similar protocols such
as these are in place at Everett
High, Malden High and Revere
High, as well as the fi ve other
GBL schools: Chelsea High,
Lynn Classical, Lynn English,
Medford and Somerville.
****
Nearly 40 years of Malden
High Football Coaching represented
by three former
coaches at MHS opener
When Malden High opened
its season on September 16,
nearly 40 years of coaching
contributions were represented
by the attendance of three
former Golden Tornadoes football
head coaches. Present at
the game were former MHS
football Head Coaches Paul
Finn, Joe Pappagallo and Steve
Freker. Coach Finn is one of the
longest-serving head coaches
of any sport in MHS history,
as he led the Golden TorLEAGUE
| SEE Page 20
׉	 7cassandra://Rz5TT96V-pi1j9JtfAbocWMuBGPdiNRgw3CJtd2eTgQ,`̰ aVUpXJ׉ETHE REVERE ADVOCATE – FRIDAY, OCTOBER 1, 2021
Page 15
Meet the 2021-2022 Revere High Girls’ Varsity Soccer Patriots
Kneeling from left to right are Fatima Esquivel-Oliva,
Kathy Granados, Catalina Chizavo, Pamela
Marquez, Nirsrin Sekkat, Giselle Salvador,
Malak Chahlaouy and Ericka Mejia. Back
row, from left to right: Head Coach Megan
O’Donnell (23), Giselle Portillo Ramos, Kimberly
Doblado Guevara, Sophia Arciniegas Padron,
Carolina Carvalho-Bettero, Angela Huynh,
Kyra Delaney, Sandra Torres and Eldaa Samuel.
Senior Sophia Arciniegas Padron
Co-Captains Nahomy Galvez Martinez, Carolina Carvalho-Bettero
and Angela Huynh with Head Coach Megan O’Donnell
From foundation
to finish, let’s
make it happen.
Seniors, pictured from left to right – Sophia Arciniegas Padron,
Carolina Carvalho-Bettero and Angela Huynh – with Head Coach
Megan O’Donnell.
     
  
      
  
    
  
 
Soccer players, pictured from left to right: Sophomore Samarah
Paiva, senior Carolina Carvalho-Bettero, junior Nahomy Martinez
and senior Angela Huynh scrubbed and hosed down a car
on Sunday. (Photos Courtesy of Megan O’Donnell)
419 BROADWAY, EVERETT MA 02149
 
Member FDIC
Member DIF
SOCCER | SEE Page 17
׉	 7cassandra://KpTKdUHkyHxxZ_4gQ8vRZqXie6zTudRfsQ8GUXTQjVY,&`̰ aVUpXJaVUpXJ
PבCט   (u׉׉	 7cassandra://XBw_X3CTbuAxDPRCNcaIZz717E57d-DgOTU9jLSvAcE `)׉	 7cassandra://DailRIW6iR3lwRNX0uOIX_tFa115l7T-X6Q1lHWKSFc͜`J׉	 7cassandra://rxsVOzyRPbwDwEFp_lYfEbKXAG8rFl0GhHBRiajHomU+`̰ ׉	 7cassandra://Cfe1dmCmhzABp0b0NV7FsoWerOD8fx58wPVZULABSvU  	͠aVUpXJHט ( (u׉׉	 7cassandra://WF2Pdqu76f7h68Sjzz4vJsdAqg_T9anOiMQiKGDcpC4 j`)׉	 7cassandra://U6vkhGl8uMMCEuvRiY5zo1pJGgSi7rN_jAb81n1jLgUͅ`J׉	 7cassandra://NkycgjANVjCUNShjKvbGDIJV9Wjr4PkUZuX5SgrcQlk,n`̰ ׉	 7cassandra://GMvn3hs63btlUdcnOgnsbqVlTAQ9T-EanoLnmFUICcQ C̴͠aVUpXJIנaVUpXJM &9ׁH $http://Facebook.com/Advocate.news.maׁׁЈנaVUpXJL #9ׁHhttp://www.Roller-World.comׁׁЈנaVUpXJK ̪aG9ׁHhttp://revere.orgׁׁЈ׉EjPage 16
THE REVERE ADVOCATE – FRIDAY, OCTOBER 1, 2021
POPULATION | FROM Page 2
The biggest goal of redistricting
is to even out the population
across the six wards. The average
ward population grew from
8,622 residents to 10,364 residents
over the past decade.
“Everything we are doing is
thinking about those 10,364
residents, within a certain deviation,”
Kantor said. Legally,
each ward must be within
a fi ve percent deviation of total
population, although Kantor
said most of the draft maps
are within the two percent deviation
in population the city is
hoping to reach.
“We’re trying to get everyone
to this boundary of just slightly
above 10,000 people,” he said.
The six draft maps are available
for review and feedback on the
city website at revere.org. “Each
of the maps has some benefi ts
and some possible downsides,”
said Kantor.
The first draft map has the
slightest amount of geographical
change, but it has the largest
deviation in population between
the wards. The biggest changes
include some shuffling between
sections of Wards 1 and 2,
as well as between Wards 3 and
6. “Some of the problems with
this map is that it carves up a little
more of Shirley Avenue and
maintains some additional geographical
inconsistencies,” said
Kantor. “It also creates a discrepancy
of nearly 1,000 residents between
Ward 2 and Ward 6, which
is a pretty substantial diff erence.”
A variation on that map tries to
limit the changes of the boundaries
as much as possible, but
keeps the population deviation
between wards closer to two
percent. “We’re not advocating
for this map; we are just noting
that if we want to minimize
the changes but hit some basic
benchmarks, these are some
possible options,” said Kantor.
The third and fourth draft
maps are attempts at making
more commonsense geographical
boundaries for the wards,
while the fi fth map aims to create
a Hispanic/Latino supermajority
of voters in Ward 2.
Kantor said the fi fth map may
create a little too much stretching
of the other ward boundaries
to make it feasible, but that
it does deliver on a goal that
some people in the city wanted
to look at.
The fi nal draft map presented
at the public forum was a proposed
ward map submitted by
the Secretary of State’s offi ce.
Ward 6 Councillor Richard Serino
noted that one of the maps
would place all of Newman
Street into his district. The street
is currently divided between
Wards 6 and 3.
Anthony Cogliandro, a candidate
for Ward 3 councillor, lives
on the Ward 3 side of the street.
While a potential change would
not impact the Ward 3 seat in this
election, it could place both Serino
and Cogliandro in Ward 6 in
2023. “I would like to state, for the
record, that I would love for Newman
Street on the odd side to
stay in Ward 3,” said Cogliandro.
Ward 4 Councillor Patrick Keefe
said he has been an advocate
for making the wards more
geographically coherent, and
asked if the maps that would
be presented to the City Council
would be set in stone. Kantor
said the City Council would have
the ability to give feedback and
there would be the opportunity
to make changes as long as
the wards fall into the legal parameters.
Currently,
Kantor said, the plan
is to present a draft map or two
to the City Council for discussion
in early October, with a fi -
nal vote by the end of October.
However, he noted that there is
potential state legislation which
could push back the deadlines
for drawing the new map if it
passes on Beacon Hill.
TRUSTS AS IRA
BENEFICIARIES
T
rusts can be named as a
benefi ciary of an IRA account
if the IRA account owner
wishes for there to be control
over required minimum
distributions upon the original
IRA owner’s death. If the
IRA account owner want the
funds to go to a minor child,
for example, an outright distribution
to the child would
not be possible unless guardianship
proceedings are commenced.
The Trust allows the
IRA account owner to provide
for the required minimum distributions
to be paid to the
Trust over a 10-year period
so long as the Trust is a seethrough
Trust, meaning the
Trust benefi ciaries are identifi
ed. Under the Secure Act,
only eligible beneficiaries
can stretch the IRA over his
or her life expectancy. Ineligible
benefi ciaries must stretch
out the IRA over a 10-year period.
If the Trust is not a seethrough
Trust and the benefi
ciaries are not identifi ed, the
Trust must take required minimum
distributions over a fi veyear
period.
Upon the death of the IRA
SKATING CENTER
www.Roller-World.com
781-231-1111
HELP WANTED
Skate Guards • Snack Bar
  
Adults Prefered - Hours Can Be Arranged
Open 7 Days Per Week
Call Jerry at 617-620-9201
or Michelle at 781-233-9507
Located at 425R Broadway (Route 1 South), Saugus
MBTA Bus Route 429
owner, the IRA account becomes
a separate asset of the
Trust. Required minimum distributions
are then reportable
by the Trust as income in the
year received. If there is a distribution
to a particular benefi
ciary of the Trust out of the
separate IRA account, that
beneficiary will pay the tax
on that distribution. A Schedule
K-1 form would be given
to the benefi ciary in order to
him or her to fi le an individual
income tax return for that
particular calendar year. If
no distributions are made by
the Trustee to any benefi ciary
after having received a taxable
required minimum distribution,
then the Trust itself
would pay the tax.
An IRA owner may wish to
name a Trust as the benefi -
ciary if a second marriage is
involved and he or she wishes
to provide for the spouse
to receive Trust distributions
over his or her lifetime with
any remaining IRA monies in
the Trust to be held for the
benefi t of children of a previous
marriage. If the Trust was
a conduit Trust with mandatory
annual or more frequent
distributions, the surviving
spouse would be an eligible
benefi ciary and therefore
the Trust’s required minimum
distributions could be based
upon the spouse’s life expectancy.
Leaving the entire IRA
account to the second spouse
might result in no monies ever
being distributed to children
of the fi rst marriage for a variety
of reasons.
If a Trust is the benefi ciary
of the IRA account, the terms
of the Trust itself will dictate
when the beneficiaries of
the Trust will be entitled to
distributions. This prevents
spendthrift benefi ciaries from
squandering the IRA monies.
Also, there would most likely
be more protection of the
IRA monies if owned by the
Trust as a result of spendthrift
provisions contained in the
document. Inherited IRA accounts
do not off er the same
level of asset protection of IRA
accounts created and owned
by the original account owner.
The distributions to the
Trust under a 10-year payout
requirement, for example,
does not mean the Trustee is
going to make distributions to
the benefi ciaries over that 10year
period. It could be a much
longer period of time due to
the terms of the Trust. As always,
the Trustee will have to
take tax planning issues into
consideration.
Joseph D. Cataldo is an Estate Planning/Elder Law Attorney, Certifi ed
Public Accountant, Certifi ed Financial Planner, AICPA Personal
Financial Specialist and holds a Master’s Degree in Taxation.
Like us on Facebook
advocate newspaper
Facebook.com/Advocate.news.ma
׉	 7cassandra://rxsVOzyRPbwDwEFp_lYfEbKXAG8rFl0GhHBRiajHomU+`̰ aVUpXJ׉E,THE REVERE ADVOCATE – FRIDAY, OCTOBER 1, 2021
Page 17
Ward 2 Councillor candidate Manuel Carrero with
Councillor-at-Large candidate Marc Silvestri.
Pictured from left to right are “Boston Bob,” candidate Marc Silvestri,
Mayor Brian Arrigo and Kimberly Fall.
Kimberly Fall, who knows Marc Silvestri
from Malden Overcoming Addiction
(MOA), said Silvestri has good
leadership qualities.
Ward 4 Councillor Patrick Keefe and Senate candidate/School
Committee Member Anthony
D’Ambrosio
Candidate Marc Silvestri’s daughter, Saige, announces elected offi -
cials present and asks everyone to vote for her father.
Candidate Marc Silvestri said he will address
mental health, food insecurity, substance
use and traffi c patterns, among other
issues, if elected.
Supporter Kimberly Fall, Ward 5 Councillor John Powers
and candidate Marc Silvestri.
Rocco Falzone with candidate Marc Silvestri
Last Thursday night during Marc Silvestri’s fundraising
reception at Fine Line, Allan Pechner said Councillor-at-Large
candidate Marc Silvestri bravely served
his country as a veteran.
Senior Angela Huynh
Senior/Co-Capt. Carolina Carvalho-Bettero
The
Revere High School Girls’ Varsity Soccer Team held a car wash on Sunday morning behind
City Hall. (Advocate photos by Tara Vocino)
SOCCER | FROM Page 15
RECEPTION | FROM Page 12
׉	 7cassandra://NkycgjANVjCUNShjKvbGDIJV9Wjr4PkUZuX5SgrcQlk,n`̰ aVUpXJaVUpXJ
PבCט   (u׉׉	 7cassandra://JRfQ4sj9Sy60JO1dBDxYaIrgeePLw43idyUUxMtSCkU 
` )׉	 7cassandra://zYr_l-NCOV7icXcinht2vJDQAXhUri4CpaeQWvYlcbY͐;`J׉	 7cassandra://YOG69IvP0_KE88OQaoR5Z1coA8L46oMtPO8Rif4LILY$`̰ ׉	 7cassandra://WvJei3DU8ddekGCfT3cITS51dwqYVOIOGo-2qic9r7k[͠aVUpXJNט ( (u׉׉	 7cassandra://81TX-mQe3ENG6tTI1AGUL2CduecB40IHzq1lBfzwCZ4 	%o`)׉	 7cassandra://xDjMywopSoVtVdeUyuQgmyRkWDJs0CHPokNnZRRvahY͐P`J׉	 7cassandra://HO2YgMxdKTJ3fjUF2MJs-gwjtGST-zbYHEw6K1-kbJY%A`̰ ׉	 7cassandra://paR3OcJvYwk2EroV8HEUJtiS5yxYA4kZGcKFFu_R1FQ)(͠aVUpXJOנaVUpXJS 	P89ׁH !mailto:bob@beaconhillrollcall.comׁׁЈ׉E,+Page 18
THE REVERE ADVOCATE – FRIDAY, OCTOBER 1, 2021
If you have any questions about this week’s report,
e-mail us at bob@beaconhillrollcall.com or call us at (617) 720-1562.
A NOTE FROM BOB KATZEN,
PUBLISHER OF BEACON
HILL ROLL CALL: Join more than
22,000 people, from movers and
shakers to political junkies and interested
citizens, who start their
weekday morning with MASSterList
– the popular newsletter that
chronicles news and informed
analysis about what going on up
on Beacon Hill, Massachusetts politics,
policy, media and infl uence
in Massachusetts. The stories are
drawn from major news organizations
as well as specialized publications
selected by widely acclaimed
and highly experienced
writers Chris Van Buskirk and Keith
Regan who introduce each article
in their own clever and never-boring
inimitable way.
MASSterlist will be e-mailed to
you FREE every Monday through
Friday morning and will give you
a leg up on what’s happening in
the blood sport of Bay State politics.
For more information and to
get your free subscription go to:
www.massterlist.com/subscribe
THE HOUSE AND SENATE:
Beacon Hill Roll Call records local
senators’ and representatives’
votes on roll calls from the week
of September 20-24.
COVID RULES FOR OPERATION
OF THE MASSACHUSETTS
HOUSE (H 4121)
House 131-28, approved am
order that requires all representatives
and House staff to be vaccinated
in order to be allowed
to work in the Statehouse; and
to maintain full vaccination status
against COVID-19 on an ongoing
basis, as recommended by
the CDC. A key section establishes
an 8-member House Working
Group on COVID-19 comprised of
seven members appointed by the
Democratic Speaker Ron Mariano
and one member appointed by
GOP Minority Leader Brad Jones.
The working group has the power
to establish many of the details
of the vaccine mandate including
establishing the deadline for
people to be vaccinated and establishing
a system for exempting
from the vaccine anyone who
chooses not to get vaccinated because
of a qualifying disability or
medical condition that contraindicates
administration of the vaccine
or because of a sincerely held
religious belief.
Other provisions require that
all members and staff be granted
paid time off to receive the vaccine;
be required to follow any
other rules established by the
working group including wearing
face masks, maintaining physical
or social distancing or being tested
for COVID-19; declare a state of
emergency in the House and extend
the House rule that allows
members to vote and participate
remotely in the House session until
a majority of House members
call for an end to the emergency.
“Vaccination is the best tool for
mitigating the risk of spreading
COVID-19 and we need to know
where we stand collectively as colleagues
and as a House,” said Rep.
Bill Driscoll (D-Milton), the House
chair of the Committee on Covid-19
and Emergency Preparedness
and Management. “It was
essential we move forward with
mandating a proof of vaccination
in order to consistently convene
in-person once again. Vaccines
have proven to be the most
eff ective tool in keeping us safe
and, layered with other non-pharmaceutical
measures, will guide
us through to the other side of
the Delta variant and aff ord us the
opportunity to return in-person.”
“The House took actions … that
I could not support,” said Rep. Michael
Soter (R-Bellingham). “The
safety of all members and staff is
of the utmost importance. However,
I’m disappointed to see
these crippling guidelines put in
place. This is the people’s house,
and we are one of the last entities
in the state to discuss a reopening
plan. We should be leading
the charge in educating individuals
on the benefi ts of the COVID-19
vaccination and not use
mandates and threats. By doing
so, we would increase participation
and decrease hesitancy. My
colleagues did not focus on uniting
us. They focused on dividing
us during a time where leaders
should be doing better.”
Public Hearing Notice
City of Revere, MA
Board of Health
Notice is hereby given in accordance with the provisions
of MGL Chapter 111, Section 31 and Chapter 2.78 of the
Revised Ordinances of the City of Revere, MA that the
Revere Board of Health will conduct a public hearing on
Tuesday evening, October 5, 2021 at 6:30P.M., in the City
Councilor Joseph A. DelGrosso City Council Chambers,
Revere City Hall, 281 Broadway, Revere, MA on the
following:
Proposed Amendments to Smoke Free Workplace
Regulations
A copy of the aforementioned current regulations
are available for public inspection at the Department
of Public Health, 25 Winthrop Ave, Revere, MA 02151
Monday through Thursday from 8:15 A.M. to 5:00 P.M.
and Friday from 8:15 A.M. to 12:15 P.M.
Attest:
Dr. Nathalee Kong, Chair
Revere Board of Health
“The fi rst step to reopening this
building is a commitment to each
other that we will do everything
we can to keep our staff , our colleagues,
our families and the public
safe,” said Rep. Kate Hogan (DStow).
“We know that vaccines are
the most eff ective tool, by far, in
keeping us safe by reducing the
risks of transmission, hospitalization
and death, particularly when
used with masks and social distancing
protocols. Therefore, the
vaccine requirement is necessary
to optimally provide for the continued
safety of the House as a
workplace for our members, offi -
cers, staff , employees and eventually,
the public.”
“I was disappointed by the order
… I truly want to get behind
a good comprehensive reopening
plan,” said Rep. Kimberly Ferguson
(R-Holden). “So here’s the
issue: What we have before us today
unfortunately is a vague document
with no detailed guidelines,
no metrics, no clear parameters.
What we have here is a document
which gives the 8-member
working group … the ultimate
and fi nal say in all further actions,
mandates and policies regarding
COVID-19 in the House. No
debate, no further votes, no further
House discussions are needed.
And that concerns me. How
can we as a body vote today on
something with such lack of clarity?
How can we as a body vote
on many policies we haven’t been
able to see yet?”
“These rules allow us to re-open
safely and will provide our staff
and fellow members with the
comfort that we as a House are
taking every step we can to ensure
their health and safety.” Said
Judiciary Committee House chair
Rep. Michael Day (D-Stoneham).
“As we are charged to do by our
state constitution, we acted for
the common good by adopting
measures that balance our ability
to continue to eff ectively conduct
the business of the state with
the need to get this pandemic under
control.”
(A “Yes” vote is for the vaccination
requirement and the other
rules. A “No” vote is against them.)
Rep. Jessica Giannino Yes
INCREASE HOURS THAT RETIRED
PUBLIC EMPLOYEES CAN
WORK (H 4007)
House 158-0, overrode Gov.
Baker’s veto of a bill that would
increase from 960 hours per year
(18 hours per week) to 1,200 hours
per year (23 hours per week) the
maximum amount of time a public
retiree collecting a pension is allowed
work for the state or local
government.
“I support providing municipalities
and state agencies with
increased fl exibility to make appropriate
staffi ng decisions,” said
Gov. Baker in his veto message.
“However, an increase of 240 more
hours per year is a signifi cant policy
change and moves the commonwealth
and its municipalities
closer to a place where employees
continue to work near full-time
while collecting a pension, without
any corresponding changes
to improve the current practice.
I therefore proposed an amendment
that would have increased
the number of hours to 975, which
more accurately refl ects half-time,
thereby allowing some fl exibility
to retired employees who are
bumping against the current 960hour
limit. In addition, I proposed
a waiver to the hour caps for personnel
in positions where a critical
shortage of qualifi ed personnel
has been determined.”
Supporters of the increase to
1,200 hours said that allowing retirees
to work 23 hours per week is
reasonable and will help many retirees
who are struggling to make
ends meet. They said it is unfair
to punish retirees who would like
to work more hours and provide
their services to the state or local
government.
“As we continue to navigate
this pandemic and its eff ects on
our local and state government,
it is imperative that we are able
to utilize the knowledge and experience
that many of our retirees
possess,” said Rep. David Linsky
(D-Natick). “This is important
as many of these roles are evolving
and allowing our retirees to assist
in this process without hindering
their pensions will help us turn
the corner towards more effi cient
government practices both during
these challenging times and
post-pandemic.”
(A “Yes” vote is for the increase
to 1,200 hours. A “No” vote is
against it.)
Rep. Jessica Giannino Yes
REPEAL THE HARBOR TAX
CREDIT AND MEDICAL DEVICE
TAX CREDIT (H 4008)
House 130-29, overrode Gov.
Charlie Baker’s veto of a bill that
would repeal the current medical
device tax credit and the harbor
maintenance tax credit. Gov. Baker
supported retaining both tax
credits and said they encourage
innovation and economic activity
in the Bay State.
“I see no reason to repeal the
medical device user fee tax credit,
as it is claimed annually by its
intended benefi ciaries and supports
medical device companies
operating in the commonwealth,”
said Baker in his veto message.
“Similarly, I do not support the repeal
of the harbor maintenance
tax credit. It serves as a benefi t to
shippers, importers and exporters
who generate critical commercial
activity in and around Massachusetts
ports.”
Supporters of repealing the tax
credits said the Tax Expenditure
Review Commission’s recent report
made clear these two tax
credits do not provide meaningful
benefi t to the state and its residents.
They noted that no other
states off er these credits which
are mostly used by large, profi table
companies.
(A “Yes” vote is for abolishing the
tax credits. A “No” vote is for retaining
them.)
Rep. Jessica Giannino Yes
REPEAL $5,000 ASSET LIMIT
FOR SOME WELFARE RECIPIENTS
(H 4012)
House 130-29, overrode Gov.
Baker’s veto of a bill that would
repeal a current law that prohibits
anyone with assets of more
than $5,000 from being eligible
for Transitional Assistance to Families
with Dependent Children
(TAFDC)—a program that provides
cash assistance and employment
support to families with children
and pregnant women with
little or no income or assets. Assets
include things like bank accounts,
retirement accounts and
cash. Some things do not count
as an asset including the person’s
house and one car.
“TAFDC extends a vital lifeline to
certain Massachusetts residents,
but I disagree with eliminating the
current asset test completely,” said
Gov. Baker in his veto message. “I
do support reforming the TAFDC
asset rule to allow recipients who
meet the asset test at the time of
application to continue to accrue
assets in excess of the current limit
without risk of losing eligibility
for TAFDC. I would welcome the
opportunity to further develop
this policy in partnership with the
Legislature to ensure these benefi
ts are available for the commonBEACON
| SEE Page 19
׉	 7cassandra://YOG69IvP0_KE88OQaoR5Z1coA8L46oMtPO8Rif4LILY$`̰ aVUpXJ׉E%THE REVERE ADVOCATE – FRIDAY, OCTOBER 1, 2021
BEACON | FROM Page 18
1. October 1 is International
Coffee Day; wild
coffee plants originated
in Kenya, Sudan and
what other country?
2. Which NFL franchise
has been in continuous
operation with the same
location and name for
the longest time?
3. What is a cruciferous
vegetable?
4. The word “robot” originated
in the hit play
“R.U.R., or Rossum’s Universal
Robots” in what
decade: 1890s, 1920s or
1940s?
5. What three letters denote
a computer’s brain?
6. On Oct. 3, 1919, Adolfo
Luque, a Cincinnati
Reds pitcher, became
the fi rst Latino World Series
player; he was from
what country?
7. What is a calabaza?
8. Massachusetts beach
sand is mostly made of
what clear mineral?
9. In what state is the
Banzai Pipeline?
10. On Oct. 4, 1883, what
passenger train began
service between Paris
Answers
and Istanbul?
11. Who authored
“Where the Wild Things
Are,” which won a Caldecott
Medal in 1964?
12. What are basenji
dogs (a breed of African
origin) unable to do?
13. What Revere Beach
birds are sometimes
heard before seen?
14. The song “Hernando’s
Hideaway” from “The Pajama
Game” is in what
style of dance time?
15. On Oct. 6, 1970, what
“gang” was arrested –
ending China’s Cultural
Revolution?
16. Who is the Super
Bowl trophy named after?
17.
What sweet substance
is in fruits?
18. In 1537 what monarch
declared Saint Valentine’s
Day a holiday?
19. Which planet is closest
to the earth?
20. On Oct. 7, 1956, Clarence
Birdseye died, who
in Gloucester had invented
what food processing
method?
wealth’s families in highest need.”
Supporters of repealing the
$5,000 asset limit said it is unfair
to deny families with children and
pregnant women who may have
as little as $6,000 to $10,000 in
assets from benefi tting from the
TAFDC program. Some said the
asset limit encourages people to
spend down their assets at a time
when they should be preserving
or increasing savings.
“Some of those most aff ected
by this pandemic and its aftereffects
are families with young children,”
said Rep. David Linsky (DNatick).
“We need to work toward
providing access to essential help
and services for this vulnerable
population. Eliminating this barrier
is a start towards helping this
high-risk population begin to get
back on their feet rather than continuing
to put themselves in debt.”
(A “Yes” vote is for repealing the
$5,000 asset limit. A “No” vote is
against repealing it.)
Rep. Jessica Giannino Yes
SEX EDUCATION (S 2534)
Senate 38-1, approved and
sent to the House legislation
that would require that all public
schools off ering a comprehensive
sexual health education curriculum
“provide medically accurate,
age-appropriate sexual health
education.”
Under current law, public
schools are not required to
teach sex education and the bill
does not change that but rather
mandates that any schools that
choose to teach sex education are
required to follow a curriculum,
based on age, that includes human
anatomy, reproduction and
sexual development; the benefi ts
of abstinence and delaying sexual
activity; the importance of eff ectively
using contraceptives to prevent
unintended pregnancy and
sexually transmitted diseases, including
HIV and AIDS; ways to effectively
discuss safe sexual activity;
relationship and communication
skills to form healthy, respectful
relationships free of violence,
coercion and intimidation; and information
about gender identity
and sexual orientation for all students,
including recognition that
people have diff erent sexual orientations,
gender identities and
gender expressions.
The measure also requires any
school off ering sex education to
notify parents about the school’s
sex education curriculum and
gives parents the right to withdraw
a student from the instruction.
Another provision creates a
process for parents to inspect the
program instruction materials before
the start of the course.
Supporters said that under the
bill, local cities and towns still have
the authority and power to decide
whether sex education is taught
in their schools. They said the
measure will ensure that schools
that choose to teach sex educaPage
19
tion will have a framework to follow.
They noted the bill will prepare
students to make healthy decisions
and will reduce teen pregnancy
and sexually transmitted
diseases.
“I am very proud that the Massachusetts
Senate has once again
reaffirmed our commitment to
this commonsense healthy policy
that will ensure our youth
have the tools needed to protect
their health and form respectful
relationships,” said sponsor Sen.
Sal DiDomenico (D-Everett) “This
legislation makes it clear that sex
education in the commonwealth
must be inclusive for all students
and emphasize the importance
and necessity of consent. I would
like to thank and congratulate the
many advocates who have partnered
with us on this legislation
and worked tirelessly to ensure
Massachusetts youth have the
information they need to build
the bright futures they deserve—
without shame or judgement.”
“This is a highly controversial
bill, as demonstrated by the fact
that it has failed to pass for multiple
sessions,” said Sen. Ryan Fattman
(R-Sutton), the only senator
who voted against the measure.
“If this legislation is to pass
into law, it would be a direct usurpation
of the local school district’s
decision-making abilities.
Each community has different
needs based on their specifi c demographics,
which is why they
should have the ability to decide
their curriculum. By mandating a
statewide sex education curriculum,
you directly take away the
ability of a community to decide
how sensitive topics like sex education
are taught.”
“It is quite troubling that our
elected offi cials think taking local
control away from school districts
and parents regarding sex
ed curriculum is a good idea,” said
Andrew Beckwith, executive director
of the Massachusetts Family
Institute. “And even worse is
the type of graphic content they
want to push on students in the
curriculum they are sanctioning.
In what reality does normalizing
high risk sexual activity like anal
and oral sex for teens or teaching
young vulnerable girls how to obtain
abortions without their parents’
knowledge or consent result
in healthy youth?”
(A “Yes” vote is for the bill. A “No”
vote is against it.)
Sen. Joseph Boncore has resigned
CHANGE
GENDER ON BIRTH
CERTIFICATES AND MORE (S
2533)
Senate 39-0, approved and sent
to the House a bill that would allow
people to change their gender
on their birth certifi cate, driver’s
license, learner’s permit, identifi
cation card or liquor purchase
identifi cation card, including to
a non-binary option other than
male or female. The possible designations
include “female,” “male”
or “X” which would indicate that
the person is another gender or
an undesignated gender. The
gender can only be changed by
an adult, an emancipated minor
or the parent or guardian of
a minor.
No documentation is required
but the person changing the gender
must submit an affi davit executed
under the penalty of perjury
attesting that the request is to
conform to the person’s gender
identity and is not made for any
fraudulent purpose. The bill also
directs the state to develop a plan
for allowing a non-binary option
on all state forms and instances
where a gender choice is required.
“People know what gender
they are,” said sponsor Sen. Jo
Comerford (D- Northampton).
“This bill simply allows for gender
identifi cation and IDs as diverse as
our people. The Legislature must
ensure that all of our constituents
have access to IDs with nonbinary
gender markers as beautifully diverse
as they are.”
(A “Yes” vote is for the bill.)
Sen. Joseph Boncore has resigned
HOW
LONG WAS LAST
WEEK’S SESSION? Beacon Hill
Roll Call tracks the length of time
that the House and Senate were
in session each week. Many legislators
say that legislative sessions
are only one aspect of the Legislature’s
job and that a lot of important
work is done outside of
the House and Senate chambers.
They note that their jobs also involve
committee work, research,
constituent work and other matters
that are important to their districts.
Critics say that the Legislature
does not meet regularly or
long enough to debate and vote
in public view on the thousands
of pieces of legislation that have
been fi led. They note that the infrequency
and brief length of sessions
are misguided and lead to
irresponsible late-night sessions
and a mad rush to act on dozens
of bills in the days immediately
preceding the end of an annual
session.
During the week of September
20-24, the House met for a total of
seven hours and 27 minutes while
the Senate met for a total of fi ve
hours and 28 minutes.
Mon. Sept. 20 House 11:01
a.m. to 11:05 a.m.
Senate 11:04 a.m. to 11:39 a.m.
Tues. Sept. 21 No House session
No
Senate session
Wed. Sept. 22 House 11:02
a.m. to 11:13 a.m.
No Senate session
Thurs. Sept. 23 House 11:02
a.m. to 6:14 p.m.
Senate 11:19 a.m. to 4:12 p.m.
Fri. Sept. 24 No House session
No Senate session
Bob Katzen
welcomes feedback at
bob@beaconhillrollcall.com
1. Ethiopia
2. The Green Bay
Packers
3. A member
of the cabbage
family
4. 1920s
5. CPU (central
processing unit)
6. Cuba
7. A pumpkin-like
squash
mostly grown in
tropical America
and the West
Indies
8. Quartz
9. Hawaii (a surf
spot on Oahu)
10. The Orient
Express
11. Maurice Sendak
12.
Bark
13. The piping
plover
14. Tango
15. The Gang of
Four
16. Vince Lombardi
17.
Fructose
18. Henry VIII
19. Venus
20. Flash freezing
(originally
used for fi sh)
׉	 7cassandra://HO2YgMxdKTJ3fjUF2MJs-gwjtGST-zbYHEw6K1-kbJY%A`̰ aVUpXJaVUpXJ
PבCט   (u׉׉	 7cassandra://HdUrEhFXTH2m64vtdljS7162NKom6CKDdG-uOzUk4hY 	`)׉	 7cassandra://L8CIbrV5vHwcQwgf0Z-KxokcFUEM8wmXRpcjsDPEuDA͜`J׉	 7cassandra://5Qzi1A8GXEeK1CcsQu7KkzENc3il-dkTzbQnOa5SIig+?`̰ ׉	 7cassandra://-wLTYvSkRfssVBoUWG9wbo_RzIkxcW1xEiDD8q1NPPs +x͠aVUpXJTט ( (u׉׉	 7cassandra://A4bMJgVaNkeYLe2DfCONNmYAWNl6gNGCj1OpMzXgH-4 +`)׉	 7cassandra://uc6OO6A4tV0Q0TnPNLfupeearLhZp8vOy_2cOxSuxW4ͣB`J׉	 7cassandra://CeopWa4jc8IKLWcbwg8imex3bkHraaMOu_3h-3IDOGk3`̰ ׉	 7cassandra://SPGW7NAppgvupN1KAILoRj-eZ1UEPL6oxMDH55gVjTs siW͠aVUpXJUנaVUpXJZ m-9ׁHhttp://www.advocatenews.netׁׁЈ׉EPage 20
THE REVERE ADVOCATE – FRIDAY, OCTOBER 1, 2021
OBITUARIES
Catherine Rose
(Feeley) Campbell
of Amelia “Molly” Feeley of Beverly,
John Feeley of Winthrop,
Thomas Feeley of Revere, Carol
Smaldone of NH, Eleanor Thomas
of Revere. She is also survived
by many loving nieces, nephews
and cousins.
Harold J. Sparks
A
A
ge 74, of (Beachmont) Revere,
formerly of Saugus,
suddenly Sept. 27. She was the
wife of the late Paul Campbell.
Catherine was the dear sister
ge, 86, died
on Monday,
September 27 at
the Lahey Clinic
in Burlington. He was the husband
of the late Joan (Lambert)
Sparks.
Born in Boston and raised in
Revere, Mr. Sparks was the son of
the late Harold E. and Phyllis (DeMarco)
Sparks. He was a USMC
veteran of the Korean confl ict
and moved to Saugus follow~
HELP WANTED ~
Tire Technician wanted.
Must have valid driver’s license
and a good work ethic.
$15-$19/hr to start based on
experience.
Call 617-389-0810 or
come in to:
Woody’s Tire Service
80 Garden St., Everett to apply
~FOR RENT~
MALDEN - 2 Bedroom Apt.
• Complete With Appliances
• Off Street Parking
• Convenient Location
$1,800 per Month
Call 978-210-2990
ing his time in the military. A former
employee of Raytheon and
V.P. at Amitron, Harold’s hobbies
included tinkering in electronics,
computers and motors. Mr.
Sparks was also a dedicated Boston
sports fan.
Mr. Sparks is survived by seven
children, Karen Tibbetts, Cynthia
Perron, Kathryn Bonia, Kenneth
Sparks, Sandra Forestier all
of Saugus, James Sparks of NH,
and Jennifer Schueller of Middleton;
twenty-two grandchildren;
seventeen great-grandchildren;
his long-time companion,
Rita Warner of Saugus;
one brother, Richard Sparks of
ME; as well as many nieces and
nephews. He was predeceased
by his son, Robert Sparks and
siblings, Michael, Edward, Robert
and Patricia.
For Advertising
with Results,
call The Advocate
Newspapers
at 781-286-8500 or
Info@advocatenews.net
HOMELESS | FROM Page 1
step up and help provide regional
problems when they are
done in a planned and coherent
manner. He pointed to the COVID-19
pandemic, where Revere
used the Quality Inn as a quarantine
site, and Revere’s eff orts
in setting up regional vaccination
and testing sites within its
boundaries.
Several councillors also stated
that Revere has homelessness
and substance abuse issues
within its own borders it
has worked hard to solve.
“The good news is that we
are on the same page on this issue;
the mayor, the administration,
we’re working cooperatively,
and I’ve never seen such unity,”
said Zambuto. “This is something
where we stand for what’s
right … we’re not hardhearted
people, and we care about our
neighbors who are having trouble
with substance abuse and
homelessness. We are a compassionate
city, and we will reLEAGUE
| FROM Page 14
nadoes’ football fortunes from
1973 to 1998: 27 seasons. Pappagallo
was MHS head football
coach from 2009-2015 – seven
seasons – and Freker was MHS
head football coach for the past
three seasons: from 2017-2020.
Altogether? That’s 37 seasons
from three of the last six coaches
– spanning the period from
1973-2021 – who were on hand
for new Head Coach Witche Exilhomme’s
head coaching debut.
Some side notes: Coach Exilhomme’s
head coach from
2009-2011 at MHS was Coach
Pappagallo, and Coach Freker
played under Coach Finn in the
late 1970s and then coached
alongside him for 17 years as a
Malden High football assistant
coach from 1982-1998.
****
Revere High Boys Soccer is
experienced... and talented
This year’s Revere High Boys
Soccer team is one of the most
experienced in the Greater Boston
League, boasting 12 seniors.
So do not make the mistake
of underestimating the
young Patriots talent-wise.
Head Coach Manny Lopes’
team has already demonstrated
they can hold their own with
a 2-1-1 start so far this year, inmain
a compassionate city, but
as my colleague said, we will not
be steamrolled, and we will not
be forced to do something, especially
with something that is
not coordinated.”
Speaking in her role as State
Representative, Jessica Ann Giannino
said that she and Saugus
Representative Donald Wong
drafted a letter to the BPHC that
is being sent to every Revere
and Saugus offi cial, as well as
all members of the state legislature,
voicing their adamant opposition
to the Quality Inn proposal.
“If this can happen in Revere,
it can happen anywhere,”
said Giannino. In the letter, Giannino
and Wong state that Boston
has an adequate number of
hotels and the funding needed
to deal with the Massachusetts
Avenue and Melnea Cass issues.
“It is clear that little to no planning
was undertaken in advance
of the relocation of unhoused
individuals from Melnea
Cass Boulevard,” the letter states.
“The BPHC has continued to insist
that the Quality Inn initiative
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
REAL ESTATE TRANSACTIONS
SELLER1
BUYER2
Bedoya, Luisa
Ruiz, Agie M
Zepaj, Marenglen
Gonzalez, Andres Diliegro, Michael
SELLER2
Coillard, Raymond P Coillard, Jill M
Diliegro, Leonre A 405 Malden St
ADDRESS DATE
PRICE
Revere
50 Fernwood Ave 10.09.2021 $ 980 000,00
10.09.2021 $ 905 000,00
Colecchia, Michael Colecchia, Chris ne 191 Reservoir Ave 01.09.2021 $ 950 000,00
cluding wins over Medford and
Chelsea and a 2-2 tie with Lynn
English.
Revere was supposed to
have hosted Malden on Tuesday,
but that game was washed
out. The youthful Patriots were
scheduled to host co-fi rst place
holder Everett (with Medford)
last night at Della Russo Stadium
under the lights. The results
were not available at press
time. The Patriots were looking
to avenge a season-opening,
3-2 loss to the Crimson Tide.
A trio of senior captains, Arath
Hernandez, David Marquez
and David Paiva, lead the way
along with fellow seniors Alex
Diaz, Emerson Pineda Mejia,
Joshuan Flores, Kayo De Souza
Lopez, Keny Guerrero Alvarez,
Karlot Quiroz, Luis Marquez,
Brayan Hanao, Christian and
Mateo Norena. Juniors include
Matt Rivera, Brian Novoa, Kevin
Rivas Flores, Alejandro Garcia,
Felipe Maia, Albino Lopez
and Santiago Grajales. Sophomores
are Bryan Peña, Joao Victor
Cunha, Juan Chavarria and
Latrell Ashby. Bryan Medina is
the only freshman. Assistant
coaches for Revere Boys Soccer
are varsity assistant coach
Gerardo Rodriguez, junior varsity
coach Khalid Ahrati, and
freshman coach Roberto Tobalino.
is
just one instance of a larger
regional approach to the crisis
on Melnea Cass Boulevard, yet
they have not been able to provide
the City of Revere or Town
of Saugus with any examples of
other municipalities joining this
eff ort or converting facilities for
displaced residents.”
The City Council unanimously
approved the motion to stand
behind Arrigo and to record its
opposition to the BPHC proposal
to use the Quality Inn. In addition,
the council also unanimously
approved motions asking
that the legality of using a
hotel as a medical facility be
explored, that representatives
from the Quality Inn appear before
the council to discuss future
plans for the site, that a public
meeting be held with all stakeholders
on the plans for the
Quality Inn and that Revere fi le a
public information request with
the City of Boston asking for the
total costs associated with public
safety and public works associated
with the Mass. Cass
homeless encampment.
׉	 7cassandra://5Qzi1A8GXEeK1CcsQu7KkzENc3il-dkTzbQnOa5SIig+?`̰ aVUpXJ׉E
THE REVERE ADVOCATE – FRIDAY, OCTOBER 1, 2021
Page 21
FRANK’S Housepainting
(781) 289-0698
• Exterior
• Ceiling Dr. • Power Wash
• Paper Removal • Carpentry
FREE ESTIMATES — Fully Insured
   
 
     
  

    
Discount Tree Service
781-269-0914
  
      
        
           
“Proper prep makes all the difference” – F. Ferrera
• Interior
AAA Service • Lockouts
Trespass Towing • Roadside Service
Junk Car Removal
617-387-6877
26 Garvey St., Everett
MDPU 28003 ICCMC 251976
Professional
TREE
REMOVAL
& Cleanups
24-HOUR SERVICE
We follow Social Distancing Guidelines!

 
 

   
 
  
ADVOCATE
Call now!
781-286-8500
advertise on the web at
www.advocatenews.net
    
  

  
   
    

  

  
  
    
     




Classifi eds
׉	 7cassandra://CeopWa4jc8IKLWcbwg8imex3bkHraaMOu_3h-3IDOGk3`̰ aVUpXJaVUpXJ
PבCט   (u׉׉	 7cassandra://baMLuW3rUqzrP7lyM0rgvwEt6PoZ-RUwHWG_HTVAgbM v`)׉	 7cassandra://VQLOpzbYc_7WCPwhzt-LSrORZhqQec_2L8R0h2DV2HI͢\`J׉	 7cassandra://Y_AFWSgXd0abeH2_tJM_mEKdqURXUDFHqWPFPrg7qEo.+`̰ ׉	 7cassandra://FK3eA9DGUlN3-IqbttPOSix8c197nlga6apHhM1o9sY iXZ͠aVUpXJ[ט ( (u׉׉	 7cassandra://vXqw_acUglQPiqN0sW322oucp3r3exh5JM8V51Yp21I `)׉	 7cassandra://mecbI-3a5ExHNh55ImGg9EW-8CfjvU0XtpW3zZiwq00͌6`J׉	 7cassandra://g0qqJ316pw026rihKDDmD9TdHgO8iS4tJWsY_P7R-VE,`̰ ׉	 7cassandra://SW-twhYXgeRJUk9k5YwnmOCECycaO9unFxmJ-H_kvnI  X͠aVUpXJ\נaVUpXJa !+9ׁHhttp://www.jrs-properties.comׁׁЈ׉E_Page 22
THE REVERE ADVOCATE – FRIDAY, OCTOBER 1, 2021
Discount Services
-Raccoons
-Squirrels
781-269-0914
Removal

   
  
  
   
  


* Crack Repairing * Pot Hole Filling
* Striping Handicapped Spaces
* Free Estimates
Tom’s Seal Coating
Call Gary: 978-210-4012
WANTED
DELIVERY DRIVER
FULL TIME
CALL 617-387-4838
Simple and Inexpensive
Final Farewells
Dear Savvy Senior,
My husband and I are looking for the simplest and least
expensive way to dispose of our bodies when we die. We hate
the idea of wasting a lot of money on high-priced funerals and
would like some advice on some simple and cheap send-off s.
Simple Seniors
Dear Simple,
With the average cost of a fullservice
funeral running around
$11,000 today, many people are
seeking simple ways to make
their fi nal farewell more aff ordable.
Depending on how you
want to go, here are several lowcost
options to consider.
  

WASTE REMOVAL &
BUILDING MAINTENANCE
• Landscaping, Lawn Care, Mulching
• Yard Waste & Rubbish Removal
• Interior & Exterior Demolition (Old
Decks, Fences, Pools, Sheds, etc.)
• Appliance and Metal Pick-up
• Construction and Estate Cleanouts
• Pick-up Truck Load of Trash
starting at $169
• Carpentry
LICENSED & INSURED
Call for FREE ESTIMATES!
  
KITCHEN
CABINETS
To Look Like New
508-840-0501
FURNITURE
STRIP & FINISH
        
  
   
 
  
Cleaning by ANJOS
  
I will clean your house or office
with love, like it is my own.
GUARANTEED SATISFACTION
~ Exceptional Reasonable Rates ~
Please call 617-257-5345
~ Home of the Week ~
SAUGUS....1st AD Nicely located seven
room Cape Cod style home offers three
to four bedrooms, granite kitchen and
    
   
    
garage, level lot with shed, great side
street location. MINT Condition!
  
  
  
 
     
View the interior
of this home
right on your
smartphone.

Direct Cremation
If you and your husband are
interested in cremation, a direct
cremation is the simplest
and least expensive way to go.
It includes picking up the body,
completing and fi ling the necessary
paperwork, the cremation
itself and returning the
cremated remains to the family.
There’s no embalming, formal
viewing or casket. A simple
cardboard box called an “alternative
container” is used to hold
the body.
Depending on where you
live and the funeral home you
choose, the average cost for a
direct cremation runs between
$1,000 and $3,000. If you want
additional services beyond
what a direct cremation off ers,
ask the funeral home for an
itemized price list that covers
the other services cost, so you
know exactly what you’re getting.
All providers are required
by law to provide this.
To locate nearby funeral
homes, look in your local yellow
pages, or Google “cremation”
or “funeral” followed by
your city and state. You can
also get good information online
at Parting.com, which lets
you compare prices from funeral
providers in your area based
on what you want.
Immediate or Direct Burial
If you’re interested in being
buried, an immediate/direct
burial is the most basic and lowcost
option. With an immediate
burial, your body would be buried
in a simple container shortly
after death, skipping the embalming,
viewing and use of the
funeral facilities.
If your family wants a memorial
service, they can have it at
the graveside at your place of
worship or at home without
the body.
These services usually cost
between $1,800 and $3,500,
not counting cemetery charges,
which can run you an additional
$1,000 to $3,000. All funeral
homes off er direct burial.
Green Burial
An eco-friendly green burial
is another aff ordable way to
go that costs anywhere from
$1,000 to $4,000 depending on
the provider. With a green cemetery
burial, the body is buried
in a biodegradable coffin or
just wrapped in a shroud, without
embalming chemicals or a
burial vault.
The Green Burial Council
(GreenBurialCouncil.org, 888966-3330)
has a state listing of
cemetery operators who accommodate
green burials, as
well as funeral professionals
who provide the services.
Anatomical Donation
If you’d like to eliminate your
cremation/burial costs all together,
as well as help advance
medical research, you and your
husband should consider donating
your bodies to science.
This option won’t cost you a
cent, however, some programs
may charge a small fee to transport
your body to their facility.
After using your body for
medical research projects, anatomy
lessons and surgical practice,
your remains will be cremated
and your ashes will be
buried or scattered in a local
cemetery or returned to your
family, usually within a year.
To locate accredited university
medical school body donation
programs in your state, see
the University of Florida’s U.S.
program directory at Anatbd.
acb.med.ufl .edu/usprograms, or
call the whole-body donation
referral service during business
hours at 800-727-0700.
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.
׉	 7cassandra://Y_AFWSgXd0abeH2_tJM_mEKdqURXUDFHqWPFPrg7qEo.+`̰ aVUpXJ׉E5THE REVERE ADVOCATE – FRIDAY, OCTOBER 1, 2021
Page 23
Follow Us On:
COMMERCIAL & RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY SALES & RENTALS
Looking to purchase a new home?
Remember, the seller pays agents commission. There
is no cost to you to use a real estate agent to protect
you during the biggest transaction of your life! Call
today and ask about Buyers Representation.
Sandy Juliano
Broker/President
WE KNOW EVERETT!! Call TODAY to sell or buy with the best!
LISTED BY NORMA & ROSEMARIE
NEW LISTING BY SANDY
NEW LISTING BY SANDY
UNDER AGREEMENT
OPEN HOUSE
SATURDAY
CONDO - NEW PRICE - $449,900
30 CHELSEA ST. #812
EVERETT
CALL NORMA FOR DETAILS!
617-590-9143
OCT. 2, 2021
12:00-2:00
SINGLE FAMILY
39 ARLINGTON ST., EVERETT
$529,900
TWO FAMILY
129 CLARENCE ST., EVERETT
$839,900
LISTED BY NORMA
SOLD BY MICHAEL
AS BUYER’S AGENT
SOLD BY NORMA
4 FAMILY
54 EVERETT STREET
EVERETT
756 BROADWAY, EVERETT
$859,900
CALL NORMA FOR DETAILS!
617-590-9143
NEW LISTING BY NORMA
OCT. 2, 2021
12:00-1:30
CONDO
120 WYLLIS AVE., UNIT #310
$499,900
OPEN HOUSE
SATURDAY
UNDER AGREEMENT
6 FAMILY
CHARLES STREET, MALDEN
$1,250,000
CALL JOE FOR DETAILS 617-680-7610
UNDER AGREEMENT
SINGLE FAMILY
20 BAKER RD., EVERETT
$519,900
SOLD BY MICHAEL
AS BUYER’S AGENT
58 BRADFORD ST.
EVERETT
Joe DiNuzzo
Norma Capuano Parziale
- Broker Associate
www.jrs-properties.com
O
D il
F
10 00 A M
5 00 PM
- Agent
Open Daily From 10:00 A.M. - 5:00 P.M.
433 Broadway, Suite B, Everett, MA 02149
Denise Matarazz
- Agent
Maria Scrima
- Agent
Follow Us On:
617.544.6274
Rosemarie Ciampi
- Agent
Michael Matarazzo
-Agent
Mark Sachetta
- Agent
׉	 7cassandra://g0qqJ316pw026rihKDDmD9TdHgO8iS4tJWsY_P7R-VE,`̰ aVUpXJaVUpXJ
PבCט   (u׉׉	 7cassandra://Rerj4-Ob4llTbOn0eKW7FhYUfRC4OQxyljEI5uvhbnY %`)׉	 7cassandra://EYQvOe5eCCRX5VUf_YADawq71jjJZ6dz2qQeut24NAg͝`J׉	 7cassandra://JIIuWng8xILQFOi-l3val0Unch94-q-LYmYHbd_0Wm0/`̰ ׉	 7cassandra://-iOwUW56HjwAvcZHhAkVTgTBiPOObUtssPHNDHLbxx4 DE͠aVUpXJbנaVUpXJd 9ׁHhttp://LITTLEFIELDRE.COMׁׁЈ׉ELPage 24
THE REVERE ADVOCATE – FRIDAY, OCTOBER 1, 2021
#
1
  
  
“Experience and knowledge
Provide the Best Service”
  


 
View our website from
your mobile phone!
335 Central St., Saugus, MA
781-233-7300
             
          
       
EVERETT - Well established Auto Body/Auto Repair shop, 6 bays,
            
     
REVERE - REVERE PRIME BROADWAY location and visibility offers this great retail
condo store front w/ many possibilities. Located on bus line, within walking distance
of neighborhoods. Great opportunity to invest & build your business.........$600,000.
SAUGUS - RARE FIND - LAND in Saugus!! GREAT OPPORTUNITY to build a new
home! Street creating a unique opportunity to build new construction in convenient
location. High on a hilltop creating lasting views and memories!................$159,900.
             
        
     
            
         
      
EVERETT - 3 FAMILY offers 5/5/5 rooms, 2 bedrooms, l bath each unit, rear porches,
separate utilities, new front stairs, conveniently located just outside of Glendale Square –
Great opportunity!......................................................................................................$975,000.
           
          
        
SAUGUS - 11 Unit Building. Cliftondale Sq. Property consists of 3 store fronts and
1 free-standing bldg., 7 residential units. All separate utilities. All units deleaded,
ample off-street parking, INCREDIBLE opportunity.....................................$2,600,000.
WONDERING WHAT YOUR
HOME IS WORTH?
CALL US FOR A FREE
OPINION OF VALUE.
781-233-1401
38 MAIN STREET, SAUGUS
FOR SALE
FOR SALE- COMPLETELY
RENOVATED 4 BED 2 BATH
OPEN CONCEPT CAPE WITH
FIREPLACE LIVING ROOM,
SHAKER CABINETS, QUARTZ
COUNTERS, MUDROOM WITH
LAUNDRY, TWO NEW BATHS,
FRAMELESS GLASS ENCLOSED
SHOWER, NEW PRIVATE PATIO,
NICE LOCATION. $589,900
SAUGUS
CALL JOHN 617-285-7117
OFFICE FOR
RENT
FOR RENT
FOR RENT
LET US SHOW YOU OUR
MARKETING PLAN TO
GET YOU TOP DOLLAR
FOR YOUR HOME!
LITTLEFIELDRE.COM
COMING SOON
COMING SOON -
NEW CONSTRUCTION
TOWNHOMES 3 BED, 2.5 BATH,
OPEN CONCEPT SHAKER
CABINETS WITH QUARTZ
COUNTERS. WALK TO
DOWNTOWN, RESTAURANTS,
SHOPS, COMMUTER RAIL AND
LAKE. CLOSE TO MAJOR RTS.
$799,900 WAKEFIELD
CALL KEITH 781-389-0791
INVESTMENT
OPPORTUNITY
FOR RENT OFFICE CONDO 890 SQFT
SAUGUS $1400CALL RHONDA 781-706-0842
LOOKING TO
BUY OR SELL?
CALL
DANIELLE
VENTRE
FOR ALL YOUR
REAL ESTATE
NEEDS!
978-987-9535
2 BED 1 BATH SINGLE WIDE NEEDS UPDATING
PEABODY $49,900 CALL ERIC 781-223-0289
FOR SALE 2 BED 1 BATH SINGLE WIDE
LOTS OF UPDATES SAUGUS $159,900
CALL ERIC 781-223-0289
FOR SALE -BRAND NEW MANUFACTURED
MOBILE HOMES. FOUR CUSTOM UNITS LEFT.
ALL UNITS ARE 2 BED , 1 BATH 12 X 52.
DANVERS $199,900 CALL ERIC 781-223-0289
2 BED FIRST FLOOR NEAR TUFTS GREAT LOCATION
SPACIOUS UNIT WALK TO PUBLIC TRANS MEDFORD
$1900 CALL RHONDA 781-706-0842
FOR SALE
FOR RENT SUNNY & BRIGHT 2-3 BED FULL KITCHEN
WITH LAUNDRY IN UNIT. OFF ST. PARKING FOR 2.
SAUGUS $2400 CALL RHONDA 781-706-0842
FOR SALE
FOR SALE - 3 FAMILY & SINGLE FAMILY
ALL ON ONE LOT EVERETT $1,499,000
CALL RHONDA 781-706-0842
FOR SALE
׉	 7cassandra://JIIuWng8xILQFOi-l3val0Unch94-q-LYmYHbd_0Wm0/`̰ aVUpXJ׈EaVUpXJaVUpXJ
P,Revere Advocate  10/01/21 Revere Advocate  10/01/21 aVUfrJ¢